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Sue Gee

    1 janvier 1947

    L'écriture de Sue Gee explore la tapisserie complexe des relations humaines, en sondant la vie intérieure de ses personnages avec une profonde sensibilité. Sa prose se caractérise par une perspicacité psychologique aiguë, attirant profondément les lecteurs dans les paysages émotionnels qu'elle crée. Gee examine fréquemment des thèmes tels que la mémoire, l'identité et la recherche de sens dans le quotidien, démontrant une capacité unique à saisir les subtiles complexités de l'expérience. Sa voix distinctive offre une perspective convaincante sur les aspects durables de la condition humaine.

    The last guests of the season
    Letters from Prague
    The Mysteries of Glass
    The Hours of the Night
    Earth and Heaven
    Trio
    • Northumberland: the winter of 1937. In a remote moorland cottage, Steven Coulter, a young history teacher, is filled with sadness and longing at the death of his wife. Through a charismatic colleague, Frank Embleton, and Frank's sister, Diana, he is drawn into the beguiling world of a group of musicians, and falls gradually under their spell. But as war approaches a decision is made which calls all their lives quite shockingly into question.Moving between the beauty and isolation of the moors, a hill-town school and a graceful old country house, Trio delicately explores conscience and idealism, romantic love and most painful desire. Throughout it all, the power of music to disturb, uplift and affirm is unforgettably evoked.

      Trio
    • Earth and Heaven

      • 416pages
      • 15 heures de lecture
      3,9(89)Évaluer

      'In this beautiful novel, Sue Gee... has dared to take on a difficult, grief- stricken period of English history, and done so with sensitivity and understanding; EARTH AND HEAVEN is the clever, compelling result' The Times schovat popis

      Earth and Heaven
    • The Hours of the Night

      • 320pages
      • 12 heures de lecture
      3,8(24)Évaluer

      Gillian Traherne and her mother Phoebe lead a remote existence in their grey, stone house on the Welsh borders. Gillian is a loner, an eccentric poet in her thirties, who has a difficult relationship with her very different mother: a well-known and expert gardener. Into their strange and secluded world, described with beautifully observed detail, come strangers from London to disrupt life as Gillian knows it. But with the joy of the love that she is to discover, will also come the pain and suffering of experience and the stark realities of the adult world.

      The Hours of the Night
    • The Mysteries of Glass

      • 320pages
      • 12 heures de lecture
      3,9(186)Évaluer

      'THE MYSTERIES OF GLASS casts its own spell, which is the essential requirement of a novel' The Times

      The Mysteries of Glass
    • Letters from Prague

      • 302pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      3,8(45)Évaluer

      During the summer of 1968, Harriet is working in London and meets and falls in love with Karel, a Czech student. But he returns home at the time of the Russian invasion. Now, 20 years on, Harriet takes her ten-year-old daughter on an overland journey to Czechoslovakia, to rediscover her first love.

      Letters from Prague
    • A novel which explores the darker side of family life. When two English families travel to Portugal on holiday together, unexpected tensions and conflicts arise. As events move towards tragedy, no one sees who is to be the real victim. By the author of "Visits to My Sister" and "Keeping Secrets".

      The last guests of the season
    • Coming Home

      • 448pages
      • 16 heures de lecture
      3,3(87)Évaluer

      Set against the backdrop of post-war Britain in 1944, the narrative follows an English couple returning from India as they navigate their new reality. The story explores themes of displacement and adaptation, reflecting on how the couple confronts the changes in their homeland and their personal identities. With echoes of Penelope Lively's storytelling style, the book delves into the complexities of family dynamics and the impact of historical events on individual lives.

      Coming Home
    • Friends since university, with busy working lives now behind them, Dido and Georgia have long been looking forward to books and outings, conversation and carefree days. Alas: life is rarely as one wishes it to be, and both find themselves caught up in wholly unexpected domestic drama. Dido, for the first time, has cause to question her marriage; widowed Georgia is certain her husband will return to her. Meanwhile, an eccentric country cousin goes wildly off the rails, children are unhappy in love, and perfect health is all at once in question. Turning to one another should be as natural as breathing, but with so much at stake even this old friendship comes under strain. As hatches are battened down, and silence falls, it takes all their loyalty and humour to recover the easy confiding intimacy of the past.

      Reading in bed
    • Author Sue Gee explores the wellspring of creativity and practice of twelve prominent but various writers, including Penelope Lively and Anna Burns.

      Just You and the Page