Heather Mulgrews world is already mapped out: she is going to travel abroad with her friends after college, come back to a great career in September, and head into a life where not much is left to chance. But that was before an encounter on an overnight train introduces her to Jack, a passionate adventurer who changes the course of her journey and her life.
Hard-hitting and uplifting true stories of the women around the world facing extreme gender inequality who, when the wider community supports them to challenge the status quo, improve life for the whole of society.
<b>The tantalizing romance of <i>These Violent Delights</i> meets the mechanical wonders of <i>Cinder </i>in Vanessa Le's <i>The Last Bloodcarver</i>, the first in a two-book debut - with a riveting medical magic system and lush Vietnam-inspired fantasy world. </b>
A trans boy searches for a future-and a romance-in which he can live and love openly as himself in this heartwrenching YA reimagining of <i>Pride & Prejudice</i>, the ninth book in the Remixed Classics series.
Pulitzer Prize-winning <i>New Yorker </i>writer tells the story of losing her father and finding the love of her life in this profound meditation on love, grief and joy.
The award-winning, bestselling author of <i>Station Eleven</i> and <i>The Glass Hotel</i> returns with a novel of art, time, love and plague that takes the reader from Vancouver Island in 1912 to a dark colony of the moon three hundred years later, unfurling a story of humanity across centuries and space.
An international bestseller and true modern classic, <i>American Psycho</i> is a bleak, bitter, black comedy about a world we all recognize but do not wish to confront.
<i>Maps of Our Spectacular Bodies</i> is about a family coming to terms with the unthinkable: the death of a mother. Playful and funny, profound and heart-breaking, this is a daring debut about motherhood, anatomy, language and the darkness within us all.
From the indie rockstar Japanese Breakfast and author of the viral 2018 <i>New Yorker</i> piece, a deeply moving memoir on identity and belonging, grief and joy.
For fans of Margaret Atwood and Deborah Harkness's <i>The Discovery of Witches, The Women Could Fly</i> is a wonderfully evocative, dark and magical dystopian novel from the critically acclaimed Megan Giddings
A darkly comic, boundary-pushing debut following an adrift Pakistani translator in London who attends a mysterious language school which boasts complete fluency in just ten days, but at a secret, sinister cost.
From Kate Mosse, the number one Sunday Times bestselling Joubert Family Chronicles series continues with <i>The Ghost Ship</i>, a thrilling tale of piracy and a sweeping historical epic about love in a time of war.