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Jeremy Gavron

    Jeremy Gavron ist der Autor von sechs Büchern, darunter die Romane 'The Book of Israel', Gewinner des Encore Award, und 'An Acre of Barren Ground'; sowie 'A Woman on the Edge of Time', ein Memoiren über den Selbstmord seiner Mutter. Er lebt in London und unterrichtet am MFA-Programm des Warren Wilson College in North Carolina.

    Felix Culpa
    The Book of Israel
    A Woman on the Edge of Time
    Dämmerung im Reich der Elefanten
    • 2018

      Felix Culpa

      • 208 Seiten
      • 8 Lesestunden

      What happens when we lose the narrative of our own life, and fall into someone else's? Felix Culpais a work of extraordinary literary alchemy: a novel made out of lines taken from a hundred great works of literature. It follows a writer on the trail of a boy recently released from prison, who has been discovered dead in the cold north, frozen and alone. But in searching for the boy's story, will he lose his own?

      Felix Culpa
    • 2016

      A Woman on the Edge of Time

      • 272 Seiten
      • 10 Lesestunden
      4,0(14)Abgeben

      Chosen as an Observer 'Book of the Year' by Ali Smith, Rachel Cooke and Jackie Kay In 1965, Hannah Gavron - a bright, sophisticated young writer and wife to a rising entrepreneur - gassed herself in Primrose Hill, north London. She left behind a suicide note, two small children, and an about-to-be-published manuscript: The Captive Wife. Jeremy Gavron was the youngest of Hannah's children, just four years old when she killed herself. In this searching examination of the events that led to her suicide, he pieces together - from letters, diaries and the memories of old friends - a picture of a brilliant but complex young woman grappling to find an outlet for her intelligence and sexuality as she carved out her place in a man's world.

      A Woman on the Edge of Time
    • 2003

      The Book of Israel

      • 288 Seiten
      • 11 Lesestunden

      By bringing out the comic and quotidian in 130 years of Jewish history, Jeremy Gavron paints a wonderfully fresh and convincing portrait of a dissipating identity.

      The Book of Israel