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    FABER & FABER

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    Vernon God Little

    €12.50
    WINNER OF THE MAN BOOKER PRIZE 2003 WINNER OF THE 2003 WHITBREAD FIRST NOVEL PRIZE Meet fifteen-year-old Vernon Gregory Little. 'Startling . . . explosive and extravagantly satisfying.' Guardian 'Dangerous, smart, ridiculous and very funny.' New York Times

    Verse Chorus Monster!

    €13.75
    And some may even be lurking inside yourself. 'Charting the hedonism of his Nineties heyday and the ensuing fallout, Blur's reluctant guitar hero is finally making himself heard.' EVENING STANDARD 'Breaks off with Coxon, a classically tortured artist, on a blessedly even keel.' OBSERVER

    Verse, Chorus, Monster!

    €25.00
    A long-awaited memoir of Blur co-founder, guitar legend and visual artist Graham Coxon.

    Very Very Very Dark Matter

    €13.75
    In a townhouse in Copenhagen works Hans Christian Andersen, a teller of exquisite and fantastic children's tales beloved by millions.

    Vogue The

    €11.25
    Set against an eerie landscape, awash with secrets, The Vogue is a grimly poetic dance through the intertwined stories of a deeply religious community, an abandoned military base, and a long-shuttered children's Care Home.

    Voyage of the Sparrowhawk

    €10.00
    Lotti's horrible aunt and uncle want to send her away to boarding-school (when she has just so successfully managed to get expelled from her last one!) And Clara, their young teacher, is waiting for news of her missing fiance. Just as they think they've found their feet in the new order, disaster strikes, and Lotti and Ben must get away.
    Accelerated Reader
    Middle Years PLUS, Book Level: 5.6

    W.B. Yeats

    €16.25
    W B Yeats (1865-1939) was not only Ireland's greatest poet but one of the most influential voices in world literature in the twentieth century.

    Waiting for Godot

    €12.50
    'Nothing happens, nobody comes, nobody goes, it's awful.' This line was adopted by Jean Anouilh, to characterize the first production of "Waiting For Godot" at the Theatre de Babylone, in 1953. Anybody acquinted with Beckett's masterly black comedy would not question the recognition of this twentieth-century literature classic.