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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8 January 2015
All the Bright Places by Jennifer Niven $18.99
Theodore Finch is fascinated by death, and he constantly thinks of ways he might kill himself. But each time, something good, no matter how small, stops him. Violet Markey lives for the future, counting the days until graduation, when she can escape her Indiana town and her aching grief in the wake of her sister's recent death. When Finch and Violet meet on the ledge of the bell tower at school, it's unclear who saves whom. And when they pair up on a project, both Finch and Violet make more important discoveries. It's only with Violet that Finch can be himself—a weird, funny, live-out-loud guy who's not such a freak after all. And it's only with Finch that Violet can forget to count away the days and start living them. But as Violet's world grows, Finch's begins to shrink. For fans of John Green.
"I'm reading this right now and you are so going to love Finch & Violet." - Stella
Loitering: New and collected essays by Charles D'Ambrosio $38.00
'This powerful collection highlights D'Ambrosio's ability to mine his personal history for painful truths about the frailty of family and the strange quest to understand oneself, and in turn, be understood." - Publishers Weekly
"Charles D'Ambrosio’s essays are excitingly good. They are relevant in the way that makes you read them out loud, to anyone who happens to be around. Absolutely accessible and incredibly intelligent, his work is an astounding relief—as though someone is finally trying to puzzle all the disparate, desperate pieces of the world together again." - Jill Owens, Powell's
Waitangi Day, The New Zealand story: What it is and why it matters by Philippa Werry $25.00
Aimed at younger readers, but excellent for the whole family, this book looks at the rich and fraught history behind our national day.
An Untamed State by Roxanne Gay $36.99
The kidnapping of a young woman in Haiti releases the brutality not only of her kidnappers but of a society riven with inequality and abuse.
"Breathless, artful, disturbing and original. I won't ever forget it." - Meg Wolitzer (author of The Interestings)
"An Untamed State is a gem, blasted into beauty by the world's harshest conditions." - Bookforum
"Gripping and brilliant." - John Green
"Unflinching." - Guardian
Love, And other perishable items by Laura Buzo $25.00
From the moment 15-year-old Amelia gets an after-school job at the local supermarket she is sunk, gone, lost, head-over-heels in love with Chris. Chris is the funny, charming, man-about-Woolies - but he's 21 and in his final year at university. The six- year age gap may as well be a hundred. Chris and Amelia talk about everything from Second Wave Feminism to Great Expectations and Alien, but will he ever look at her in the way she wants him to?
Love in Small Letters by Francesc Miralles $25.00
When Samuel wakes up on 1st January, he is convinced that the year ahead will bring nothing exciting or unusual - until a strange visitor bursts into his flat, determined not to leave. The appearance of Mishima, a young stray cat, leads Samuel to a strange encounter with Valdemar and his neighbour Titus, with whom he had previously never exchanged a word, and is the beginning of the incredible transformation that is about to occur in the secluded world he has built around himself.
Humans: An A-Z by Matt Haig $17.00
Make the most of your time on Earth. This book will show you how to make the best of everything from high-level interactions to casual visits.
"Astonishing." - Stephen Fry
Did you read The Humans?
Under Suspicion ('Friday Barnes' #2) by R.A. Spratt $19.99
Friday Barnes, girl detective, is back, with more mysteries and perplexities to solve! Perfect school holiday reading.
Where Chefs Eat: A guide to chefs' favourite restaurants, 2015 by Joe Warwick $39.99
More than 600 of the world's leading chefs list their favourite places to eat, from neighbourhood eateries to high-end restaurants.
Five Minutes Alone by Paul Cleave $38.00
Back in the police force and with his wife Bridget out of hospital, Tate looks to be getting his life on track. Meanwhile, his former detective partner Carl Schroder is finding life a little more challenging. The bullet he took in the head six months ago hasn't killed him...but it's left him with time on his hands. When the body of a convicted rapist is found, obliterated by an oncoming train, and other criminals begin to disappear, it seems somebody might be helping their victims exact revenge...
The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks by E. Lockhart $19.99
Tells of the life and transformation of Frankie Landau-Banks who began her teenage years as a quiet member of the Debate Club and grew to become a sixteen-year-old criminal mastermind with an attitude to match.
From the author of the excellent We Were Liars.
