New books to hit the spot
TOUCHDOWN is a weekly selection of outstanding new titles: books either anticipated or surprising, just out of the carton! Follow the links for more information, to purchase these books or to have them put aside for you.
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6 March 2015
The Buried Giant by Kazuo Ishiguro $36.99
Ishiguro's first novel since Never Let Me Go is set in a post-Roman Britain where the forces of myth constantly assail the edges of the familiar and the faculty of memory is contended and uncertain. This is a very interesting and rather unusual book - one of the publishing highlights of the year.
"This amazing novel will take you on a journey as reader that will leave you wondering and contemplating the metaphorical cleverness of this author to talk about aging, loyalty, betrayal, peace and war in such an unusual setting. Ishiguro pulls off a masterpiece that a lesser author would have struggled with." - Stella
>> Neil Gaiman on this book.
>> Ishiguro blames his wife.
The Fish Ladder: A journey upstream by Katharine Norbury $37.00
Grief-stricken over a miscarriage and the re-opening of the wound of her own adoption, the author set out to walk various rivers upstream. As she moved from mouth to source, she found consolation in the natural world and a healing of her own wounds. If you loved H is for Hawk or Nature Cure, you will be keen to read this book.
"A beautiful, strange, intoxicating and utterly unique story." - Phillip Pullman
"Norbury’s writing achieves a lovely unobtrusive merging of emotion and description, so that the landscape reveals her feelings and in doing so shares her burden." - Guardian
A Lion in Paris by Beatrice Alemagna $39.99
A lion tires of life on the savannah and decides to go to Paris. He is disappointed when no-one pays him any attention, even when he roars on the Metro.
This large-format book is one of the most irresistibly beautiful picture books we have seen this year.
Whale Years by Gregory O'Brien $29.99
"Two poets on a headland, mid-survey / might pause suddenly and say / will this be your whale, or mine?"
Between 2011 and 2014, poet and artist Gregory O'Brien found himself following the migratory routes of whales and seabirds across vast tracts of the South Pacific Ocean, resulting in work that O'Brien describes as "acts of devotion - a homage to a series of remarkable locations and to the natural histories of those places".
The Age of Wire and String by Ben Marcus, illustrated by Catrin Morgan $37.00
"This excellent book is a sort of fictional encyclopedia of pretty much everything you don't understand about the world but were unable quite to pinpoint or to find words for your confusion. The book will certainly not help you to understand anything any better, but it will make your confusion immaculate and add to it dimensions of awe and beauty that you had hitherto not suspected. This new edition pairs Marcus's text with Morgan's equally obtuse and intriguing illustrations. Highly recommended." - Thomas
The Senate Intelligence Committee Report on Torture: Committee study of the Central Intelligence Agency's detention and interrogation program $39.99
"The Senate Intelligence Committee's report is a landmark in accountability. It is one of the most shocking documents ever produced by any modern democracy about its own abuses of its own highest principles." - The Guardian
William S. Burroughs: A life by Barry Miles $39.99
"I think that William Burroughs is the only American novelist living today who may conceivably be possessed by genius." - Norman Mailer
>> William Burroughs shoots William Shakespeare.
Fishes: A guide to their diversity by Philip A. Hastings $75.00
Showcases the anatomy and diversity of all 82 orders of fishes and more than 150 of the most commonly encountered families.
The Poet's Tale: Chaucer and the year that made The Canterbury Tales by Paul Strohm $39.99
Where were you in 1386? When the year began, Geoffrey Chaucer was a middle-aged bureaucrat and sometime poet, living in London and enjoying the perks that came with his close connections to its booming wool trade. When it ended, he was jobless, homeless, out of favour with his friends and living in exile. No wonder he started producing the great foundational text of English literature.
Death Sentences: Stories of deathly books, murderous booksellers and lethal literature from the world's best crime writers introduced by Ian Rankin $37.00
No mention of Page & Blackmore yet.
