Pampa Kampana, blessed by a goddess as a child, breathes an empire into existence in 14th-century south India. The empire of Bisnaga rises and falls across two hundred and fifty years while Pampa watches, intervenes, suffers, and records — a mythological history that is also an allegory of power, imagination, and the persistence of storytelling.
The Trojan War is retold entirely through the voices of the women caught in it — goddesses, queens, slaves, and prophets — with the Muse Calliope insisting that their stories are as worth telling as any hero's.
In 1962, a young Italian innkeeper on a remote Ligurian cliff meets a dying American actress, and their brief encounter echoes across fifty years, two continents, and a Hollywood dream factory that chews up everyone who enters it.
Mother is the matriarch of the Shangguan family in Northeast China. Through her eyes—and through the nine daughters and one son she bears—Mo Yan tells the story of China's twentieth century: the Japanese occupation, civil war, the Communist revolution, the Cultural Revolution, reform and opening. An epic of endurance told through the body, specifically through the mother who survives everything.
A fictionalized account of Marilyn Monroe's life — reimagined as Norma Jeane Baker, a woman of extraordinary sensitivity and intelligence consumed and ultimately destroyed by the cultural construction called Marilyn Monroe that she inhabits but does not fully control.
Zanzibar, 1899: a British colonial officer collapses in the street and is taken in by an Indian merchant, falling in love with the merchant's sister. Decades later, their descendants try to understand what happened between their grandparents and why it still shapes their lives. Gurnah's novel about the long shadow of a single colonial encounter.
Frank Money, a Korean War veteran, is hospitalized in 1950s America, escapes, and makes his way back south to rescue his sister Cee from medical experimentation. Morrison's slimmest novel, about homecoming, brotherhood, and the specific horrors awaiting Black veterans in Jim Crow America.
Twelve-year-old Yusuf is left as a debt-pawn with a prosperous merchant and travels with him into the African interior on trading expeditions. Set on the Swahili coast at the turn of the twentieth century, as German colonial rule begins to transform East Africa, this coming-of-age novel draws on the Quranic story of Yusuf and the Biblical Joseph.
Briseis, the enslaved queen who becomes Achilles's war-prize, narrates the Trojan War from the ground level of the Greek camp, where women survive at the mercy of the men who own them.
A Venetian scholar is captured by Ottoman forces in the seventeenth century and given as a slave to a Turkish man of learning who looks exactly like him. Over years of intellectual collaboration and obsessive mutual study, the two men—master and slave, East and West—begin to exchange identities.
When the Pope dies suddenly, the College of Cardinals gathers in the Sistine Chapel to elect his successor. Behind the locked doors of the Vatican, Dean of the College Cardinal Lomeli presides over a conclave of intrigue, ambition, and hidden sin — where faith and politics are indistinguishable.
A young woman discovers her father's cache of documents — a mysterious old book stamped with a dragon and letters from a professor — and begins uncovering a multigenerational quest to find the actual tomb of Vlad the Impaler, who may still be alive.
The daughters of King Minos — Ariadne, who saves Theseus from the Labyrinth only to be abandoned, and Phaedra, who inherits the consequences — reclaim two lives silenced at the edges of the Theseus myth.
In a small Turkish village in Anatolia, Christians and Muslims have lived together for centuries — until WWI, Gallipoli, the Greek-Turkish War, and the population exchanges of the 1920s destroy everything. A companion in scope and grief to Captain Corelli's Mandolin.
A radical reimagining of the life of Christ — depicting Jesus as a man torn between the flesh and the spirit, tempted on the cross by a vision of the ordinary human life he might have lived.
In 16th-century Andalusia, a Moorish boy named Hernando is born to a Christian father who rapes his Muslim mother. Caught between two worlds and two faiths, he tries to preserve the legacy of the Moors as Spain expels them.
Thessaloniki (Salonika) in the early twentieth century: a city of Greeks, Jews, Turks, and refugees, one of the most cosmopolitan cities in the Mediterranean. The Thread follows two families — one Greek Orthodox, one from the city's ancient Jewish community — across eight decades of fire, war, occupation, and transformation, as the city loses its plurality and becomes something more singular. Hislop's most historically ambitious novel.
Athens, 1941. The German occupation begins, and with it the great famine in which hundreds of thousands of Greeks die. Themis, a young woman from a divided Athens family — some Communist, some right-wing, all suffering — lives through the occupation, the resistance, the civil war that follows, and the decades of political fracture that define 20th-century Greek history. Hislop's most politically complex novel, spanning sixty years of Greek history.
The continuation of Cecilia Klein's story from The Tattooist of Auschwitz — after liberation, Cilka is convicted by the Soviets of collaboration and sent to a Siberian labour camp, where she must survive again.
Set in Crete during the late 19th-century struggle for independence from Ottoman rule, the novel follows Captain Michalis — a man of elemental passions — as he leads his people in revolt.
In 1914, a Suffolk fishing village. Thomas Maggs, thirteen, befriends an artist named Mr Mac — the Scottish architect and designer Charles Rennie Mackintosh, who spent his final years painting in the Suffolk village of Walberswick.
The second All Souls novel — Diana Bishop and Matthew Clairmont timewalk to Elizabethan London, where Diana must learn witchcraft and retrieve the enchanted manuscript that holds the secrets of all creatures.
Set partly in WWII Lisbon — neutral Portugal as the espionage capital of Europe — and partly in the present day, as Javier Falcón investigates a case that connects to wartime intelligence operations. Wilson returns to the Portugal of A Small Death in Lisbon to interweave Falcón's modern investigation with the wartime story of an SOE agent and the shadowy world of competing intelligence services in neutral Lisbon.
Two Australian sisters — Naomi and Sally Durance — both nurses, leave the family farm at the outbreak of World War I and serve at Gallipoli, on hospital ships, and on the Western Front, each carrying a secret from their last night at home.