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Katie Hickman

    L'écriture de Katie Hickman explore les thèmes du voyage, de la culture et de la connexion humaine. Sa prose se caractérise par des descriptions vivantes des lieux et une profonde perspicacité dans la vie intérieure de ses personnages. Elle tisse magistralement l'expérience personnelle avec des observations sociales plus larges, offrant aux lecteurs un voyage captivant et réfléchi. L'œuvre de Hickman invite à la contemplation sur la complexité du monde et notre place en son sein.

    Courtesans
    Daughters of Britannia
    Travels with a Mexican Circus
    Dreams of the Peaceful Dragon
    Brave Hearted
    La porte aux oiseaux
    • La porte aux oiseaux

      • 450pages
      • 16 heures de lecture

      Constantinople, 1599. Une délégation de marchands anglais s’apprête à remettre au sultan une extraordinaire horloge mécanique, présent de la reine Elizabeth. Parmi eux, Paul Pindar, secrétaire de l’ambassadeur, porte depuis deux ans le deuil de sa fiancée Celia Lamprey, perdue en mer. Un jour, il apprend la présence, derrière les murs interdits du harem, d’une jeune femme ressemblant en tous points à son amour perdu. Se pourrait-il que Celia soit encore en vie ? Au sérail, une impitoyable lutte pour le pouvoir oppose la mère du sultan et sa favorite. Le chef des eunuques noirs a été emprisonné. Celia, devenue Kaya, tente de survivre au milieu des intrigues, ne sachant à qui se fier dans cet univers clos dont la beauté et la sensualité dissimulent des pièges mortels. La situation devient encore plus dangereuse lorsqu’elle apprend que Paul se trouve lui aussi à Constantinople. Des siècles plus tard, Elizabeth Staveley, qui fait des recherches pour sa thèse de doctorat, découvre dans une bibliothèque d’Oxford un fragment de manuscrit concernant Celia. Tout de suite, elle se passionne pour le sort de cette jeune captive anglaise, comme si un lien mystérieux les unissait. Sa quête la mènera jusqu’à Istanbul, vers les labyrinthes secrets du harem de Topkapi où une histoire tombée dans l’oubli depuis quatre cents ans attend d’être enfin racontée.

      La porte aux oiseaux
      3,4
    • Brave Hearted

      • 400pages
      • 14 heures de lecture

      The extraordinary, dramatic story of the women of the American west: the women who crossed the plains and the mountains in covered wagons, the indigenous women living on the land, the women who came to work in the gold mining cities. Brave hearted women - an amazing cast of characters brought to life by this wonderful storyteller

      Brave Hearted
      4,3
    • Dreams of the Peaceful Dragon

      • 192pages
      • 7 heures de lecture

      Katie Hickman, author of the best–selling Daughters of Britannia, offers a captivating record of her travels through the forbidden Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan.

      Dreams of the Peaceful Dragon
      3,3
    • Travels with a Mexican Circus

      • 368pages
      • 13 heures de lecture

      A vivid potrayal of pre-drug-ravaged Mexico through the lens of a small circus.

      Travels with a Mexican Circus
      3,4
    • Daughters of Britannia

      • 352pages
      • 13 heures de lecture

      "The reverse of stuffy" is how one British reviewer characterized Katie Hickman's portrait of English diplomatic wives. Unstuffy it is. Hickman, whose writing is graceful and sprightly, describes the unusual and often difficult lives of Foreign Service spouses. Tracking these feisty transplants from the 17th century to the present, she shows how these very significant others coped with everything from tropical epidemics to kidnappings to small household budgets. Warm-weather reading.

      Daughters of Britannia
      3,7
    • Courtesans

      Money, Sex and Fame in the Nineteenth Century

      • 384pages
      • 14 heures de lecture

      This title tells of the extraordinary lives and times of a small group of women who, during the course of the 19th century, rose from impoverished obscurity to become some of the most powerful, independent and wealthy women the world had ever seen. These were women who took control of their lives - and those of other people - and made the world do their will.

      Courtesans
      3,5
    • The House at Bishopsgate

      • 448pages
      • 16 heures de lecture

      Wonderfully sinister ... Hickman is a born storyteller. Hugely enjoyable The Times

      The House at Bishopsgate
      3,2
    • In a small town on the Italian coast, a mysterious woman washes ashore. She is crippled, mute, and clutches a bundle to her chest-a baby the townspeople insist is a real-life mermaid. It can only bring bad luck; they pay a troupe of acrobats to carry mother and child away. In the bustling trade center of Venice, merchant Paul Pindar is the subject of his colleagues' concern. Since his return from Constantinople, they have found him changed; raging over the loss of his beloved, Celia, he has gambled away his fortune at the gaming tables. But when a priceless blue diamond surfaces in the city, Pindar recognizes the opportunity to regain everything he has lost-including, perhaps, the woman he loves. A celebrated writer of history and travel books, Katie Hickman has always been a master of evoking time and place. With The Pindar Diamond, her follow-up to The Aviary Gate, she brings early-seventeenth-century Italy vividly to life, and also demonstrates her maturity as a novelist. A tale of love and avarice, with a touch of the mystical, The Pindar Diamond is rich with historical detail, and unfolds with urgency and grace. It is accomplished, wholly satisfying historical fiction.

      The Pindar Diamond
      3,3