The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins $37.00
Rachel catches the same commuter train every morning. She knows it will wait at the same signal each time, overlooking a row of back gardens. She's even started to feel like she knows the people who live in one of the houses. 'Jess and Jason', she calls them. Their life - as she sees it - is perfect. If only Rachel could be that happy. And then she sees something shocking. It's only a minute until the train moves on, but it's enough. Now everything's changed. Now Rachel has a chance to become a part of the lives she's only watched from afar. Now they'll see; she's much more than just the girl on the train.
"The Girl on the Train has more fun with unreliable narration than any chiller since Gone Girl." - The New York Times
Radio Benjamin by Walter Benjamin $39.99
An excellent introduction to this hugely influential critic, essayist and philosopher (1892-1940): an eclectic collection of texts written for radio broadcast.
Wanted! Ralfy Rabbit, Book Burglar by Emily MacKenzie $19.99
Some rabbits dream about lettuces and carrots, others dream of flowering meadows and juicy dandelions, but Ralfy dreams only of books. In fact, he doesn't just dream about them, he wants to read them ALL THE TIME. Soon his obsession sends him spiralling into a life of crime.
The Paris Review, 211 $29.99
Includes an interview with Austrian filmmaker Michael Hanneke and a tantalising excerpt from the forthcoming fourth volume of Karl Olaf Knausgaard's self-obsessed epic 'My Struggle'.
Epilogue: A memoir by Will Boast $35.00
When Will Boast's father dies he is alone in the world: an American with distant English roots, orphaned, and derailed by grief. Everything he thought he knew about his parents unravels when he discovers he has two half-brothers living in England. Boast sets about piecing together a new sense of himself, attempting as he does to understand, forgive and heal the mistakes of his father's past.
“Family tragedy leads to almost unbearable darkness but also renewal and hope for a young man in this excellent memoir… Boast writes with unsparing clarity, in precisely observed domestic scenes that reveal mountains of unspoken feeling. A finely wrought, wrenching yet lyrical study of a family that lives on past its seeming end.” - Publishers Weekly
Knit Your Own Farm by Sally Muir and Joanna Osborne $25.00
Useful.
Peace and Conflict by Irene Sabatini $26.00
Ten-year-old Robert has questions. Is his neighbour, Monsieur Renoir, really evil? Why did he leave a Victoria Cross medal on Robert's doorstep? And why has his Zimbabwean Auntie Delphia disappeared?
"One of the most engaging novels about inter-racial love to be published this century. Entertaining, ambitious and packed with news from elsewhere, leavened by the precious optimism of youth. Don't miss it." - Independent
Far As the Eye Can See by Robert Bausch $37.00
A heart-stopping epic journey across the Great Plains during the events that led up to Custer's Last Stand.
"Robert Bausch has produced a funny, intelligent, poignant novel that courageously explores the fundamental truths in all our lives." - New York Times
Taming the Tiger Parent: How to put your child's well-being first in a competitive world by Tanith Carey $35.00
A welcome corrective to the parent-driven hyper-achievement trend afflicting modern childhood.
Life on the Edge: The coming of age of quantum biology by Jim Al-Khalili and Johnjoe McFadden $38.00
"Life on the Edge gives the clearest account I've ever read of the possible ways in which the very small events of the quantum world can affect the world of middle-sized living creatures like us. With great vividness and clarity it shows how our world is tinged, even saturated, with the weirdness of the quantum." - Philip Pullman
See You in Paradise by J. Robert Lennon $25.00
Bizarre, darkly funny and disconcerting, this collection of stories explores the surreal that lurks in everyday life. Deftly blending the everyday at its most uncanny with smatterings of sci-fi, these fourteen stories probe moments when family members move apart, or drift back together, when dreams crumble and convictions falter, moments when suddenly things fall in to place from a new perspective.
From the author of the excellent Familiar.
First They Killed My Father: A daughter of Cambodia remembers by Loung Ung $35.00
Until age five, Loung Ung lived in Phnom Penh, one of seven children of an educated, high-ranking government official. When the Kymer Rouge stormed the city in 1975, the young girl and her family fled from village to village. Fighting to hide their identity, the Ungs eventually were forced to separate to survive. Loung was trained as a child soldier in a work camp for orphans. Half her family died in labour camps by execution, starvation, and disease.
