Bookbot

Lewis Jones

    Me, Myself and I
    The White South
    Japanese Red and Other Short Stories
    Le Docteur Jivago
    Three Sherlock Holmes Adventures
    The Mayor of Casterbridge
    • From its spectacular opening–the astonishing scene in which drunken Michael Henchard sells his wife and daughter to a passing sailor at a county fair–to the breathtaking series of discoveries at its conclusion, The Mayor of Casterbridge claims a unique place among Thomas Hardy’s finest and most powerful novels. Rooted in an actual case of wife-selling in early nineteenth-century England, the story build into an awesome Sophoclean drama of guilt and revenge, in which the strong, willful Henchard rises to a position of wealth and power–only to suffer a most bitter downfall. Proud, obsessed, ultimately committed to his own destruction, Henchard is, as Albert Guerard has said, “Hardy’s Lord Jim…his only tragic hero and one of the greatest tragic heroes in all fiction.

      The Mayor of Casterbridge1979
      4,4
    • « Ma charmante, mon inoubliable ! Tant que les creux de mes bras se souviendront de toi, tant que tu seras encore sur mon épaule et sur mes lèvres, je serai avec toi. Je mettrai toutes mes larmes dans quelque chose qui soit digne de toi, et qui reste. J'inscrirai ton souvenir dans des images tendres, tendres, tristes à vous fendre le cœur. Je resterai ici jusqu'à ce que ce soit fait. Et ensuite je partirai moi aussi. »

      Le Docteur Jivago1978
      3,9
    • A 22,000 ton whaling ship steams into a broken plain of white, glimmering ice during the howling fury of an Antarctic gale. What madness drives the ship forwards, deeper and deeper into the ice until its jagged edges hold her fast? Marooned amidst the pitiless, frozen wastes, the crew of the Southern Cross make a desperate attempt to survive against the odds.

      The White South1977