Più di un milione di libri, a un clic di distanza!
Bookbot

Catherine O'Flynn

    Catherine O'Flynn è un'autrice britannica celebrata per la sua acuta intuizione sulla vita della gente comune e i loro desideri nascosti. Le sue opere esplorano spesso temi di identità, solitudine e la ricerca di significato in un mondo complesso. O'Flynn fonde magistralmente l'umorismo con la malinconia, creando personaggi memorabili che risuonano con i lettori. Il suo stile di scrittura è caratterizzato dalla sua onestà e dalla capacità di scoprire verità profonde nelle situazioni quotidiane.

    James Joyce and the Matter of Paris
    Lori and Max and the Book Thieves
    What Was Lost
    Mr Lynch's Holiday
    Lori and Max
    • Lori and Max

      • 202pagine
      • 8 ore di lettura

      Lori wants to be a detective, but so far the most exciting mystery she has solved is the disappearance of her nan's specs down the side of the sofa. Max is the new girl at school and Lori is asked to look after her. Max is odd. She doesn't fit in - but then, Lori realises, she doesn't really fit in either.

      Lori and Max
    • Eamonn Lynch stares at the letter announcing his father's imminent arrival. His first thought: I'll make an excuse, I'll put him off. But it's too late. Laura has left, and Dermot is already here, a fresh arrival from Ireland to southern Spain. Now it's just the two of them, father and son, for two long, hot weeks.

      Mr Lynch's Holiday
    • A stolen phone and an unruly dog; a buried lunchbox and an antique children's book. Young detectives Lori and Max must dig through layers of lies to solve two mysteries.

      Lori and Max and the Book Thieves
    • James Joyce and the Matter of Paris

      • 250pagine
      • 9 ore di lettura

      This book is essential reading for Joyceans, Irish modernists, and Anglophone modernists, and also for scholars of transnational modernism, of comparative European literatures, of the life of the sensorium, and of culture and capitalism in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

      James Joyce and the Matter of Paris