“A skillful portrayal of life in pre-colonial Ghana emphasizes distinctions of religion, language, and status…[Attah] has a careful eye for domestic and historical detail.” —The Guardian
“A skillful portrayal of life in pre-colonial Ghana emphasizes distinctions of religion, language, and status…[Attah] has a careful eye for domestic and historical detail.” —The Guardian
“The true wolves of Wall Street from someone who knows them well” —VANITY FAIR
“A must-read” —NEW YORK POST
The tenth anniversary edition is out next week, and we are so excited!!!
Keep an eye out for this one from the New York Times bestselling author of THE GLASS ROOM, Simon Mawer returns to Czechoslovakia, this time during the turbulent 1960s, with a suspenseful story of sex, politics, and betrayal.
ON SALE NOV 13
'Nothing I have read is more affecting than Mihail Sebastian's magnificent, haunting 1934 novel, For Two Thousand Years' - Philippe Sands, Guardian Book of the Year
Not for the faint-hearted, A GIFT FROM DARKNESS tells the story of Patience, a young Christian girl who escaped and survived the hardships of Boko Haram while raising her daughter.
Baz Dreisinger goes behind bars in nine countries to investigate the current conditions in prisons worldwide, and delivers this crucial study named one of the Washington Post's Notable Nonfiction Books of 2016.
In which peaky hats, cigaret smoking & young street gang members blend together to take you back to an early 20th century gritty atmosphere.
“An unabashed tale that does not pull punches and looks at love‘s underside…This breathless story should only be read in one sitting. It hits hard and never lets up. Terse, brusque, etched on one‘s inner thigh with an old serrated knife.” —André Aciman, author of Call Me by Your Name
“A must-read” according to the New York Post!
“A powerful and moving novel that intricately explores the Salaga slave market as it hurtles toward its final days, seen through the eyes of two women whose opposite circumstances converge. Attah‘s gift is her staggering ability to depict the personal within the past, to show us a moment in Ghana‘s history from those who lived it, making for an urgent, poignant experience.” —Gabe Habash, author of Stephen Florida
The author of The Meursault Investigation is back!