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RESULTSSearching enCompass books for 'James Lasdun'... We found 5 matches.
James Lasdun
Besieged When an African dictator jails her husband, Shandurai goes into exile in Italy, studying medicine and keeping house for Mr Kinsky, an eccentric English pianist and composer. She lives in one room of his Roman palazzo. He besieges her with flowers, gifts, and music, declaring passionately that he loves her, would go to Africa with her, would do anything for her. 'What do you know of Africa?' she asks; then, in anguish, shouts, 'Get my husband out of jail!' The rest of the story deals with the implications of this scene, and leaves Shandurai with a choice.
WW Norton 1999 pbk £6.99 ISBN 0-39-332044-X
James Lasdun
The Horned Man Lawrence Miller, an English expatriate and professor of gender studies, tells the story of what appears to be an elaborate conspiracy to frame him for a series of killings. The reader is drawn into a world of subtly deceptive appearances where the persecutor and victim continually shift roles.
W W Norton 2002 hbk £17.65 ISBN 0-393-00336-1
Vintage 2003 pbk £6.99 ISBN 0-09-942835-0
James Lasdun
It's Beginning to Hurt The stories in this remarkable collection are vibrant, gripping and intricately worked, but they are more than simply small masterpieces of narrative art. James Lasdun's other great gift is his unfailing psychological instinct for the vertiginous moments when the essence of a life discloses itself. With forensic skill he exposes his characters' hidden desires and fears, drawing back the folds of their familiar self-delusions, their images of themselves, their habits and routines, to reveal them to themselves - and us - with brilliant clarity. In sharply evoked settings that range from the wilds of Northern Greece to the beaches of Cape Cod, these intensely dramatic tales chart the metamorphoses of their characters as they fall prey to the gamut of human passions. The lives in them see the with love, hate, desire, fear, tender corruption and cruel idealism. They rise to unexpected heights of decency, stumble into comic or tragic folly, they throw themselves open to lust, longing, paranoia - but they are always recognisably, illuminatingly, our lives.
Jonathan Cape 2009 hbk £16.99 ISBN 978-0224080903
James Lasdun
Landscape With Chainsaw The poet-author of Besieged explores the themes of exile, belonging, and the human relationship with the natural world in a collection of poetry inspired by the author's own life in the Catskill Mountains of New York.
W. W. Norton 2003 pbk £7.80 ISBN 0-393-32370-6
James Lasdun
Seven Lies Part political thriller, part meditation on the nature of desire and betrayal, Seven Lies tells the story of Stefan Vogel, a young man growing up in the former East Germany, whose yearnings for love, glory and freedom express themselves in a lifelong fantasy of going to America. The hopeless son of an ambitious mother and a kind but unlucky diplomat, Stefan lurches between his budding, covert interests - girls and Romantic poetry - to find himself embroiled in dissident politics, which oddly seems to offer both. In time, by a series of blackly comic and increasingly dangerous manoeuvres, he contrives to make his fantasy come true, finding himself not only in the country of his dreams, but also married to the woman he idolises. America seems everything he expected, and meanwhile his secrets are safely locked away behind the Berlin Wall. A new life of unbounded bliss seems to have been granted to him. And then that life begins to fall apart...
Jonathan Cape 2006 hbk £14.99 ISBN 0-224-07592-6
![]() Author photo: © The Random House Group
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