Five Billion Years of Solitude: The search for life among the stars by Lee Billings $26.00
"Graceful. The best book I have read about exoplanets, and one of the few whose language approaches the grandeur of a quest that is practically as old as our genes." - New York Times
Rush Hour: How 500 million commuters survive the daily journey to work by Iain Gately $37.00
Interesting study of the commuting phenomenon and its subcultures. (How many commuters don't survive the journey?)
The Pearl That Broke its Shell by Nadia Hashimi $25.00
“Nadia Hashimi has written, first and foremost, a tender and beautiful family story. Her always engaging multigenerational tale is a portrait of Afghanistan in all of its perplexing, enigmatic glory, and a mirror into the still ongoing struggles of Afghan women.” — Khaled Hosseini, author of And the Mountains Echoed and The Kite Runner
Train: Riding the rails that created the modern world, from the Trans-Siberian to the Southwest Chief by Tom Zoellner $26.00
"Highly entertaining, lucid and perceptive....It's a train lover's celebration of the great epic story of rail travel itself."- Los Angeles Times
Stuffocation: Living more with less by James Wallman $37.00
Materialism makes us unhappy. What to do?
>> Wallman here.
Chickens by Ernest Goh $49.99
"The experience of photographing these birds made me realise how our perception of animals could be changed simply by getting to know them as individuals." - Ernest Goh
The State vs. Nelson Mandela: The trial that changed South Africa by Joel Joffe $29.99
On 11 July 1963, a seemingly harmless dry cleaning van drew up outside a rural farm near Johannesburg, South Africa. Within seconds, heavily armed police had burst out and arrested the entire high command of the armed wing of the African National Congress (ANC). Together with the already imprisoned Nelson Mandela, they were put on trial and charged with conspiring to overthrow the apartheid government by violent revolution. Their expected punishment was death. In this compelling book, their defence attorney, Joel Joffe, gives a blow-by-blow account of the most important trial in South Africa's history.
Bizarre Scotland: Discover the country's secrets and surprises by David Long $37.00
The world's longest man-made echo, a city where aliens are welcome, what the Royals really think of it, Britain's weirdest wig, the worst Scottish accents ever, the tallest hedge and oldest tree, Loch monsters nastier than Nessie, a road you can roll up, Scots in Space, Ruthven or Ruthven? Britain's loneliest bus stop (and its loveliest), a school for spies, the cost of burning witches, an aeroplane made from seaweed, and why the Queen needs rubber gloves.
2 January 2015
The Strange Library by Haruki Murakami, designed by Chip Kidd $39.99
Chip Kidd's American edition has a very different feel from the edition designed by Suzanne Dean, but is just as wonderful.
See How Small by Scott Blackwood $26.99
"A genre-defying novel of powerful emotion, intrigue, and truth. Reminiscent of Alice Sebold’s The Lovely Bones and based on a similar, still-unsolved 1991 case in Austin, Tex., Blackwood explores the effects of senseless crime on an innocent, tightly knit community, using deft prose to mine the essence of human grief and compassion." - Publishers' Weekly
"This lyrical, abstract novel may haunt literary fiction readers long after the unsettling ending." - Library Journal
The UnAmericans by Molly Antopol $35.00
"The stories are as satisfying as individual novels. They'll make you nostalgic, not just for earlier times, but for another era in short fiction: a time when writers such as Bernard Malamud, and Issac Bashevis Singer and Grace Paley roamed the earth." - Meg Wolitzer (author of The Interestings)
"First-rate short stories." - The Telegraph
River Cottage: Light and Easy, Healthy recipes for every day by Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall $59.99
Dairy-free, wheat-free and delicious!
The Bone Dragon by Alexia Casale $18.00
“Casale’s dazzling debut begins with a sick girl who, when presented with a fragment of her own rib, carves it into the shape of a dragon. And then it just gets stranger. A haunting portrayal of damage, resilience and revenge, and one of the finest novels of the year – in any category. Beautifully written, poetic and haunting." - Financial Times
"An outstanding book that vividly portrays the power and fragility of the human heart and mind." - The Guardian
My Hiroshima by Junko Morimoto $19.99
On 6 August, 1945, 13-year-old Junko Morimoto's life was changed forever. That was the day that an atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, the Japanese city where she lived. She tells her story in this beautiful, poignant and hopeful book.
