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      • Fiction
        September 2018 - September 2023

        Desert Hunters

        a great fable written by the author Xuemo in a plain and realistic style

        by Xuemo

        Desert Hunters Xuemo  Translated by Howard Goldblatt and Sylvia    Desert Hunters is a great fable written by the author Xuemo . This is what is different from Desert Rites.In Desert Hunters, every section is a vivid scene of life,and every chapter is a grand depiction of the society;It forms an epic historical picture in the whole work .There are more than 50 characters, and depicts more than 20 species of animals in the book features.The stories of the book revolve around a place called the Pig Belly Well.All people and all life in the area, including wolves and sheep, falcons and rabbits, birds and bugs, foxes and rats, rely on this water well for survival.   Images of all figures demonstrated fierceness and kindness,suffering and joy, helplessness and endurance,nature and feud, greed and strife.all scenes seem to be distant but familiar, vast but subtle.   Every character, every animal seems to be the mouth of God in these book,telling stories about their own transgressions and the following aftermath.Through layers and layers of conflicts between humans and animals, humans and nature, and humans for their own fate,the book tells us that tragedies of humanity are rooted in greed, hatred, and ignorance.Those who transgress, those who break the laws of nature, are bound to be punished, bound to suffer in the dessert of the soul,and bound to become a prey that is being hunted on the hunting field of the soul.   It is like the coronavirus spreading around the world,ruthlessly attacking everybody around us,paralyzing industries and forcing countries into long-term lock down, spreading fear and anxiety among all people.However, through the actions of the heroes and heroines, the book also tells us how to create a harmonious conservation between people and their inner selves, between different people, and between human and nature.   The following people will like this book: those who love animals and those who wonder about how to create balance between human and nature, how to make a living ,and how to form a harmonious conservation between people’s life and their own inner world .

