Bookbot

Graham Swift

    4 mai 1949

    Graham Swift est un auteur britannique, réputé pour ses explorations profondes de l'histoire, de la mémoire et de l'identité anglaises. Sa prose est souvent caractérisée comme lyrique et réfléchie, tissant sans couture le passé et le présent. Swift aborde magistralement les thèmes de la famille, de la perte et de la recherche de sens dans un monde en mutation. Ses œuvres offrent des aperçus profonds sur la condition humaine et les complexités du patrimoine national.

    Graham Swift
    England and Other Stories
    Out of This World
    Last Orders
    Learning to Swim and Other Stories
    Mothering Sunday
    Waterland
    • Waterland

      • 368pages
      • 13 heures de lecture

      Set in the bleak Fen Country of East Anglia, and spanning some 240 years in the lives of its haunted narrator and his ancestors, Waterland is a book that takes in eels and incest, ale-making and madness, the heartless sweep of history and a family romance as tormented as any in Greek tragedy. " Waterland, like the Hardy novels, carries with all else a profound knowledge of a people, a place, and their interweaving.... Swift tells his tale with wonderful contemporary verve and verbal felicity.... A fine and original work." --"Los Angeles Times"

      Waterland
      3,9
    • The Sunday Times bestseller - an intensely moving and beautifully written new novel from the Booker-prize winning author of Last Orders and Waterland

      Mothering Sunday
      3,9
    • Learning to Swim and Other Stories

      • 160pages
      • 6 heures de lecture

      'Graham Swift has shown that he has an authority - of style, characterization, grasp of life. These concentrated enigmatic stories address their subjects with such intelligent conviction and clarity that their ambiguities are not left to be stumbled on by the reader, but are challengingly displayed. They are like James's stories in the way they apply an almost scientific analytical cleverness to the things in life which are forever vague, painful or imponderable' Times Literary Supplement 'The ties that bind people, the good and bad things they do to each other, the happiness, embarrassment and the pain that they cause their friends, their partners, their children - these are Graham Swift's chief concerns. He has a wide range; he can be delicately sensitive or outrageously funny. He is a born storyteller' Daily Telegraph

      Learning to Swim and Other Stories
      3,7
    • Swift's latest novel explores friendship and love shaped by the past and fate, centered on four men fulfilling their friend Jack's last wishes. As they journey to scatter his ashes, they confront their shared history, revealing a tapestry of sorrow, passion, and regret, while reflecting on a changing England and enduring mortality.

      Last Orders
      3,7
    • Harry Beech, an aerial photographer, surveys his scarred memories - his career as a photojournalist, abruptly terminated; the death by terrorists of his father, and his marriage. Meanwhile, his daughter, Anna, tries to piece together the fragments of her life.

      Out of This World
      3,4
    • A collection of new stories from the Booker Prize-winning author of Last Ordersand Waterland

      England and Other Stories
      3,4
    • Tomorrow

      • 247pages
      • 9 heures de lecture

      On a midsummer's night Paula lies awake, Mike, her husband of twenty-five years asleep beside her, her two teenage children, Nick and Kate, sleeping in nearby rooms. The next day, she knows, she will reveal a secret that will redefine all their lives

      Tomorrow
      3,2
    • Ever After

      • 275pages
      • 10 heures de lecture

      Bill Unwin, in his 50s, looks back over his life and past. From his university rooms, he studies old family diaries from the mid-Victorian era. Excerpts from the diaries throw light on his own life - his feelings of hurt, revenge and family betrayal.

      Ever After
      3,4
    • The Sweet Shop Owner

      • 224pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      In the sweet shop Willy Chapman was free, absolved from all responsibility, and he ran his sweet shop like his life - quietly, steadfastly, devotedly. It was a bargain struck between Chapman and his beautiful, emotionally injured wife - a bargain based on unexpressed, inexpressible love and on a courageous acceptance of life's deprivation.

      The Sweet Shop Owner
      3,5
    • Here We Are

      • 208pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      The extraordinary new novel from the author of Mothering Sunday and winner of the Booker Prize

      Here We Are
      3,4