If I Fall, If I Die by Michael Christie $35.00
"An astonishing piece of work. Christie combines lyrical prose and true-to-life characters (and skateboarding) to craft a remarkable tale of mothers and sons, and what it means to grow up." - Philipp Meyer, author of The Son
A Walk in Paris by Salvatore Rubbino $29.99
Accompany a girl and her grandfather on a walk around Paris, the most beautiful city in the world. No lions.
"Just beautiful. I love this book!" - Sarah
The Umbrella by Ingrid and Dieter Schubert $29.99
A curious dog is caught by a gust of wind and rides an umbrella around the world in this charming wordless book. Guess where he ends up!
The Man Who Touched His Own Heart: True tales of science, surgery and mystery by Rob Dunn $49.99
The secret history of the human heart (the organ), from the first explorers to the latest discoveries.
Entanglements of Empire: Missionaries, Maori and the question of the body by Tony Ballantyne $39.99
From the establishment of the first mission in 1814, the physical body itself became the most contentious site of cultural engagement. Maori and missionaries struggled over issues of hygiene, tattooing, clothing, and sexual morality, and missionaries found it was difficult to maintain their own practices because of their dependence on Maori chiefly patrons as well as material constraints and social conflicts.
Worn Stories, Sartorial memoirs edited by Emily Spivack $46.00
Every piece of clothing tells a story. In this interesting book, a large number of people, many prominent, all with narrative talent, tell the stories behind an item they have worn or someone close to them has worn. If you loved Women in Clothes, this book is for you.
Girl in a Band by Kim Gordon $37.00
>> Sonic Youth: 'Kool'.
The Legend of Winstone Blackhat by Tanya Moir $38.00
In Winstone's imagination, the Kid and his partner ride through the Wild West on the trail of their quarry. In Winstone's actual life, he's had to abandon his 'partner' and is hiding out in the tough landscape of Central Otago. What has this boy run from, and how will the resilient and engaging twelve-year-old survive?
The Fire Sermon by Francesca Haig $29.99
In a world where everyone is born as a twin, the Alpha twins are elite and the Omega twins are cast out. But there is a strange interdependence between them, and things are not always as they seem...
"This is the first in a trilogy which will appeal to fans of The Hunger Games and Wool. There was a five-publisher fight for this one and the film rights have already been sold! And that's not surprising as the premise is great and I'm keen to get the next installment!" - Stella
Risk Wise: Nine everyday adventures by Polly Morland $29.99
Could any of us live in a world without risk, and would it be desirable to do so? Through a series of nine pen portraits, Polly Morland takes us on a journey through the world of risk, looking not at the extremes or exceptions, but at the routine risks we accept and embrace as part of our everyday lives, often unconsciously.
She Will Build Him a City by Raj Kamal Jha $37.00
"Don't let the lucid, lyrical grace of the prose fool you - this is a blistering, enthralling, barek-nuckle ride of a novel. Its revelations about the "New India" are explosive." - Neel Mukherjee, author of The Lives of Others
"The best novel from and about India that I have read in a long time." - Pankaj Mishra
The Pirates and the Nightmaker by James Norcliffe $19.99
To escape the cannibalistic impulses of some pirates, a boy is made invisible and given wings by a mysterious stranger. What is the price he must pay? As well as being a great magical adventure in its own right, this book provides the deep history of the Loblolly Boy.
Asians and the New Multiculturalism in New Zealand edited by Gautam Ghosh and Jacqueline Leckie $39.99
What kind of multicultural framework best suits New Zealand's rapidly expanding ethnic diversity? Can the Treaty of Waitangi - initially set up to accommodate British settlers and to recognise the tangata whenua - serve as the basis for New Zealand's immigration policy in the new millennium? Could all citizens embrace multiculturalism?
Five Things They Never Told Me by Rebecca Westcott $19.99
It's a glorious summer and Erin and Martha are both stuck at Oak Hill Home for the Elderly. Misunderstood and feeling ignored, they are equally frustrated by the situation. But as Erin learns to listen to Martha, she discovers some very important lessons about making her own voice heard.
Without You There is No Us: My secret life teaching the sons of North Korea's elite by Suki Kim $28.00
In 2011 and all universities in North Korea were shut down for an entire year, except for the all-male Pyongyang University of Science and Technology. Suki Kim got a job there, teaching English.