      • Fiction

        The Loathsome

        by Santiago Lorenzo

        Los asquerosos (The Loathsome)A novel by Santiago LorenzoBlackie Books, Barcelona, 2018 - 220 ppLanguage: SpanishRights Sold: French (Seuil), Italian (Blackie), German (Heyne Hardcore), Portuguese, excl Brazil (Gradiva), Chinese complex (ACME Publishing).    The novel is about Manuel, a young man in his early 20s who lives (or survives) in Madrid during the worst years of the crisis. He has recently left his parents’ home and rents a microscopic space, without even an actual contract. He gets very bad, and poorly paid, temporal jobs and is worried about his lack of success in making friends. In fact he has none, except an uncle of him who is in his late forties and also a lonely man. But Manuel has always been very good at doing things with his hands and always carries a screw driver with him.   After an unexpected incident in which he harms a police officer in the neck with the screw driver (he believes he has killed the policeman and fears he will end up in jail), he runs to his uncle’s home and they decide he will take his car and quickly escape from the city. He needs to disappear completely. After hours driving he finds an abandoned little village in the middle of nowhere. It’s a very rural area, and it looks like the village has been abandoned for decades. He picks up one of the houses and takes shelter there. The house has no electricity, no water, nothing...At the village, he only receives help from his uncle in Madrid (who is the narrator of the book).   They are in touch only via an old (non-smart) phone and they devise a plan so that he receives food from a supermarket once a month. The uncle is also very short of money and they will have to ration Manuel's (very) little savings. The deliverer is instructed to leave the bags in front of the house and leave, they tell the supermarket that someone will pick up the bags later.   While Manuel is learning to live by his own and adapt to his new circumstances, he reads paperback books that were left in the house. He starts to enjoy this life of isolation, being without documents, no job, no bosses and just paying attention to he passing of time. He knows nothing about nature and can’t distinguish a pine from an oak tree.   At this point, the novel might bring memories of Thoreau or of Robinson Crusoe but what makes the novel exceptional is the brilliant prose of the author and the irony that the guy lands in the middle of nature not because of his choice (he is not a modern lover of rural life) but because of the accident with the police. Despite this forced isolation, little by little he starts enjoying being on his own, with no human contact at all. He does things, recollects wood, repairs stuff, takes long walks and ultimately realizes that he never really wanted to make friends, that he shouldn’t have fought his life-long instincts of being alone because now, for the first time, he starts feeling well with himself. He starts to eat plants he has at hand. He discovers a plum tree, a vine that gives him grapes… And the months pass by happily. He has stopped to need things and doesn’t even think about being hunted by the police. Manuel discovers his true self, and in the process he also discovers that he needs almost nothing of what enslaves the rest of us, caught between frustration, hypnosis and fraud.   But one day a woman arrives and rents the adjacent house. She will use it as a weekend house for her family. Fortunately, she doesn’t see him. This breaks all the fragile balance and harmony but, so far, he only needs to hide from the newcomers during weekends. However, as weeks pass by he starts feeling very upset by the presence of these people, even if only for a couple of days. They don’t understand anything about being in the nature, they are noisy and walk around with their phones, their city clothes… they become The Nasties. And, ironically, the nasties here become ourselves. Readers realize how, probably, they would act exactly as the newcomers do. People who instead of looking at the sky to see if it’s cloudy will look at their phones to check the weather. People who will install a little gym at home to keep fit, instead of doing physical activities in the woods. People who will do whatever to prevent nature entering into their country home…   Manuel devises a plan to get rid of them and, in a few very funny scenes, breaks into the house during the week and sabotages many of the house’s comodities in a somehow childish hope that they will not come again. The novel, here, gets very intriguing (almost thriller like as we fear Manuel will be found out).   And the inevitable happens and for some reason, the nasties come back to the village during the week, on the wrong day, and Manuel does not realize they are there. They hear noise in Manuel’s house (he’s chopping wood) and are curious about it. They open one door and find him here, so completely unprepared that he chops his own leg with the axe. He can’t run away, he has been caught.   Manuel’s idyllic life abruptly comes to an end and he is taken to hospital, where he is sure that sooner or later police will break into his room and arrest him… but to our surprise none of this happens. After some days he feels confident and pays a visit to Madrid. He goes into a bank, into a government office, identifies himself but nothing happens either… It looks like no one cares about his identity.   After some research, the uncle finds out that the cop wasn´t killed at the incident with the screw driver, but that he was killed some time afterwards by another cop and that the police stopped looking for the guy who had harmed him with the screw driver as they never had any clues to follow. Ironically, Manuel was never looked for by the police. He might have stayed in Madrid, he didn’t need to escape in a hurry. But in the meantime the house of the nasties has been burned to the grounds because of one of his sabotages, and as he was away from the village no one suspects him. The nasties see it as a tragedy caused by themselves (they might have forgotten to switch off a boiler) and decide to abandon the house forever…   After this unexpected twist, Manuel realizes he can go back to the village and that he will be there alone again… He can go back to his life away from the mainstream, away from the need of buying and possessing things. In fact he has no desire at all to go back to his life before the incident with the police officer.

      • Fiction

        Sweet Introduction to Chaos

        by Marta Orriols

        Sweet Introduction to Caos, by Marta Orriols Full tex available in Catalan and Spanish German Rights sold to DTV   What happens to the pain that arises from a feeling that we didn't even know we harbored? What about the silence that is created around a desire that we cannot share and that we can only repress? Marta and Daniel have recently been a couple and react differently to the news of an unexpected pregnancy. For a week they will feel lost, walking in a limbo of doubts and indecisions that will make them rethink themselves as individuals and as a couple. In a world obsessed with resolutions, this story does not admit polarities and forces us to flee from mere black and white debates. And to stop and closely look at nuances and uncertainties. An invitation to swim in the sea of contradictions that the possibility of fatherhood and motherhood becomes. The will, instinct, freedom, social and political structures that affect our privacy are questioned here by the gaze of a man and a woman and the masterly skill of Marta Orriols when it comes to dissect intimacy and emotions.

      • Fiction in translation
        September 2020

        Alindarka's Children

        by Alhierd Bacharevič, Translated by Jim Dingley and Petra Reid

        Alindarka's Children (Dzieci Alindarkiis, 2014) is a contemporary novel about a brother and a sister interned in a camp. Here children are taught to forget their own language and speak the language of the colonizer, aided by the use of drugs as well as surgery on the larynx to cure the 'illness' of using the Belarusian language.   The children escape but are pursued by the camp leaders and left to thrive for themselves in this adventure, which bears a likeness to an adult, literary 'Hansel and Gretel'.   The dialogue translates well to the guttural differences between English Received Pronunciations and Scots. The Russian, translated by Jim Dingley, will become RP and the Belarusian, translated by Macsonnetries author Petra Reid, Scots. This novel has been translated and will be published in September 2020 thanks to the Pen Translates Award, won by Scotland Street Press in May 2019

