Get 10% off all titles + free UK p&p. Offer applied at checkout

We bring to you our top summer reads from our own list, and what we're reading from others'... 

One of Spain's greatest writers, who we've published since the '80s, has died.

Flora Willis looks at the women in literature defying a conventional life path.

Twitter

New releases

Videos

Watch Mary Gaitskill read from her highly-acclaimed new novel, The Mare.

Events

Join us for dinner and chat at the Wharf Restaurant at the Talyllyn Railway in Tywyn, with Rebecca F. John and help her launch her new book 'The Haunting of Henry Twist' Tickets are £15 to include Food and a £5 book token for one of Rebecca's books. THE HAUNTING OF HENRY TWIST by Rebecca F John Is there a love so powerful it can bring someone back to life? London, 1926: Henry Twist's heavily pregnant wife leaves home to meet a friend. On the way, she is hit by a bus and killed, though miraculously the baby survives. Henry is left with nothing but his new daughter - a single father in a world without single fathers. He hurries the baby home, terrified that she'll be taken from him. Racked with guilt and fear, he stays away from prying eyes, walking her through the streets at night, under cover of darkness. But one evening, a strange man steps out of the shadows and addresses Henry by name. The man says that he has lost his memory, but that his name is Jack. Henry is both afraid of and drawn to Jack, and the more time they spend together, the more Henry sees that this man has echoes of his dead wife. His mannerisms, some things he says ... And so Henry wonders, has his wife returned to him? Has he conjured Jack himself from thin air? Or is he in the grip of a sophisticated con man? Who really sent him? Set in a London recovering from the First World War, The Haunting of Henry Twist is a novel about the limits and potential of love and of grief. It is about the lengths we will go to hold on to what is precious to us, what we will forgive of those we love, and what we will sacrifice for the sake of our own happiness. About the author Rebecca F. John was born in 1986, and grew up in Pwll, a small village on the South Wales coast. Her short stories have been broadcast on BBC Radio 4. In 2014, she was highly commended in the Manchester Fiction Prize. In 2015, her short story 'The Glove Maker's Numbers' was shortlisted for the Sunday Times EFG Short Story Award. She is the winner of the PEN International New Voices Award 2015, and the British participant of the 2016 Scritture Giovani project. Her first short story collection, Clown's Shoes, was published by Parthian. She lives in Swansea with her three dogs.