"This superb work of investigative journalism is distinguished by its grave beauty and aching tenderness." - Kiran Desai
Red, A crayon's story by Michael Hall $29.99
A blue crayon labelled 'red' suffers an identity crisis. He just can't be red no matter how hard he tries.
Daydreams for Night by John Southworth and David Ouimet $29.99
Meet the boy with grey hair who spends his days on a cargo ship peeling potatoes, a strange man who keeps a ferris wheel in his backyard, and a whale that lives in a man-made lake on the top of a faraway hill. Six short, strange tales with intriguing illustrations.
Outlaws of the Atlantic: Sailors, pirates and motley crews in the age of sail by Marcus Rediker $39.99
This book urns maritime history upside down, exploring the world of seafaring adventure, not from the perspective of admirals, merchants, and other builders of empire, but rather from the point-of-view of common people whose labors made that world possible: sailors, slaves, indentured servants, pirates, and other outlaws, whose formative experiences at sea are brought together for the first time. This book shows that important historical processes transpired on the vast, nationless commons called the sea: the rise of capitalism, the formation of race and class, and the creation, from below, of oppositional cultures that promised more just and democratic ways of life.
Small Bites: Tapas, mezze and other tasty morsels by Paul Gayler $45.00
Pick your way around the world.
Brand New: The shape of brands to come by Wally Olins $45.00
Analyses the problems facing today's organizations, criticizes corporate misbehaviour where he finds it, praises those companies who seem to be building and sustaining brands successfully in our brave new world, and predicts the future of branding. Olins has been lauded by The Financial Times as the world's leading practitioner of branding and identity.
The Teenage Brain: A neuroscientist's survival guide to raising adolescents and young adults by Frances E. Jensen $35.00
Helpful (the neuroscientist survives, the parents survive, the teenagers survive (and become lovely adults (and leave home))).
Spitting Blood: The history of tuberculosis by Helen Bynum $35.00
Mycobacterium tuberculosis and its human hosts have been together for a very long time, and the history of the disease is not merely a medical but a cultural one.
Fullmoon photographs by Darren Almond $130.00
Almond is a maestro of the difficult art of nocturnal nature photography.
Blood, Wine and Chocolate by Julie Thomas $35.00
Loyalty, betrayal, murder.... and merlot. There is no safe place from the Mob for Vinnie Whitney-Ross, not even on an idyllic New Zealand vineyard.
From the author of the runaway success The Keeper of Secrets.
The Maine Coon's Haiku, And other poems for cat lovers by Michael J. Rosen, illustrated by Lee White $$25.00
27 February 2015
Honeydew by Edith Pearlman $38.00
"Pearlman’s majestic, fleet-footed new collection is cause for celebration. The stories in Honeydew excel at capturing the complex and surprising turns in seemingly ordinary lives. In these stories, the point of view flits nimbly from character to character, allowing the reader to absorb the world from a bird’s-eye perspective. The result is like a diorama, simultaneously intimate and removed: We are able to observe both how these characters perceive the world and how the world perceives them. If Binocular Vision launched Pearlman, rightly, into the spotlight, Honeydew should cement her reputation as one of the most essential short story visionaries of our time." - The New York Times
'Little Black Classics' by various authors $2.99 each!
Short black anyone? To celebrate their 80th birthday, Penguin have published a mouthwatering selection of 80 extra-short classics by authors you've been meaning to read and by others you've yet to discover. Have one with a cup of coffee (it'll be cheaper than the coffee!).
"Where publishing meets public service." - The Guardian
>> Spin the dial to learn a little more, or spin by to learn a lot more and make your first selection.
He Wants by Alison Moore $25.00
The appearance of a childhood friend unsettles a widower's very ordinary life and causes him to confront a world in which his wishes are always compromised. A beautifully written exploration of loneliness and anxiety.
"Desires teem throughout the pages of this slim yet forceful second novel from the Man Booker prize-shortlisted author of The Lighthouse. Some are easy to fulfil yet others remain forever unattainable for the characters, and it is these that create the powerful poignancy." - Guardian
Aquarium by David Vann $38.00
A 12-year-old girl befriends an elderly man, who turns out to be her estranged grandfather, at the local aquarium. Will he be able to rejoin the family? How will the secret she learns change her relationship with her mother? How much of the past can be healed? Another powerful book from this fine author.
