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Translated by Lara Vergnaud
'Stops you in your tracks' Mona Eltahawy, author of The Seven Necessary Sins for Women and Girl
'Fatima Daas’s impressive debut novel has the urgency of well-made cinéma vérité' Alev Adil, TLS >
'Rarely have I read a novel about identity that demands its readers sit with contradictions & complexity this much' Bad Form >
'I tore through this incredible work of art in one sitting'
Abdi Nazemian, author of
Like a Love Story
Drawn from the author’s experiences growing up in a Paris banlieue, this
powerful, prize-winning debut explores the diverse, often conflicting
facets of her identity — French, Algerian, Muslim, lesbian.
Paperback £8.99 | Ebook £6.99
Istanbul 1593. In the final episode of the chronicles, The Ruzgär has inadvertently released an ancient demon. As it now lurks within the bowels of the city, unaware by everyone including Murad III, Sultan of the Ottoman Empire, he brings friend and foe to Istanbul, to convene the world’s grandest trade fair.
From Rehan Khan comes the third and final instalment of the
The Chronicles of Will Ryde & Awa Maryam Al-Jameel.
Translated by Lara Vergnaud
'Stops you in your tracks' Mona Eltahawy, author of The Seven Necessary Sins for Women and Girl
'Fatima Daas’s impressive debut novel has the urgency of well-made cinéma vérité' Alev Adil, TLS >
'Rarely have I read a novel about identity that demands its readers sit with contradictions & complexity this much' Bad Form >
'I tore through this incredible work of art in one sitting'
Abdi Nazemian, author of
Like a Love Story
Drawn from the author’s experiences growing up in a Paris banlieue, this
powerful, prize-winning debut explores the diverse, often conflicting
facets of her identity — French, Algerian, Muslim, lesbian.
Paperback £8.99 | Ebook £6.99
Istanbul 1593. In the final episode of the chronicles, The Ruzgär has inadvertently released an ancient demon. As it now lurks within the bowels of the city, unaware by everyone including Murad III, Sultan of the Ottoman Empire, he brings friend and foe to Istanbul, to convene the world’s grandest trade fair.
From Rehan Khan comes the third and final instalment of the
The Chronicles of Will Ryde & Awa Maryam Al-Jameel.
Growing up in 70s Brighton, teenager Naseem's (Naz’s) life is made hell by his father, a moody, bitter, often violent man, disappointed at what life has brought him and envious of his son’s youth and freedom. Inspired by his favourite teacher, Mr ‘Easy’ Easton, Naz escapes from a reality he has little control over by reading books. But with the onset of adolescence, Naz begins a journey of discovery.
With new friends and interests – fashion, music, girls – he begins to taste a freedom he’s never known. But as Naz moves further from his family, conflict is inevitable.
Paperback £10.99 | Ebook £6.99
‘... if Agard had not already been forged in the roller-coaster aftermath of empire, there would be an urgent need for society
to invent someone like him.’ Financial Times
John Agard’s stories reveal hidden truths that subtly change our view of
who we are and where we come from. Surreal and playful, this tongue-in-cheek collection of short stories sends up imperial myths.
Hardback £14.99 | Ebook £7.99
After World War Two England was on her knees, so the call went out to
the British Empire for volunteers to help rebuild the ‘Mother Country’.
Young men and women from different Caribbean islands were quick to
respond, paying the considerable sum of Twenty-Eight Pounds Ten Shillings to board HMT Empire Windrush – the ‘ship of dreams’ that would take them to their new
The motives and back-stories of these West Indian people is a key part of
the Windrush story, one that has never been fully told. This powerful
narrative reveals what happened on board that ship, which was packed
with young, excited people who had never before left their parents, their
parishes – let alone their islands.
Paperback £9.99 | Ebook £5.99
'Deftly weaves the tales of the diaspora into his work' Gary Younge
'Riveting sensitive snapshots of inner city London life'
Yvonne Brewster
'A writer inspired by the idea and realities of Africa and the African diaspora'
Margaret Busby
'Elegiac snapshots with.. subtle epiphanies' Maya Jaggi,
in The Guardian >
From the critically acclaimed author of Duppy Conqueror, comes The Black and White Museum, a collection of both highly personal and universal short stories, revealing the emotional drama of faded love, the loss of individual and shared memory and the wistful longing for home.
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