Adam Foulds es un novelista y poeta británico cuyas obras profundizan en complejas psicologías humanas y eventos históricos. Su estilo se caracteriza por una aguda perspicacia y un lenguaje evocador que atrae a los lectores a sus mundos meticulosamente elaborados. Foulds explora magistralmente temas como la memoria, la cordura y los límites del comportamiento humano, a menudo ambientados en importantes contextos históricos. Su escritura es celebrada por su profundidad literaria y su capacidad para capturar la esencia de la experiencia humana.
Set against the backdrop of the Mau Mau uprising in 1950s Kenya, the narrative unfolds with a powerful and poetic voice. It explores the intense struggle against British colonial rule, delving into the complexities of resistance and the human experience during this tumultuous period. Through vivid storytelling, the author captures the fierce spirit of the characters involved, illuminating their fight for freedom and identity in a time of conflict.
From the author of the Man Booker shortlisted The Quickening MazeIn the Wolf's
Mouth follows the lives of four very different men, all of them navigating the
chaos and horror brought about by the Second World War.
Tom has returned to his family's farm in Kenya for the summer vacation between
school and university when he is swept up by the events of the Mau Mau
uprising. This poetic sequence illuminates a period in British colonial
history.
Centres on the first incarceration of the great nature poet John Clare. After years struggling with alcohol, critical neglect and depression, Clare finds himself in High Beach Private Asylum - an institution run on reformist principles which would later become known as occupational therapy. At the same time another poet, the young Alfred Tennyson, moves nearby and becomes entangled in the life and catastrophic schemes of the asylum's owner, the peculiar, charismatic Dr Matthew Allen. For John Clare, a man who had grown up steeped in the freedoms and exhilarations of nature, who thought 'the edge of the world was a day's walk away', a locked door is a kind of death.
Adam Foulds, the award-winning author of The Quickening Maze, pens a stunning and terrifying vision of the damage done between a fan and a celebrity in Dream Sequence—where the borders between inner and outer life have been made porous in a world full of flickering screens large and small. Henry became famous starring in The Grange, a television drama beloved by mothers and wives, and whose fans speak about the characters as though they were real people . . . yet Henry dreams of escaping the small screen. An audition for a movie directed by a highly respected Spanish auteur holds the promise of a way forward. Whether holed up in his apartment eating monkish meals of rice and steamed vegetables or snorting cocaine at desert parties in Doha, Henry’s awareness of his own image, of his relative place in the world, is acute and constant. But Henry has also—unwittingly—become an important part of the life of recently divorced Kristin. He appears repeatedly on the television in her beautiful, empty Philadelphia house, and her social media feeds bring news of his London home, his family. What Kristin wants is simply to get as close to him in real life as she has in her fandom.
Ten year-old Saul Dawson-Smith has an extremely impressive memory, so much so that he can remember every conversation he's ever had. Howard McNamee is a lonely, poorly educated and overweight twenty-eight year old. Struggling to pay his rent with a succession of menial jobs, he finds himself thrust into an unlikely friendship with Saul when he is taken under the wing of his parents. While Howard is having to cope with the demands of London and accidentally acquiring himself a Russian internet fiancee, Saul is focussed on the World Memory Championships, an event he has been training for his whole life. With Howard realising he has to save his friend from a lifetime of unbearable expectations, the pair embark on an extraordinary road trip and voyage of dicovery as they attempt to escape their lives.