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Nicola Barker

    30. März 1966
    Nicola Barker
    Darkmans
    Burley Cross Postbox Theft
    Love Your Enemies
    Feet First
    Weit offen
    Nadeln im Ohr
    • Brigitte Heinrich, geboren 1957 am Bodensee, lebt nach Verlagstätigkeit in etlichen Städten und Häusern als Übersetzerin, Herausgeberin und Lektorin in Frankfurt am Main. Sie übertrug unter anderem Nicola Barker, Alan Bennett, Robin Black, Lily Brett und Daphne du Maurier ins Deutsche.

      Nadeln im Ohr
    • Brigitte Heinrich, geboren 1957 am Bodensee, lebt nach Verlagstätigkeit in etlichen Städten und Häusern als Übersetzerin, Herausgeberin und Lektorin in Frankfurt am Main. Sie übertrug unter anderem Nicola Barker, Alan Bennett, Robin Black, Lily Brett und Daphne du Maurier ins Deutsche.

      Weit offen
    • Feet First

      • 176 Seiten
      • 7 Lesestunden
      4,4(16)Abgeben

      Explores the issues surrounding barefoot horses in the UK and looks in detail at how to improve overall hoof health, in both shod and barefoot horses. This book offers a practical, hands-on advice on achieving barefoot performance in a variety of disciplines - from eventing and hunting to endurance.

      Feet First
    • In 'Love Your Enemies', Nicola Barker's unconventional short stories offer a loving portrayal of the beautiful, grotesque, and bizarre aspects of overlooked suburban Britons' lives.

      Love Your Enemies
    • From the Man Booker Prize shortlisted author of Darkmans comes a comic epistolary novel of startling originality and wit.

      Burley Cross Postbox Theft
    • Shortlisted for the 2007 Man Booker Prize, an epic novel of startling originality which confirms Nicola Barker as one of Britain's most exciting literary talents.

      Darkmans
    • Hilarious, poignant and frequently surreal, Small Holdings is a is a comedy of errors from a neglected corner of everyday life by the brilliantly unconventional Nicola Barker.

      Small Holdings
    • The Yips

      • 548 Seiten
      • 20 Lesestunden
      3,3(43)Abgeben

      A new novel of the pre-Olympic moment from the Booker-shortlisted author of ‘Darkmans’, Nicola Barker. 'There was a rat in the bath', Gene explains. 'It's a long story, but basically I fished it out and was carrying around by the tail, not quite sure how to dispose of it, when I managed to barge in on this woman having a genital tattoo'. 2006 is a foreign country; they do things differently there. Tiger Woods' reputation is entirely untarnished and the English Defence League does not exist yet. Storm-clouds of a different kind are gathering above the bar of Luton's less than exclusive Thistle Hotel. Among those caught up in the unfolding drama are a man who's had cancer seven times, a woman priest with an unruly fringe, the troubled family of a notorious local fascist, an interfering barmaid with three E's at A-level but a PhD in bullshit, and a free-thinking Muslim sex therapist and his considerably more pious wife. But at the heart of every intrigue and the bottom of every mystery is the repugnantly charismatic figure of Stuart Ransom – a golfer in free-fall. Nicola Barker's ‘The Yips’ is at once a historical novel of the pre-Twitter moment, the filthiest state-of-the-nation novel since Martin Amis' ‘Money’ and the most flamboyant piece of comic fiction ever to be set in Luton.

      The Yips
    • I Am Sovereign

      • 224 Seiten
      • 8 Lesestunden
      3,5(460)Abgeben

      "Charles, a forty-year-old boutique teddy bear maker and wearer of ironic t-shirts, is trying - and failing - to sell his small, characterless house in Llandudno. His estate agent Avigail, whose name is definitely not Abigail, is trying - in vain - to rein in Charles's most unhelpful eccentricities, especially his repeated recounting to prospective buyers of a failed burglary that took place twelve years ago. When Wang Shu and her daughter Ying Yue view the house, Wang Shu is mysteriously struck by a falling oyster shell - the first in a series of seemingly innocuous events distort the reality of the characters' lives and cause them to question their very existence. As religious epiphanies bump up against declarations of love, the characters begin to sabotage the fictional world they inhabit, causing our entire understanding of the book - and of the boundaries between fiction and real life - to be radically upended."--Publisher

      I Am Sovereign