Life Times: Stories, 1952–2007

Life Times: Stories, 1952–2007

$12.00 AUD

Availability: in stock at our Tullamarine warehouse

Condition: SECONDHAND

This is a secondhand book. The jacket image is a photograph of the exact copy we have in stock. This image shows the condition of this book. Further condition remarks are below.


Condition remarks:
Condition: Very Good. Jacket: N/A (no dust jacket — hardcover binding). Page Condition: Good — pages appear clean and bright. Markings: No markings visible. Binding: Intact, no loose pages. Stickers/Labels: None visible.

Spanning more than five decades of literary output, Life Times: Stories, 1952–2007 presents a landmark collection from Nobel Prize-winning South African author Nadine Gordimer. The anthology gathers stories that chronicle the moral and social tensions of apartheid-era South Africa and its aftermath, bearing witness to the lives of ordinary people caught in extraordinary political circumstances. Written with spare, precise prose and an unflinching moral intelligence, Gordimer illustrates the private costs of public injustice, illuminating race, identity, and conscience with devastating clarity. Drawn from across her celebrated career, these stories stand as essential documents of one of the twentieth century's most important literary voices.

Author: Nadine Gordimer
Format: Hardback

Genre: Modern fiction

Description


Condition remarks:
Condition: Very Good. Jacket: N/A (no dust jacket — hardcover binding). Page Condition: Good — pages appear clean and bright. Markings: No markings visible. Binding: Intact, no loose pages. Stickers/Labels: None visible.

Spanning more than five decades of literary output, Life Times: Stories, 1952–2007 presents a landmark collection from Nobel Prize-winning South African author Nadine Gordimer. The anthology gathers stories that chronicle the moral and social tensions of apartheid-era South Africa and its aftermath, bearing witness to the lives of ordinary people caught in extraordinary political circumstances. Written with spare, precise prose and an unflinching moral intelligence, Gordimer illustrates the private costs of public injustice, illuminating race, identity, and conscience with devastating clarity. Drawn from across her celebrated career, these stories stand as essential documents of one of the twentieth century's most important literary voices.