      • Crime & mystery
        March 2013

        SEVERE

        by Régis Jauffret

        A love story. Despite the whips, the humiliations, the latex and the bullets.Severe is the author's fictionalised take on a sensational and tragic event: the murder of a rich banker by his lover, as recounted by her. Régis Jauffret makes the narrator's story entirely credible: every sentence carries her tortuous personality, and she gives a loving and far from conventional picture of the banker. A performance all the more remarkable as he might appear as the archetypical debauched millionaire. But Régis Jauffret does not moralise and he acknowledges no sins. He knows that love stories are private planets where the only valid laws are those that allow them to last.

      • Crime & mystery
        March 2013

        SEVERE

        by Régis Jauffret

        A love story. Despite the whips, the humiliations, the latex and the bullets.Severe is the author's fictionalised take on a sensational and tragic event: the murder of a rich banker by his lover, as recounted by her. Régis Jauffret makes the narrator's story entirely credible: every sentence carries her tortuous personality, and she gives a loving and far from conventional picture of the banker. A performance all the more remarkable as he might appear as the archetypical debauched millionaire. But Régis Jauffret does not moralise and he acknowledges no sins. He knows that love stories are private planets where the only valid laws are those that allow them to last.

      • Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945)
        August 2012

        The Knot in the Rug

        by Masoud Behnoud

        Masoud Behnoud’s The Knot in the Rug is an epic tale of life, love, loss and loyalty. The book’s heroine, a Persian princess named Khanoum, is forced to leave the comfort of her aristocratic Qajar home and flee for Europe. Born in 1900 Khanoum lives through massive upheavals of the twentieth century including the Second World War and the terrorist attacks of 9/11. Ever resourceful, she faces her ordeals with compassion, grace and a childlike sense of humour.

      • Crime & mystery
        October 1966

        The Exiled

        by Kati Hiekkapelto

        Anna Fekete returns to the Balkan village of her birth for a relaxing summer holiday. But when her purse is stolen and the thief is found dead on the banks of the river, Anna is pulled into a murder case. Her investigation leads straight to her own family, to closely guarded secrets concealing a horrendous travesty of justice that threatens them all. How long will it take before everything explodes? Chilling, taut and relevant, The Exiled is an electrifying, unputdownable thriller from one of Finland's most celebrated crime writers.

      • Crime & mystery
        January 2017

        Rupture

        by Ragnar Jonasson

        1955. Two young couples move to the uninhabited, isolated fjord of Hedinsfjörður. Their stay ends abruptly when one of the women meets her death in mysterious circumstances. The case is never solved. Fifty years later an old photograph comes to light, and it becomes clear that the couples may not have been alone on the fjord after all...In nearby Siglufjörður, young policeman Ari Thórtries to piece together what really happened that fateful night, in a town where no one wants to know, where secrets are a way of life. He’s assisted by Ísrún, a news reporter in Reykjavik,who is investigating an increasingly chilling case of her own. Things take a sinister turn when a child goes missing in broad daylight.With a stalker on the loose, and the town of Siglufjörðurin quarantine, the past might just come back to haunt them.Haunting, frightening and complex, Ruptureis a dark and atmospheric thriller from one of Iceland’s foremost crim

      • Thriller / suspense
        February 2017

        Cursed

        by Thomas Enger

        What secret would you kill to protect?When Hedda Hellberg fails to return from a retreat in Italy, where she has been grieving for her recently dead father, her husband discovers that his wife’s life is tangled in mystery. Hedda never left Oslo, the retreat has no record of her and, what’s more, she appears to be connected to the death of an old man, gunned down on the first day of the hunting season in the depths of the Swedish forests.Henning Juul becomes involved in the case when his ex-­‐wife joins in the search for the missing woman, and the estranged pair find themselves enmeshed both in the murky secrets of one of Sweden’s wealthiest families, and in the painful truths surrounding the death of their own son.With the loss of his son to deal with, as well as threats to his own life and to that of his ex-­‐wife, Juul is prepared to risk everything to uncover a sinister maze of secrets that ultimately leads to the dark heart of European history.Taut, chilling andunputdownable, Cursed is the fourth inthe internationally renowned series featuring conflicted, disillusioned by always dogged crime reporter Henning Juul, and marks the return of one of Norway’s finest crime writers.

