LONDON (Reuters) - British author Sebastian Faulks does not shy away from big themes in his latest novel "A Week In December," which had its U.S. release earlier this month on the Doubleday imprint.
As a novelist, you write about what puzzles, inspires and keeps you awake at night. It feels like a one-off adventure and it’s only in retrospect, years later, that you can see a pattern or a link ...
It's not just any old December that provides Sebastian Faulks' eponymous week: it's a very particular one, carefully chosen, only two years back from us now: 2007. The recent past under normal ...
Parn sat back again. ‘Did you know I fund a palaeoanthropology research programme? It’s attached to the University of London. They do top genetic work. Looking at old bones. Sequencing the genome of ...
Why is Christian Science in our name? Our name is about honesty. The Monitor is owned by The First Church of Christ, Scientist, and we’ve always been transparent about that. The church publishes the ...
Our New Scientist Book Club has been reading Sebastian Faulks’s The Seventh Son, a futuristic sci-fi thriller in which a young woman answers an ad to carry a child that is, unbeknownst to her, ...
LONDON (Reuters) - British novelist Sebastian Faulks has written a new, officially approved James Bond thriller portraying the ageing spy as vulnerable and damaged but as highly sexed as ever. Sign up ...
LONDON (Reuters) - British author Sebastian Faulks does not shy away from big themes in his latest novel "A Week In December," which had its U.S. release earlier this month on the Doubleday imprint.
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