 |
Author
Ismail Kadare
 - Sophie Bassouls
Ismail Kadare is acclaimed worldwide as one of the most important writers of our time. In 2005 he won the inaugural Man Booker International Prize. He lives in Paris and Tirana.
|
|
The Successor
A Novel
Ismail Kadare
2008 Edition
A powerful political novel based on the sudden, mysterious death of the man who had been handpicked to succeed the hated Albanian dictator Enver Hoxha.
|
|
|
Chronicle in Stone
A Novel
Ismail Kadare
2007 Edition
A stunning tale of a young boy and an ancient land, each awakening to the joys and horrors of the modern world
|
|
|
Agamemnon's Daughter
A Novella and Stories
Ismail Kadare
2006 Edition
From the winner of the first Man Booker International Prize comes a crushing story of love taken away without warning and shattered by the icy wheels of the state.
|
|
|
The General of the Dead Army
A Novel
Ismail Kadare
2006 Edition
A moving and timely meditation on war and its consequences by the winner of the first Man Booker International Prize, available again in paperback.
|
|
|
Spring Flowers, Spring Frost
A Novel
Ismail Kadare
2002 Edition
A major new work of fiction, set at the end of the twentieth century, by the author whom critics worldwide have compared to Kafka, Borges, and García Márquez.
|
|
|
Elegy for Kosovo
Ismail Kadare
2000 Edition
A timely and profound reflection in fiction on war, memory, and the destiny of two peoples by “one of the most compelling novelists writing in any language” (Bruce Bawer, The Wall Street Journal).
|
|
|
The File on H.
A Novel
Ismail Kadare
1998 Edition
For the first time in paperback, the acclaimed comic fable by "one of the most compelling novelists writing in any language" (Wall Street Journal).
|
|
|
The Three-Arched Bridge
Ismail Kadare
1997 Edition
From the Balkans' most renowned living author, a chilling tale of ethnic rivalry on Europe's ever-disintegrating fringe.
|
|
|
The Pyramid
Ismail Kadare
1996 Edition
A gripping historical fable by "one of the most compelling novelists now writing in any language" --Bruce Bawer, Wall Street Journal
|
|