Confessions of a Sociopath: A life spent hiding in plain sight by M.E. Thomas $25.00
M. E. Thomas is a high-functioning non-criminal sociopath. She is charismatic, ambitious and successful. You would be charmed by her if you met her. You would not realise that she is studying you to find your flaws, that she is ruthlessly manipulative, has no empathy and does not feel guilt or remorse. But she does like people - she likes to touch them, mould them and ruin them. She could be your friend or your boss. She could be you.
"Gripping and important. Revelatory." - Jon Ronson (author of The Psychopath Test), New York Times
A Different Class of Murder: The story of Lord Lucan by Laura Thompson $35.00
On 7 November 1974, a nanny named Sandra Rivett was bludgeoned to death in a Belgravia basement. A second woman, Veronica, Countess of Lucan, was also attacked. The man named in court as perpetrator of these crimes, Richard John Bingham, 7th Earl of Lucan, disappeared in the early hours of the following morning. The case, solved in the eyes of the law, has retained its fascination ever since. Why?
Redeployment by Phil Klay $25.00
Winner of the US National Book Award - now in paperback.
"In Klay's hands, Iraq comes across not merely as a theatre of war but as a laboratory for the human condition in extremis." - New York Times
"Redeployment is the real thing - a vivid and vital battery of war stories that does not rely soley on its subject matter for impact (although, make no mistake, the subject certainly has impact)." - Guardian
"One of the great story collections of recent times." - Colum McCann
"Stunning, upsetting, urgently necessary." - Karen Russell
Trout Fishing in America by Richard Brautigan $25.00
We are pleased that Brautigan's incomparable novels and story collections, bursting with zany imagination and shot through with wistful melancholy, are being reissued. In this book he uses the theme of trout fishing to thread together a series of observations and critiques of mainstream American culture that range from wry to devastating.
The Fanaticism of the Apocalypse: Save the earth! Punish human beings! by Pascal Bruckner $37.00
Is ecological catastrophism preventing us from solvable problems and injustices?
Deep Blue ('Waterfire Saga' #1) by Jennifer Donnelly $19.99
"Percy Jackson with mermaids!" - The Bookseller
British Pop Invasion edited by Alan J. Whiticker $59.99
Fifty years ago British music burst onto the world stage. This book is stuffed with rarely seen photos from the early 1960s.
On holiday? Come in and choose a jigsaw puzzle.
On holiday? Come in and choose a jigsaw puzzle.

19 December 2014
Where I'm Reading From: The changing world of books by Tim Parks $35.00
Should you finish every book you start? How has your family influenced the way you read? What is literary style? How is the Nobel Prize like the World Cup? Why do you hate the book your friend likes? Is writing really just like any other job? What happens to your brain when you read a good book? What makes Tim Parks always thoughtful and a pleasure to read?
Men Explain Things to Me, And other essays by Rebecca Solnit $29.99
Rebecca Solnit's essay 'Men Explain Things to Me' has become a touchstone of the feminist movement, inspired the term 'mansplaining', and established Solnit as one of the leading feminist thinkers of our time - one who has inspired everyone from radical activists to Beyonce Knowles. Collected here in print for the first time is the 2008 essay itself, along with the best of Solnit's feminist writings.
Meet Me in the Square: Christchurch, 1983-1987 by David Cook $49.99
After the earthquake of 22 February 2011, photographer David Cook returned to his former hometown and found the central city irreparably damaged. He was inspired to unearth his archive of 6000 photographs of the city he'd shot as a young man in his twenties, rebuilding through images the city as he remembered it.
"These are excellent. This is the Christchurch of the early 1980s as I remember it. I haven't found myself in the background of any of the photographs yet, though." - Thomas
Severed: A history of heads lost and heads found by Frances Larson $49.99
A wide-ranging and enjoyable history of decapitation.
"Larson is a riveting storyteller, and tells a gripping, very human account of an inhumane act." - Guardian
Owls: A guide to the world's favourite bird by Matt Sewell $27.99
A charming book of idiosyncratic paintings and descriptions of 50 owl species.
