Published 01/01/2001 | Paperback / softback,
Description:
Introducing the Collins Modern Classics, a series featuring some of the most significant books of recent times, books that shed light on the human experience – classics which will endure for generations to come.
A single person is missing for you, and the whole world is empty
John Gregory Dunne and Joan Didion saw their daughter fall ill. At first they thought it was flu, then she was placed on life support. Days later, the Dunnes were sitting down to dinner when John suffered a massive and fatal coronary.
This powerful book is Didion’s ‘attempt to make sense of the weeks and then months that cut loose any fixed idea I ever had about death, about illness’. The result is a personal yet universal portrait of marriage and life, in good times and bad, from one of the defining voices of American literature.
‘Beautiful and devastating … Didion has always been a precise, humane and meticulously truthful writer, but on the subject of death she becomes essential’ Zadie Smith

Richard Scarry's Peasant Pig and the Terrible Dragon
If It Bleeds
Elmer and the Lost Treasure
No Room For Small Dreams
The Eye of the World
Girl, Woman, Other
The Strawberry Thief
Bone China : A gripping and atmospheric gothic thriller
Washington Black
The Other Half of Augusta Hope
Gift Wrapping
Fight Club
Breasts and Eggs
Fragile Things
The Return
The Penguin Book of Italian Short Stories
One Hundred Years of Solitude
Frankissstein
The Silent Companions
The Breaks
Normal People
The Beekeeper of Aleppo
The Testaments
Unsheltered
The Trouble With Goats and Sheep
Who Ate the First Oyster? : The Extraordinary People Behind the Greatest Firsts in History