      • Thriller / suspense
        May 2017

        Block 46

        by Johana Gustawsson

        Falkenberg, Sweden. The mutilated body of talented young jewellery designer, Linnea Blix, is found in a snow-swept marina. Hampstead Heath, London. The body of a young boy is discovered with similar wounds to Linnea's. Buchenwald Concentration Camp, 1944. In the midst of the hell of the Holocaust, Erich Hebner will do anything to see himself as a human again. Are the two murders the work of a serial killer, and how are they connected to shocking events at Buchenwald? Emily Roy, a profiler on loan to Scotland Yard from the Canadian Royal Mounted Police, joins up with Linnea's friend, French true-crime writer Alexis Castells, to investigate the puzzling case. They travel between Sweden and London, and then deep into the past, as a startling and terrifying connection comes to light. Plumbing the darkness and the horrific evidence of the nature of evil, Block 46 is a multi-layered, sweeping and evocative thriller that heralds a stunning new voice in French Noir. WINNER: Nouvelle Plume D’Argent 2016 For fans of The Missing, Dominique Manotti, Camilla Lackberg, Stieg Larsson

      • Thriller / suspense
        April 2017

        Faithless

        by Kjell Ola Dahl

        Oslo detectives Gunnarstranda and Frølich are back... and this time, it's personal... When the body of a woman turns up in a dumpster, scalded and wrapped in plastic, Inspector Frank Frølich is shocked to discover that he knows her... and their recent meetings may hold the clue to her murder. As he begins to look deeper into the tragic events surrounding her death, Frølich's colleague Gunnarstranda finds another body, and things take a more sinister turn. With a cold case involving the murder of a young girl in northern Norway casting a shadow, and an unsettling number of coincidences clouding the plot, Frølich is forced to look into his own past to find the answers - and the killer - before he strikes again. Dark, brooding and utterly chilling, Faithless is a breath-taking and atmospheric page-turner that marks the return of an internationally renowned and award-winning series, from one of the fathers of Nordic Noir.

      • Crime & mystery
        June 2017

        Wolves In The Dark

        by Gunnar Staalesen

        Reeling from the death of his great love, Karin, Varg Veum’s life has descended into a self-destructive spiral of alcohol, lust, grief and blackouts.When traces of child pornography are found on his computer, he’s accused of being part of a paedophile ring and thrown into a prison cell. There, he struggles to sift through his past to work out who is responsible for planting the material ... and who is seeking the ultimate revenge.When a chance to escape presents itself, Varg finds himself on the run in his hometown of Bergen. With the clock ticking and the police on his tail, Varg takes on his hardest –and most personal –case yet.Chilling, shocking and exceptionally gripping, Wolves in the Darkreaffirms Gunnar Staalesenas one of the world’s foremost thr

      • Fiction
        April 2018

        El Amo

        by Lébedeva, Victoria

        The Master is the work of a young and very promising Russian writer Victoria Lébedeva, who with is linked to the wave of “new sincerity”. Distanced from all kinds of dystopias, fantasies and others –ias in the conditional –what could it be if… - this generation, with a realistic attitude, re-explores the contradictory and fickle human nature that always holds surprises for authors and lovers of the novel psychological. A complicated ball of relationships between mothers and daughters, between mature and young people, human beings and pets, with an old animal in between and the inescapable and belated regret at the end ...

      • Fiction

        The Shortcut

        by Miquel Martín

        Published by Edicions del Periscopi (Catalan) English sample available   La drecera (The Shortcut), by Miquel Martín, has been the big surprise of the summer season. Published at the end of June it has been selling more and more since then and now it’s been in Catalan Bestsellers lists for weeks. This is a short novel about the passage from childhood to youth of the son of the housekeepers of a rich family that owns a large summer house in the region of Empordà (which might ring a bell because it is also the setting of Milena Busquets’s successful novel This Too Shall Pass).  In The Shortcut we see the evolution of this boy of 10, who still does not know anything about social boundaries and the scars that life leaves on adults, and who finishes the novel, at 13 or 14, having discovered some of the secrets, joys, wonders and resignations of the adult world.

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