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Graham Swift

    4 mai 1949

    Graham Swift est un auteur britannique, réputé pour ses explorations profondes de l'histoire, de la mémoire et de l'identité anglaises. Sa prose est souvent caractérisée comme lyrique et réfléchie, tissant sans couture le passé et le présent. Swift aborde magistralement les thèmes de la famille, de la perte et de la recherche de sens dans un monde en mutation. Ses œuvres offrent des aperçus profonds sur la condition humaine et les complexités du patrimoine national.

    Graham Swift
    Waterland
    20 Under 35
    Waterland and Last Orders
    Twelve Post-War Tales
    Cambridge Literature: Learning to Swim
    Making An Elephant
    • Making An Elephant

      • 448pages
      • 16 heures de lecture

      Brand New!! Re-check ISBN before Purchase

      Making An Elephant
      4,0
    • Cambridge Literature: Learning to Swim

      And Other Stories

      • 223pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      Cambridge Literature is a series of literary texts edited for study by students aged 14–18 in English-speaking classrooms. It will include novels, poetry, short stories, essays, travel-writing and other non-fiction. The series will be extensive and open-ended and will provide school students with a range of edited texts taken from a wide geographical spread. It will feature writing in English from various genres and differing times. Learning to Swim by Graham Swift is edited by Richard Hoyes, Head of Sixth Form at Farnham College.

      Cambridge Literature: Learning to Swim
      3,8
    • Twelve Post-War Tales

      • 320pages
      • 12 heures de lecture

      Graham Swift's latest fiction explores profound themes of memory, loss, and the passage of time, weaving together intricate narratives that reflect on personal and collective histories. His masterful storytelling invites readers to delve into the complexities of human relationships and the impact of choices on life’s trajectory. With rich character development and evocative prose, the novel promises to engage and resonate deeply with its audience, showcasing Swift's signature style and literary prowess.

      Twelve Post-War Tales
      3,9
    • In Waterland, Tom Crick, a history teacher in the Fenlands, is driven by a marital crisis and the provocation of one of his pupils to forsake his teaching and relate the story of his family, who have lived in the Fens since the eighteenth century. In Last Orders, four men once close to jack Dodds, a London butcher, meet to carry out his peculiar last wish: to have his ashes scattered into the sea. For reasons best known to herself, Jack's widow, Amy, declines to join them. On the surface the tale of a simple if increasingly bizarre day's outing, Last Orders is Graham Swift's most poignant exploration of the complexity and courage of ordinary lives.

      Waterland and Last Orders
      3,9
    • 20 Under 35

      Original Stories by Britain's Best New Young Writers

      • 336pages
      • 12 heures de lecture

      A collection of short stories by young British writers, this provides an introduction to the work of Iain Banks, Peter Benson, H.S. Bhabra, James Buchan, Patricia Ferguson, Ronald Frame, Patrick Gale, Carlo Gebler, James Lasdun, Deborah Levy, Adam Lively, Aidan Mathews, Candia McWilliam, Geoff Nicholson, Tim Parks, Philip Ridley, Joan Smith, Rupert Thomson, Daisy Waugh and Mathew Yorke. Many of these have already received critical acclaim. The collection is introduced by Graham Swift, author of "Waterland" and "Out of this World".

      20 Under 35
      3,5
    • Waterland

      • 368pages
      • 13 heures de lecture

      Set in the bleak Fen Country of East Anglia, and spanning some 240 years in the lives of its haunted narrator and his ancestors, Waterland is a book that takes in eels and incest, ale-making and madness, the heartless sweep of history and a family romance as tormented as any in Greek tragedy. " Waterland, like the Hardy novels, carries with all else a profound knowledge of a people, a place, and their interweaving.... Swift tells his tale with wonderful contemporary verve and verbal felicity.... A fine and original work." --"Los Angeles Times"

      Waterland
      3,9
    • The Sunday Times bestseller - an intensely moving and beautifully written new novel from the Booker-prize winning author of Last Orders and Waterland

