Format: Paperback Pages: 256 The world we were born into has gone. We shall never completely recapture its climate, its seasons, the way its plants grew and its animals lived...more details
Format: Paperback Pages: 256 Granta magazine's 'What We Think of America', published in April 2002, was a prescient reflection of the USA's deepening political unpopularity among people outside its own borders...more details
Repressed personal experiences, neglected battles, forgotten civilizations: an issue of Granta that excavates the unfairly buried event, the secret life, the overlooked war...more details
Featuring John Fowles on the making of The French Lieutenant's Woman and DM Thomas on the not-making of The White Hotel, Thomas Keneally on finding Schindler's list...more details
Featuring John McGahern on his mother's struggle for health and happiness in Catholic Ireland, Edmund White on his mother's battle with the girdle in Texas; Alexander Fuller on bearing a child in Africa; Paul Theroux on an American matriarchy and new fiction by Hilary Mantel and Jayne Anne Phillips...more details
Format: Paperback Pages: 256 We know what Bob Geldof and Tony Blair think about Africa - as the continent that most needs salvation. But what do the people of Africa feel, in their diverse cultures and classes and nations...more details
Jonathan Taylor on a boyhood spent caring for a father with Alzheimer s disease ( Who are you?); Georgia Blain on her Australian teacher's love for Chinese Communism; Katya Krausova on the Slovak survivors of the Holocaust; James Lasdun on Forest Lawns cemetery, inspiration for Evelyn Waugh's The Loved One...more details
This issue features new work by the twenty writers that Granta's judges - including novelists Edmund White and A.M. Homes - have selected as the most interesting, new young voices in American fiction...more details
Format: Paperback Pages: 288 The Granta Book of India brings together, for the first time, evocative, personal and informative pieces from previous editions of Granta magazine, all on the experiences of Indian life, culture and politics...more details
Format: Paperback Pages: 448 Since its relaunch in 1979, Granta magazine has championed the art and craft of reportage journalism marked by vivid description, a novelist's eye to form and eyewitness reporting that reveals hidden truths about people and events that have shaped the world we know...more details