"Unlike Vann’s other novels, which exist in a closed system of violence and despair, this story offers redemption. Vann’s novels are striking, uncompromising portraits of American life; here is another exceptional example." - Kirkus
>> Vann speaks about the book.
The Ghost Estate by John Connell $35.00
The opportunities and demands of modern Ireland collide with the forces of the past as a young electrician gets involved in the restoration of a decrepit manor.
"Humane, incisive, witty and beautifully written." - Donal Ryan
The Letter for the King by Tonke Dragt $25.00
A truly remarkable children's classic, at last translated into English.
Tiuri must spend hours locked in a chapel in silent contemplation if he is to be knighted the next day. But, as he waits by the light of a flickering candle, he hears a knock at the door and a voice desperately asking for help. A secret letter must be delivered to King Unauwen across the Great Mountains - a letter upon which the fate of the entire kingdom depends. Tiuri has a vital role to play, one that might cost him his knighthood.
"Brilliant, extraordinary." - The Times
"Gripping, delightful." - The Guardian
In the Hands of Strangers, A memoir: A New Zealand childhood stolen by Beverly Wardle-Jackson $38.00
Beverly Wardle-Jackson was first removed from her family and taken into Child Welfare care in 1952 at the age of eight. Four years later she was permanently separated from her brothers and sisters and made a state ward. She spent the next five years being beaten and locked up in state-run children's homes, before she was eventually admitted to Porirua Hospital for so-called psychiatric treatment. She did not regain her freedom until she was 17, at which point she was pregnant. Now a grandmother in her sixties, Beverly has decided to share the story of her lost childhood.
The Child Poverty Debate: Myths, misconceptions and misunderstandings by Jonathan Boston and Simon Chapple $14.99
Before we can address the problem of child poverty we need to understand the context in which both the problem and the discussion occurs, and within which a solution must be forged.
>> Boston and Chapple's long book on the subject.
The Pilot and the Little Prince: The life of Antoine de Saint-Exupery by Peter Sis $29.99
Who better than the inimitable Peter Sis to conjure the sort of melancholy dreaminess and gravity-defying imagination found in The Little Prince in an exquisite pictorial biography?
Brick by William Hall $75.00
A stunning illustrated survey of the use of brick in all times and in all places, showing the versatility and decorative potentials of this often-overlooked but ubiquitous building material. An unexpectedly exciting book.
An Amorous Discourse in the Suburbs of Hell by Deborah Levy $27.00
She is a shimmering, tattooed and acerbic angel, flown from Paradise to save him from the suburbs of Hell. He, an accountant worn down by the day-to-day struggles of the nine to five, is dreaming of a white Christmas, a little garden and someone to love. She attempts, with scornful wit, to shock him out of his commuter's habits and into an experience of ecstasy.
A wide-ranging poetic discourse from the author of Swimming Home.
>> The Booker shortlistee speaks in a shed.
The Rabbit Back Literature Society by Pasi Ilmari Jaaskelainen $25.00
While investigating a virus affecting the plots of books in the local library, a teacher happens to write a children's story and is invited to become the tenth member of a mysterious literary society whose practices include physical violence and a disinhibiting drug called Yellow.
"This wonderfully knotty novel is a peculiar metafiction, a very grown-up fantasy masquerading as quirky fable. Unexpected, thrilling and absurd, it is primarily an irreverent exploration of the art of writing itself, of how far a tale can credibly stretch." - The Telegraph
The Fishermen by Chigozie Obioma $37.00
In a small town in western Nigeria, four young brothers use their strict father's absence from home to go fishing at a forbidden local river. The encounter a local madman who predicts that the oldest brother will be killed by another. This prophesy breaks their strong bond and unleashes a tragic chain of events of almost mythic proportions.
