| Fight Club: A Novel (Paperback) - A great début
Hypnotic, pitiless and told brilliantly |
£9.85 |
| Fiction: Fight Club: A Novel by Chuck Palahniuk (2005) - The first rule about fight club is you don't talk about fight club. Chuck Palahniuk's outrageous and startling debut novel that exploded American literature and spawned a movement. Every weekend, in the basements and parking lots of bars across the country, young men with white-collar jobs and failed lives take off their shoes and shirts and fight each other barehanded just as long as they have to. Then they go back to those jobs with blackened eyes and loosened teeth and the sense that they... |
£9.85 |
| The Vesuvius Club: A Lucifer Box Novel - Lucifer Box is the darling of the Edwardian belle monde - society's most fashionable portrait painter is a wit, a dandy, a rake, the guest all hostesses (and not a few hosts) must have. But few know that Lucifer Box is also His Majesty's most accomplished and daring secret agent. And so of course when Britain's most prominent scientists begin turning up dead, there is only one man his country can turn to. |
£2.99 |
| The Potluck Club: A Novel (Potluck Club) |
£7.19 |
| The Trophy Wives Club: A Novel of Fakes, Faith, and a Love That Lasts Forever |
£5.89 |
| Bite Club: A West Hollywood Vampire Novel (West Hollywood Vampire Novels) |
£14.44 |
| Fiction: The Vesuvius Club: A Lucifer Box Novel by Mark Gatiss (2005) - Unleashed from the dark and twisted mind of ‘The League of Gentleman’ star Mark Gatiss comes celebrated society portraitist and secret agent Lucifer Box: stylish, arrogant, witty and charming, and definitely more James Bond than Papa Lazaru. In ‘The Vesuvius Club’, Gatiss has created a wildly daring romp through Edwardian London, where we follow our hero trying to uncover the secrets behind the murders of the country’s top scientists. An imaginative and riveting read which draws you in to the... |
£6.79 |
| The Hunt Club: A Novel (Paperback) |
£2.90 |
| Trouble's Brewing: A Novel (Potluck Club) |
£8.09 |
| Fight Club a devastating critique of American materialist, consumer culture, or a film about the monstrous thrill of violence and the fragility of men? (Rombes: 1999) |
£4.99 |
| Kill Pot: A Fact and Fiction Novel about One of California's Oldest Card Clubs (Paperback) |
£9.07 |
| The Story of the Stone: a Chinese Novel: Vol 2, The Crab-flower Club (Penguin Classics) (Paperback) - "The Story of the Stone" (c. 1760), also known as "The Dream of the Red Chamber", is one of the greatest novels of Chinese literature. The fifth part of Cao Xueqin's magnificent saga, "The Dreamer Awakes", was carefully edited and completed by Gao E some decades later. It continues the story of the changing fortunes of the Jia dynasty, focussing on Bao-yu, now married to Bao-chai, after the tragic death of his beloved Dai-yu. Against such worldly elements as death, financial ruin, marriage, decadence and corruption... <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Story-Stone-Chinese-Crab-flower-Classics/dp/0140443266#similarities">Read full description at Amazon.com</a> |
£10.39 |
| Fiction: Fight Club by Chuck Palahniuk (1998) - 'Fight Club' is Palahniuk's debut novel, and I think is by far his best. Until he meets the now legendary Tyler Durden, our protagonist becomes sick of his dead end job and life in general, but that is soon to change. The film is excellent, but the book is better. I would love to tell you more, but the first rule of Fight Club is 'you can not talk about Fight Club! |
£6.79 |
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