Bookbot

Tennant Emma

    20 octobre 1937 – 20 janvier 2017

    Emma Tennant s'est imposée au début des années 1970 comme l'une des principales figures britanniques de la "nouvelle fiction". Son œuvre se caractérise par son originalité et une approche très personnelle, mêlant avec brio réalisme et fantaisie. Tennant emploie la parodie et la réécriture, explore la nature de la fiction et expérimente avec les conventions génériques, incorporant souvent des éléments de science-fiction. Son style unique offre aux lecteurs des récits hautement imaginatifs et inventifs.

    Tennant Emma
    Burnt Diaries
    Heathcliff's Tale
    The Last of the Country House Murders
    Queen of Stones
    How to garden : when you're new to gardening
    The House of Hospitalities
    • Let the RHS guide you through the surprisingly simple steps to creating a garden you can enjoy with your friends, and even show off to them. Are you surrounded by weeds? Is your lawn forlorn? Are the bushes deceased? Fear not! How To Garden When You're New To Gardening shows you the basics to get your green space under control and keep it that way. With the expertise of the RHS, this book gives simple step by step instructions, with clear images to help you build your dream garden, no matter the size and scale

      How to garden : when you're new to gardening
    • Queen of Stones

      • 160pages
      • 6 heures de lecture
      3,0(5)Évaluer

      On the weekend of October 17 1981, a party of girls who had set out on a sponsored walk from Beaminster became separated from their leader and disappeared into the worst fog ever recorded on the west coast of Dorset. For days search parties of anxious parents and police failed to trace the girls. Those that returned, finally, could give no coherent account of their strange exile from home. '"Lord of the Flies" was a book of this kind.' "Observer" 'A compulsively readable work of the imagination.' Elaine Feinstein, "Times" 'A delicate interweaving of Hansel and Gretel, Goldilocks, and 'Good Queen Bess'... its somber moods and haunting melodies give it a power beyond the range of mere intellect.' "Literary Review"

      Queen of Stones
    • The Last of the Country House Murders

      • 160pages
      • 6 heures de lecture
      2,0(3)Évaluer

      In England after the Revolution, the 'Last of the Country House Murders' is planned--by the Government. The murder of Jules Tanner, aesthete and survivor of the old regime, is to be decked out as a tourist attraction. Haines, once the school sneak, now the compliant Government agent, has the task of selecting possible murderers and arranging a suitably exciting crime...

      The Last of the Country House Murders
    • For a specific description of this book, please see each individual seller offering.

      Heathcliff's Tale
    • Burnt Diaries

      • 240pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      3,5(28)Évaluer

      This title is Emma Tennant's memoir set mostly during the 70s, in which she shares the experience of her affair with Ted Hughes while she was editor of the literary magazine "Bananas". She offers perceptions of the writers who contributed to her magazine, including Angela Carter and J.G. Ballard.

      Burnt Diaries
    • Two Women of London

      • 136pages
      • 5 heures de lecture
      2,9(12)Évaluer

      'You can't imagine what it's like when your youth comes back - and beauty, and more... I found out that if I took the pills I could turn - just like that - into the person I had been. Yes, into me! Eliza! Where had I gone? Who had I been?' Emma Tennant's brilliant re-imagining of Robert Louis Stevenson tells of an impoverished single mother at the bitter end of her tether, who finds dark pharmaceutical means to revive her looks and career ambitions. This splitting of personality, however, leads to disintegration and murder. 'Fascinating.' Financial Times 'Brilliant... Wittily worked out, perceptive of modern m ores and values.' Times Literary Supplement 'Reminiscent of Muriel Spark at her very darkest and very best.' Scotland on Sunday

      Two Women of London
    • "'...I met the sad menopausee and offered her, at the flick of a switch, a return of beauty, youth, and desire. And - after all, I'm no stinge-merchant - power and money as well. Why not? If a man, such as Dr Faustus, was offered such commodities by myself... why not a woman, in this age of equality?'" Emma Tennant's modern-day reworking of the Faust legend describes a young woman's dark discovery of just what befell her kindly long-lost grandmother.

      Faustine
    • A House In Corfu

      • 240pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      3,2(147)Évaluer

      A House in Corfu is the story of one of the most beautiful places on earth, still astonishingly unspoilt, on the west coast of Corfu. Full of colour and contrast, A House in Corfu shows the huge changes in island life since the time of the building of the house, and celebrates, equally, the joy of belonging to a timeless world;

      A House In Corfu
    • Felony

      The Private History of The Aspern Papers

      2,5(22)Évaluer

      "Felony" is about the misdemeanours inherent in writing; theft, false memory, plagarism and greed for celebrity. It demonstrates the embarrassment and shame suffered by those who steal from and exploit others in their quest, but who go on and do it all the same.

      Felony