The final volume of the Cairo Trilogy follows the al-Jawad family into the 1940s as Al-Sayyid Ahmad ages and the third generation comes of age amid nationalism, political violence, and the approach of World War II. Kamal continues writing and wondering; his nephews Abdul Muni'm and Ahmad embrace the Muslim Brotherhood and Communism respectively. Egypt's political upheaval mirrors the family's fragmentation.
The life of Jacob Frank (1726-1791), the most controversial figure in Jewish history: a charismatic false messiah who led his followers through Judaism, Islam, and finally Catholicism, crossing the borders of eighteenth-century Poland, Turkey, and Austria. Tokarczuk's National Book Award-winning magnum opus.
A group of pilgrims travelling to the shrine of Thomas Becket at Canterbury agree to tell stories to pass the time. Each tale reflects its teller — the Knight's romance, the Miller's bawdy fabliau, the Wife of Bath's self-portrait, the Pardoner's moral tale told by an immoral man. The foundational work of English literature.
The first volume of the Merlin trilogy tells the life of Merlin from childhood to the conception of Arthur — a rational, historically grounded retelling of Arthurian legend in which Merlin is a genuine historical figure with remarkable intelligence rather than a supernatural wizard. The finest Arthurian historical novel.
London, the Blitz. Writer Maurice Bendrix begins an affair with Sarah Miles, wife of a civil servant. When Sarah suddenly ends the affair without explanation, Bendrix's jealousy drives him to hire a detective. What he discovers is not another lover but a bargain Sarah made with God. Greene's most personal novel: faith, jealousy, and the possibility of grace.
The Moskat family of Warsaw, from the late nineteenth century to 1939: the patriarch Reb Meshulam's descendants assimilate, secularize, intermarry, embrace Zionism, turn to communism, have affairs, go bankrupt—while Warsaw's Jewish world that contained them is being destroyed. Singer's most comprehensive novel, in the tradition of Thomas Mann's Buddenbrooks.
Rafael Trujillo, dictator of the Dominican Republic for thirty-one years, is assassinated in 1961. The novel weaves three narratives: Trujillo on his final day, the conspirators planning the ambush, and Urania Cabral returning to Santo Domingo forty years later to face what Trujillo did to her father—and to her. Vargas Llosa's most politically searing work.
1949. A group of Soviet scientists and engineers—political prisoners with special technical skills—are housed in a sharashka (a prison research institute), the first circle of Dante's Inferno where the least tortured souls reside. Stalin wants them to build a voice-recognition device to identify phone calls. Three days over Christmas. Solzhenitsyn's most politically comprehensive novel.
Found in the wreckage of the car that killed Camus in 1960, this unfinished novel is his most personal: the story of Jacques Cormery (Camus himself) growing up in poverty in Algeria, with a deaf illiterate mother, searching for his father who died in WWI before Jacques was one year old. Camus's lost masterpiece.
The fourth volume of Maya Angelou's autobiography — New York in the late 1950s, the Harlem Writers Guild, the civil rights movement, her friendship with Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr., and her years in Cairo and Accra.
Why great companies can do everything right and still lose market leadership — and how new entrants use disruptive innovation to topple industry leaders.
Nick Guest, a gay Oxford graduate, lodges with the politically connected Fedden family in Notting Hill from 1983 to 1987 — the years of Thatcher's ascendancy, the AIDS crisis, and the cocaine boom. The novel is about beauty, class, and the illusion of belonging.
Katharina Blum spends one night with a man who turns out to be wanted by police. A tabloid newspaper begins destroying her reputation. At the end of the week, she shoots the journalist responsible. Böll's most pointed political satire—and a story of a woman driven to murder by systematic character assassination.
Five years in the life of Henry James, 1895 to 1900 — following the public failure of his play Guy Domville, his retreat to Lamb House in Rye, and his composition of the late novels. His suppressed homosexuality, his relationships with his family, his aesthetic choices, and the specific quality of his loneliness.
In 1952, twenty-three-year-old medical student Ernesto Guevara and his friend Alberto Granado set off on a motorcycle to travel the length of South America — a nine-month, 8,000-mile journey that transformed the future revolutionary's understanding of his continent.
Based on the real Dozier School for Boys in Florida, two Black teenagers — Elwood Curtis and Turner — navigate brutal abuse at the Nickel Academy in 1960s Jim Crow America. Winner of the 2020 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction.
Macfarlane follows ancient paths on foot — the Icknield Way, pilgrimage routes in the Himalayas, sea-roads in the Outer Hebrides, paths through Palestine. A meditation on what walking old routes does to the mind and body, and what landscapes remember.
The only complete ancient Greek trilogy to survive — Agamemnon returns from Troy to be murdered by his wife Clytemnestra; their son Orestes kills Clytemnestra in revenge; the Furies pursue Orestes until Athena establishes a jury court to try him. The founding myth of justice.
A Nobel-winning scientist convicted of sexual abuse writes his memoir from prison, describing the 1950 expedition that discovered a remote jungle tribe — and a population of apparently immortal humans.
Alternative history: Charles Lindbergh defeats FDR in the 1940 presidential election and signs a neutrality pact with Hitler. Told from the perspective of young Philip Roth's Jewish family in Newark as antisemitism becomes state-adjacent policy in America.
Miss Jean Brodie, teacher at the Marcia Blaine School for Girls in Edinburgh in the 1930s, dedicates herself to educating her chosen set of girls for life rather than for exams. She is charismatic, dangerous, and will be betrayed. Spark's masterpiece in 137 pages.
Julien Sorel, brilliant son of a provincial carpenter, rises through seduction, hypocrisy, and calculation — as tutor in the Rênal household, then as secretary to a Parisian aristocrat. His relationship with two women (Mme de Rênal and the volatile Mathilde de la Mole) ultimately destroys him.
Socrates and his interlocutors ask what justice is — and end up designing an ideal city, debating the nature of the soul, defining the philosopher-king, arguing for the immortality of the soul, banning poets from the ideal state, and constructing the allegory of the cave. The most influential philosophical text in the Western tradition.
In 1921, Protestant Anglo-Irish landowners prepare to leave Ireland for England. Eight-year-old Lucy Gault runs away to prevent them leaving; she is assumed drowned; her parents depart in grief. She grows up alone in the empty house. The novel follows the consequences across sixty years.
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