"Awesome in the true sense of the word: crackling with life, freighted with death, vertiginous both in its style and in the elemental power of its story. Few novels deserve to be called 'mythic', but Chigozie Obioma's The Fishermen is certainly one of them. A truly magnificent debut." - Eleanor Catton
Anatolia: Adventures in Turkish cooking by Somer Sivrioglu and David Dale $99.99
A sumptuously illustrated survey of this regional Turkish cuisine.
Havoc by Jane Higgins $26.00
The ceasefire is barely holding. Southside waits, with a kind of hope that feels like defeat. Then Cityside blows up the bridge. And amid the chaos and rubble Nik and Lanya are drawn into a complex web of power, fear and betrayal. Who is the girl found crying out from the bombed bridge? What is her connection to the secret experiments taking place at Pitkerrin Marsh? And why does she cry 'havoc'?
The Christchurch writer's sequel to her gripping YA dystopian novel The Bridge.
Creatures of a Day, And other tales of psychotherapy by Irvin D. Yalom $35.00
Given that we are going to die, how can we make life worthwhile? Yalom recounts his own and his patients' stories.
My Heart & Other Black Holes by Jasmine Warga $22.00
A YA book sensitively exploring depression and suicide. For fans of John Green.
Girls Will Be Girls: Dressing up, playing parts and daring to act differently by Emer O'Toole $38.00
Emer O'Toole is on a mission to re-write the old script and bend the rules of gender.
>> O'Toole on women and body hair.
Second Life by S.J. Watson $37.00
A chilling psychological thriller from the author of Before I Go to Sleep.
How well can you really know another person? And how far would you go to find out the truth about them? When Julia learns that her sister has been violently killed, she knows she must get to the bottom of things. Even if it means jeopardising her relationship with her husband and risking the safety of her son.
My Year Without Matches: Escaping the city in search of the wild by Clair Dunn $29.99
One woman's quest for belonging, to the land and to herself.
The Society of the Crossed Keys: Selections from the writings of Stefan Zweig (Inspirations for The Grand Budapest Hotel) by Stefan Zweig $27.00
Wes Anderson's enjoyable film has broadened interest in Zweig's writing. Anderson has curated this excellent introductory smorgasbord that resuscitates this once hugely popular writer.
Skin by Ilka Tampke $37.00
This novel vividly recreates the world and society of Iron Age Britain on the cusp of the Roman invasion.
Atlas of Adventures: A collection of natural wonders, exciting experiences and fun festivities from the four corners of the globe by Lucy Letherland $39.99
Letherland's quirky hand-drawn illustrations give this large-format book huge appeal. Visit the penguins of Antarctica, join the Carnival in Brazil, take a canoe safari down the Zambezi River!
The Prince by Vito Bruschini $37.00
The fictional life of Prince Ferdinando Licata, founding father of the Sicilian Mafia.
"A seamlessly intricate plot and with striking effects, dirty dealings and sullied passions. Red-hot action, but treated with epic mastery." - La Repubblica
One Thousand Things by Anna Kovecses $29.99
What do 1000 things look like?
The Flying Classroom by Erich Kastner $25.00
Martin's school is no ordinary school. There are snowball fights, kidnappings, cakes, a parachute jump, a mysterious man called 'No-Smoking' who lives in a railway carriage, and a play about a flying classroom. As the Christmas holidays draw near, Martin and his friends are preparing for the end-of-term festivities. But there are surprises, sadness and trouble on the way - and a secret that changes everything.
>> Such was the popularity of Emil and the Detectives that the Nazi's dared not suppress it, though they ruined Kastner's career and forced him to watch his books other being burned. Watch this.
After Hitler: The last days of World War Two in Europe by Michael Jones $39.99
From Hitler's suicide to Himmler's, this book gives a day-by-day account of the uneasy transition from war in Europe.
Coined: The rich life of money and how its history has shaped us by Kabir Sehgal $39.99
“Money may be an evolutionary substitute for energy.” - Sehgal
The War on Women in Israel: A story of religious radicalism and the women fighting for freedom by Elana Maryles Sztokman $49.99
Sztokman sees the increasing influence of the fundamentalist Orthodox Jewish faction as an assault on egalitarian principles in Israeli politics and society.
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