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Rupert Thomson

    5 novembre 1955
    Rupert Thomson
    Barcelona Dreaming
    The Insult
    Never Anyone But You
    Death of a Murderer
    This Party's Got to Stop
    Dreams of Leaving
    • Dreams of Leaving

      • 448pages
      • 16 heures de lecture
      3,8(4)Évaluer

      25th anniversary edition, with a new introduction by the author

      Dreams of Leaving
    • This Party's Got to Stop

      • 263pages
      • 10 heures de lecture
      4,0(40)Évaluer

      Wonderfully dark, relentlessly slippery ... I read this entire memoir with my breath held Julie Myerson, The Observer

      This Party's Got to Stop
    • An ordinary policeman spends a long and thoughtful night guarding the body of one of Britain's most notorious criminals

      Death of a Murderer
    • Based on actual events, NEVER ANYONE BUT YOU is the gripping, beautifully written story of a love affair between Suzanne Malherbe and Claude Cahun - two extraordinary women who not only smashed gender barriers, but also played an influential role in the Surrealist movement in Paris, and ultimately risked their lives resisting the Nazis.

      Never Anyone But You
    • The utterly engrossing and disturbing novel from the author of Divided Kingdom

      The Insult
    • Barcelona Dreaming

      • 224pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      3,6(56)Évaluer

      Set on the eve of the financial crash of 2008, Barcelona Dreaming is made up of three stories that are linked by time and place, and also by the moving, unexpected interactions of a rich cast of characters.

      Barcelona Dreaming
    • The Book of Revelation

      • 272pages
      • 10 heures de lecture
      3,7(1067)Évaluer

      In an edgy psychological thriller that is as mesmerizing as it is profound, Rupert Thomson fearlessly delves into the darkest realm of the human spirit to reveal the sinister connection between sexuality and power. Stepping out of his Amsterdam studio one April afternoon to buy cigarettes for his girlfriend, a dashing 29-year old Englishman reflects on their wonderful seven-year relationship, and his stellar career as an internationally acclaimed dancer and choreographer. But the nameless protagonist's destiny takes an unthinkably horrifying turn when a trio of mysterious cloaked and hooded women kidnap him, chain him to the floor of a stark white room to keep as their sexual prisoner, and subjected him to eighteen days of humiliation, mutilation, and rape. Then, after a bizarrely public performance, he is released, only to be held captive in the purgatory of his own guilt and torment: The realization that no one will believe his strange story. Coolly revelatory, meticulously crafted, The Book of Revelation is Rupert Thomson at his imaginative best.

      The Book of Revelation
    • A sculptor of the macabre. A sorcerer of wax. A criminal. A runaway. Zummo is exactly what the last great Medici ruler of Florence needs...

      Secrecy
    • It is winter, somewhere in the United Kingdom, and an eight-year-old boy is removed from his home and family in the middle of the night. He learns that he is the victim of an extraordinary experiment. In an attempt to reform society, the government has divided the population into four groups, each representing a different personality type. The land, too, has been divided into quarters. Borders have been established, reinforced by concrete walls, armed guards and rolls of razor wire. Plunged headlong into this brave new world, the boy tries to make the best of things, unaware that ahead of him lies a truly explosive moment, a revelation that will challenge everything he believes in and will, in the end, put his very life in jeopardy …

      Divided Kingdom
    • In the late 80s, Katherine Carlyle is created using IVF. Stored as a frozen embryo for eight years, she is then implanted in her mother and given life. By the age of nineteen Katherine has lost her mother to cancer, and feels her father to be an increasingly distant figure. Instead of going to college, she decides to disappear, telling no one where she has gone. What begins as an attempt to punish her father for his absence gradually becomes a testing-ground of his love for her, a coming-to-terms with the death of her mother, and finally the mise-en-scene for a courageous leap from false empowerment to true empowerment. Written in the beautifully spare, lucid and cinematic prose that Thomson is known for, Katherine Carlyle uses the modern techniques of IVF and cryopreservation to throw new light on the myth of origins. It is a profound and moving novel about where we come from, what we make of ourselves, and how we are loved.

      Katherine Carlyle