      Mothering Sunday
      3,9
    • Learning to Swim and Other Stories

      • 160pages
      • 6 heures de lecture

      'Graham Swift has shown that he has an authority - of style, characterization, grasp of life. These concentrated enigmatic stories address their subjects with such intelligent conviction and clarity that their ambiguities are not left to be stumbled on by the reader, but are challengingly displayed. They are like James's stories in the way they apply an almost scientific analytical cleverness to the things in life which are forever vague, painful or imponderable' Times Literary Supplement 'The ties that bind people, the good and bad things they do to each other, the happiness, embarrassment and the pain that they cause their friends, their partners, their children - these are Graham Swift's chief concerns. He has a wide range; he can be delicately sensitive or outrageously funny. He is a born storyteller' Daily Telegraph

      Learning to Swim and Other Stories
      3,7
    • Set in Southeast England, friendship and love among a group of men whose lives have been intertwined since World War II. When one dies, the survivors are brought together and are forced to take stock of the paths their lives have taken, by choice and by accident, since the war. Winner of the 1996 Booker Prize.

      Last Orders
      3,7
    • Harry Beech, an aerial photographer, surveys his scarred memories - his career as a photojournalist, abruptly terminated; the death by terrorists of his father, and his marriage. Meanwhile, his daughter, Anna, tries to piece together the fragments of her life.

      Out of This World
      3,4
    • A collection of new stories from the Booker Prize-winning author of Last Ordersand Waterland

      England and Other Stories
      3,4
    • Tomorrow

      • 247pages
      • 9 heures de lecture

      On a midsummer's night Paula lies awake, Mike, her husband of twenty-five years asleep beside her, her two teenage children, Nick and Kate, sleeping in nearby rooms. The next day, she knows, she will reveal a secret that will redefine all their lives

      Tomorrow
      3,2
    • Ever After

      • 275pages
      • 10 heures de lecture

      Bill Unwin, in his 50s, looks back over his life and past. From his university rooms, he studies old family diaries from the mid-Victorian era. Excerpts from the diaries throw light on his own life - his feelings of hurt, revenge and family betrayal.

      Ever After
      3,4
    • Shuttlecock

      • 224pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      Prentis, the narrator of this nightmarish novel, catalogs "dead crimes" for a branch of the London Police Department and suspects that he is going crazy. His files keep vanishing. His boss subjects him to cryptic taunts. His family despises him. And as Prentis desperately tries to hold on to the scraps of his sanity, he uncovers a conspiracy of blackmail and betrayal that extends from his department and into the buried past of his father, a war hero code-named "Shuttlecock"--and, lately, a resident of a hospital for the insane.

      Shuttlecock
      3,4
    • The Sweet Shop Owner

      • 224pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      In the sweet shop Willy Chapman was free, absolved from all responsibility, and he ran his sweet shop like his life - quietly, steadfastly, devotedly. It was a bargain struck between Chapman and his beautiful, emotionally injured wife - a bargain based on unexpressed, inexpressible love and on a courageous acceptance of life's deprivation.

      The Sweet Shop Owner
      3,5
    • Here We Are

      • 208pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      The extraordinary new novel from the author of Mothering Sunday and winner of the Booker Prize

      Here We Are
      3,4
    • A triumphant return to form from the Booker Prize-winner. On an autumn day in 2006, on the Isle of Wight, Jack Luxton, former Devon farmer and now the proprietor of a seaside caravan park, receives the news that his soldier brother Tom, not seen for years, has been killed in Iraq. For Jack and his wife Ellie this will have a potentially catastrophic impact. For Jack in particular it means a crucial journey-to receive his brother's remains, but also into his own most secret, troubling memories and into the land of his and Ellie's past. Wish You Were Here is both a gripping account of things that touch and test our human core and a resonant novel about a changing England. Rich with a sense of the intimate and the local, it is also, inescapably, about a wider, afflicted world. Moving towards an almost unbearably tense climax, it allows us to feel the stuff of headlines - the return of a dead soldier from a foreign war - as heart-wrenching personal truth.

