The city of Vukovar, situated on Croatia's easternmost periphery, across the Danube River from Serbia, was the site of some of the worst violence in the wars that rocked ex-Yugoslavia in the early '90s. It is referred to only as the city throughout this taut political thriller from one of Europe's most celebrated young writers. In this city without a name, fences in schoolyards separate the children of Serbs from those of Croats, and city leaders still fight to free themselves from violent crimes they committed--or permitted--during the war a generation ago. Now, it is left to a new generation--the children, now grown up, to extricate themselves from this tragic place, innocents who are nonetheless connected in different ways to the crimes of the past.
Nora is a journalist assigned to do a puff piece on the perpetrator of a crime of passion--a Croatian high school teacher who fell in love with one of her students, a Serb, and is now in prison for having murdered her husband. But Nora herself is the daughter of a man who was murdered years earlier under mysterious circumstances. And she wants, if not to avenge her father, at least to bring to justice whoever committed the crime. There's a hothouse intensity to this extraordinary noir page-turner because of how closely the author sets the novel within the historical record. This city is unnamed, the story is fictional, so it can show us what actually happened there.
From the ingenious author of Jennifer Government and Lexicon a brilliant work of science fiction that tells the intimate tale of four people facing their most desperate hour--alone, together, at the edge of the universe.
An astonishing novel! Providence is Philip K. Dick and William Gibson fueled by pure adrenaline (with a bit of Spielberg and Ridley Scott thrown in). The brilliant, unstoppable imagination of Max Barry glows on every page of this action-filled, yet emotionally resonant, tale. It will keep you riveted from first page till last. I read in one sitting and I guarantee you'll do the same.--Jeffery Deaver
The video changed everything. Before that, we could believe that we were safe. Special. Chosen. We thought the universe was a twinkling ocean of opportunity, waiting to be explored.
Afterward, we knew better.
Seven years after first contact, Providence Five launches. It is an enormous and deadly warship, built to protect humanity from its greatest ever threat. On board is a crew of just four--tasked with monitoring the ship and reporting the war's progress to a mesmerized global audience by way of social media.
But while pursuing the enemy across space, Gilly, Talia, Anders, and Jackson confront the unthinkable: their communications are cut, their ship decreasingly trustworthy and effective. To survive, they must win a fight that is suddenly and terrifyingly real.
As a child, acclaimed author Edwidge Danticat was terrified by Carnival festivities - until 2002, when she returned home to Haiti determined to understand the lure of this famed event. Here she chronicles her journey to the coastal town of Jacmel, where she met with the performers, artists, and organizers who re-create the myths and legends that bring the festival to life. In the process, Danticat traces the heroic and tragic history of the island, from French colonists and Haitian revolutionaries to American invaders and home-grown dictators. Part travelogue, part memoir, part historical analysis, this is the deeply personal story of a writer rediscovering her country, along with a part of herself--and a wonderful introduction to Haiti's southern coast and to the beauty and passions of Carnival.
La isla del tesoro es sinónimo de emoción y libertad. Robert Louis Stevenson apenas rebasaba la treintena cuando la publicó en 1881, y no podía imaginar que su creación se iba a convertir en un éxito que marcaría para siempre las vidas de varias generaciones de lectores, ni que Jim Hawkins y John Silver el Largo se convertirían en unos personajes tan míticos como los célebres piratas Barbanegra o William Kidd. Esta obra nos transporta a una infancia feliz y evoca todo lo que se espera de una novela de aventuras: tesoros escondidos, motines, tabernas, canciones, y olor a mar, pólvora y ron.
La Ilíada de Homero no solo marca el comienzo de la literatura griega, sino también el de la cultura occidental tal y como la conocemos. Literalmente, nuestro mundo sería diferente si Homero no hubiera existido. El genial bardo ciego retrata con maestría la guerra de Troya, las hazañas de los contendientes y las rencillas entre los dioses con una intensidad y una fuerza que todavía conmueven.
Grandes esperanzas, considerada como la mejor obra del gran novelista inglés Charles Dickens, contiene muchos elementos autobiográficos del autor, aderezados con su delicioso manejo de la ironía, el misterio, la sátira social y el retrato costumbrista. Conmovedora historia de uno de los grandes personajes de la literatura inglesa surgidos de la mente de uno de sus mejores creadores.