A Lovely Way to Burn: Plague Times Trilogy 1

A Lovely Way to Burn: Plague Times Trilogy 1

Louise Welsh
Our Price:  £3.99
List Price:  £8.99
Saving Of:  56%

Availability:  

  

In stock

Author:  Louise Welsh
Condition:  New
Format:  Paperback
Pages:  368
Publisher:  John Murray Press
Year:  2015
ISBN:  9781848546530

As heard on BBC Radio 4 Book at Bedtime

It doesn't look like murder in a city full of death.

A pandemic called 'The Sweats' is sweeping the globe. London is a city in crisis. Hospitals begin to fill with the dead and dying, but Stevie Flint is convinced that the sudden death of her boyfriend Dr Simon Sharkey was not from natural causes. As roads out of London become gridlocked with people fleeing infection, Stevie's search for Simon's killers takes her in the opposite direction, into the depths of the dying city and a race with death.

A Lovely Way to Burn is the first outbreak in the Plague Times trilogy. Chilling, tense and completely compelling, it's Louise Welsh writing at the height of her powers.

You may also like
An Appeal to the World: The Way to Peace in a Time of Division
Dalai Lama
Condition: New
£9.99   £5.99

In An Appeal to the World, His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama of Tibet illuminates the way to peace in our time, arguing for a form of universal ethics that goes beyond religion - values we all share as humans that can help us create unity and peace to heal our world.


Nights of Plague: 'A masterpiece of evocation' Sunday Times
Orhan Pamuk
Condition: New
£20.00   £6.99

'Orhan Pamuk is the sort of writer for whom the Nobel Prize was invented.' Daily Telegraph 'Pamuk is the real thing.' Observer'One of the world's finest living writers.' Independent 'Essential reading for our times.' Margaret Atwood'Everyone should read Pamuk.' New StatesmanPlague is not the only killer ...


The Society of Time: The Original Trilogy and Other Stories
John Brunner
Condition: New
£8.99   £3.99

In three fascinating and ground-breaking novellas, John Brunner weaves an ingenious tale of a divergent and compelling timeline, and poses complex questions of how we perceive the fourth dimension and its relation to our own identity.