      Wish You Were Here
      3,3
    • Sarah is in prison. Every fortnight she is visited by George, the private eye she employed to observe the final stage of her husband's affair. The visits - and the days between - lead George back into Sarah's past and into events he can picture only too well

      The Light of Day
      3,3
    • »Man liest dieses Buch und möchte mit Swift sofort befreundet sein.« The Washington Times Am Anfang steht der geheime Wunsch, Schriftsteller zu werden. Das Studium in Cambridge muss warten, vorher zieht es den jungen Graham Swift raus in die Welt: Rucksackreisen in Krisengebiete, in der Tasche 50 Pfund für fünf Monate, genug, um das Schicksal herauszufordern. Erste Höhen kommen früh, erste Tiefen auch. ›Einen Elefanten basteln‹ ist der in Essays, Interviews und Gedichten nachgezeichnete Weg eines Schriftstellers, der in seinen Büchern ‒ auch in diesem ‒ stets das Terrain des Bekannten verlässt, um sich hinaus ins Unbekannte zu wagen, die einzige Sicherheit: seine Vorstellungskraft. »Literatur ist ein Impfstoff, der uns vor jenen Seuchen beschützt, wie die Realität sie erzeugen kann. Aber wie alle echten Impfstoffe wirkt auch dieser nur, wenn er Spuren der Seuche selbst enthält, ein Extrakt dessen, dem er sich entgegenstellt.« Graham Swift

      Einen Elefanten basteln
      3,5
    • Was je maar hier / druk 1

      • 382pages
      • 14 heures de lecture

      Als een Engelse campingeigenaar bericht krijgt dat zijn broer als militair in Irak is gesneuveld, denkt hij terug aan zijn jeugd die zij samen op de familieboerderij hebben doorgebracht.

      Was je maar hier / druk 1
      3,4
    • Wasserland

      • 406pages
      • 15 heures de lecture
      Wasserland
    • Wärst du doch hier. Roman

      • 424pages
      • 15 heures de lecture

      Inmitten eines Sturms reflektiert Jack Luxton über seine Ehe, Familie und die Herausforderungen seiner Zeit. Die Geschichte untersucht, wie gesellschaftlicher Wandel das menschliche Wesen beeinflusst und die Grundlagen der Existenz erschüttert und neu gestaltet.

      Wärst du doch hier. Roman
    • Alias "Federball"

      • 227pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      In London des Jahres 1977 lebt und arbeitet Mr. Prentis, der 32jährige Archivar einer Polizeiabteilung. Er ist mit seinem Leben unzufrieden. Tagsüber fühlt er sich von seinem Chef beobachtet und gequält, abends reizt ihn das Verhalten von Kindern und Frau, so daß er am liebsten zuschlagen möchte, bissartig wird, wo er Liebe bezeigen will. Prentis ahnt, daß sein Leben von Gründen beeinflußt wird, die in tieferen Regionen liegen

      Alias "Federball"
    • Fens, nízko položená oblasť východného Anglicka. Odvodnená krajina, ktorú kedysi tvorila voda a ktorá ešte ani dnes nie je celkom pevnou zemou. Realizmus, fatalizmus, flegma. To je krajina, do ktorej autor zasadil svoj sugestívny príbeh. Swift skonštruoval svoje dielo na troch hlavných rovinách. Prvú tvoria osobné zážitky hrdinu Toma, podávané ako spomienky na mladosť, na roky dospievania a prvé erotické zážitky s dcérou miestneho farmára ústiace v tragédiu zapríčinenú slabomyseľnosťou jeho staršieho brata Dicka. V druhej rovine sa autor zamýšľa nad zmyslom dejín, nad ich výkladom a postojom človeka k nim. V tretej rovine je to fascinujúca a bohatá história Fens, ako sa odráža na osudoch dvoch rodín, sedliackej a podnikateľskej, a na životných príbehoch typických postáv, dopĺňajúci miestny kolorit. Realistický obraz života zaostalého kraja, izolovaného od ostatného sveta, je spestrený iróniou a miestami priam šibeničným humorom.

      Krajina vôd