I Think I Can See Where You're Going Wrong, And other wise and witty comments from Guardian readers edited by Marc Burrows and illustrated by the wonderful Tom Gould $29.99
A collection of the wittiest, wisest, most bonkers of the Guardian readers' comments on every subject from food (mostly quinoa), ethics (mostly guilt), politics (mostly angry), travel (mostly skiing), sport (mostly banter), sex and drugs (mostly awkward), culture (mostly harmless) and blocked comments and abuse (mostly baffling).
The Farmer and the Clown by Marla Frazee $24.00
A baby clown is separated from his family when he accidentally bounces off their circus train and lands in a lonely farmer's vast, empty field. The farmer reluctantly rescues the little clown, and over the course of one day together, the two of them make some surprising discoveries about themselves, and about life.
The Penguin Knitting Book by James Norbury $26.00
A 1957 classic with huge appeal, re-issued for discerning retro-knitters.
The Ministry of Guidance Invites You Not to Stay: An American family in Iran by Hooman Majd $30.00
We have an idea of the texture of life in Paris or Rome, but what is the texture of life like in Tehran? How do you get a driving license? Or secure an account with a discreet and reputable liquor dealer? And how on earth do you explain to an official that your son was indeed born just a month after your marriage?
"Fascinating." - Independent
"A sympathetic and nuanced picture of a complex society too often misinterpreted by the outside world." - Telegraph
Hooked: How to build habit-forming products by Nir Eyal $37.00
Dangerous. The book everyone in Silicon Valley is talking about, apparently.
The Emerald Light in the Air by Donald Antrim $35.00
"A complex and powerfully emotive collection that tackles psychological derangement with elegance and grace." - Guardian
"The most underrated quality in fiction nowadays is intelligence; the most overrated, imagination. Donald Antrim possesses both." - The New York Times
Exodus: Immigration and multiculturalism in the 21st century by Paul Collier $30.00
As people from poorer countries move to richer countries, what effects does this migration have on the social and economic texture of both?
"Exodus is an important book and one I have been waiting to read for many years. It is a work that is humane and hard-headed about one of the greatest issues of our times." - Sunday Times
Lingo: A language-spotter's guide to Europe by Gaston Dorren $29.00
Combining linguistics and cultural history, Gaston Dorren takes us on an intriguing tour of the continent, from Proto-Indo-European (the common ancestor of most European languages) to the rise and rise of English, via the complexities of Welsh plurals and Czech pronunciation. Along the way we learn why Esperanto will never catch on, how the language of William the Conqueror lives on in the Channel Islands and why Finnish is the easiest European language.
Love and War in the Yurt: Poems by Panni Palasti and music by Gabor Tolnay and Simon Williams $25.00
Just in this afternoon! The recording of a very memorable performance at Nelson's Free House Yurt. Palasti's mesmerising poems are perfectly complemented by two sensitive and accomplished musicians.
Back to Back by Julia Franck $27.00
The story of a brother and a sister caught in the tide of the Cold War in East Berlin.
"Like an expert geologist, Franck is digging deep into her family's extraordinary history creating things of beauty from its dark recesses. Diamond-hard and full of glittering prose, Back to Back is a powerful and moving book." - Sunday Telegraph
Winner of the Independent Foreign Fiction Award, 2014.
Elsa Schiaparelli by Meryle Secrest $55.00
Biography of the woman who was the Queen of Fashion during the 1920s and 1930s.
The Gardener's Son by Cormac McCarthy $25.00
Screenplay from the taut 1976 Emmy award-winning film, now available in printed form.
The Art of Stillness: Adventures in going nowhere by Pico Iyer $19.00
"A beautifully argued case for the unexpected pleasures of 'sitting still as a way of falling in love with the world and everything in it,' revealed through one man’s sincere record of learning to 'take care of his loved ones, do his job, and hold on to some direction in a madly accelerating world.'” - Brain Pickings
His Father's Will by Suzanne Clark $29.99
The year is 1896, and young Will is his father’s constant companion as the family struggles to make a living on a stubborn pioneer farm. Then fate strikes an unkind blow, and life changes in ways that the Tyrrell family could not have imagined.
Local author Suzanne Clark's novel draws on her family history.
May the Stars Drip Down by Jeremy Chatelain and Nikki McClure $28.00
A lullaby inspired by nature and the bond between parent and child.
>> Meet the paper cut artist.
Nelson Arts Guide, 2015 $20.00
Who's who, where's where and what's what in the arts in Nelson.
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