• Complain

Tom Rachman - The Rise & Fall of Great Powers

Here you can read online Tom Rachman - The Rise & Fall of Great Powers full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. year: 2014, publisher: Doubleday Canada, genre: Prose. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

Romance novel Science fiction Adventure Detective Science History Home and family Prose Art Politics Computer Non-fiction Religion Business Children Humor

Choose a favorite category and find really read worthwhile books. Enjoy immersion in the world of imagination, feel the emotions of the characters or learn something new for yourself, make an fascinating discovery.

Tom Rachman The Rise & Fall of Great Powers
  • Book:
    The Rise & Fall of Great Powers
  • Author:
  • Publisher:
    Doubleday Canada
  • Genre:
  • Year:
    2014
  • ISBN:
    978-0-385-67696-0
  • Rating:
    4 / 5
  • Favourites:
    Add to favourites
  • Your mark:
    • 80
    • 1
    • 2
    • 3
    • 4
    • 5

The Rise & Fall of Great Powers: summary, description and annotation

We offer to read an annotation, description, summary or preface (depends on what the author of the book "The Rise & Fall of Great Powers" wrote himself). If you haven't found the necessary information about the book — write in the comments, we will try to find it.

The Rise & Fall of Great Powers begins in a dusty bookshop. What follows is an abduction, heated political debate, glimpses into strangers homes, and travel around the globe. Its a novel of curious personalities, mystery, and lots of books: volumes that the characters collect, covet, steal. Tooly Zylberberg, owner of a bookshop in the Welsh countryside, spends most of her life reading. Yet theres one tale that never made sense: her own life. In childhood, she was spirited away from home, then raised around Asia, Europe and the United States. But who were the people who brought her up? And what ever happened to them? There was Humphrey, a curmudgeon from Russia; there was the charming but tempestuous Sarah, who hailed from Kenya; and there was Venn, the charismatic leader who transformed Tooly forever. Until, quite suddenly, he vanished. Years later, she has lost hope of ever knowing what took place. Then, the old mysteries stir again, sending her and the reader on a hunt through place and time, from Wales to Bangkok to New York to Italy, from the 1980s to the Year 2000 to the present, from the end of the Cold War, to the rise and wobbles of U.S. power, to the digital revolution of today. Gradually, all secrets are revealed

Tom Rachman: author's other books


Who wrote The Rise & Fall of Great Powers? Find out the surname, the name of the author of the book and a list of all author's works by series.

The Rise & Fall of Great Powers — read online for free the complete book (whole text) full work

Below is the text of the book, divided by pages. System saving the place of the last page read, allows you to conveniently read the book "The Rise & Fall of Great Powers" online for free, without having to search again every time where you left off. Put a bookmark, and you can go to the page where you finished reading at any time.

Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Tom Rachman

The Rise & Fall of Great Powers

For my sister Emily

2011

HIS PENCIL WAVERED above the sales ledger, dipping toward the page as his statements increased in vigor, the pencil tip skimming the pad, then pulling up like a stunt plane, only to plunge at moments of emphasis, producing a constellation of increasingly blunt dots around the lone entry for that morning, the sale of one used copy of Land Snails of Britain by A. G. Brunt-Coppell (price: 3.50).

Take the Revolution, he called out from the front of the bookshop. The French see it completely differently than we do. They arent taught it was all chaos and Reign of Terror. For them, it was a good thing. And you cant blame them. Knocking down the Bastille? The Declaration of Rights?

The thrust of his argument was that, when considering the French people and their rebellious spirit well, it wasnt clear what Fogg intended to say. He was a man who formed opinions as he spoke them, or perhaps afterward, requiring him to ramble at length to grasp what he believed. This made speech an act of discovery for him; others did not necessarily share this view.

His voice resounded between bookcases, down the three steps at the rear of the shop, where his employer, Tooly Zylberberg in tweed blazer, muddy jeans, rubber boots was trying to read.

Hmm, she responded, a battered biography of Anne Boleyn open on her lap. She could have asked Fogg to shush, and he would have obliged. But he reveled in pronouncing on grand issues, like the man of consequence he most certainly was not. It endeared Fogg to her, especially since his oration masked considerable self-doubt whenever she challenged him, he folded immediately. Poor Fogg. Her sympathy for the man qualified him to chatter, but it made reading impossible.

Because, after all, the fellow who invented the guillotine was a man of medicine, he continued, restoring books to the shelves, riffling their pages to kick forth the old-paper aroma, which he inhaled before pushing each volume flush into its slot.

Down the three creaking steps he came, passing under the sign HISTORY NATURE POETRY MILITARY BALLET to a sunken den known as the snug. The bookshop had been a pub before, and the snug was where rain-drenched drinkers once hung their socks by the hearth, now bricked up but still flanked with tongs and bellows, festooned with little green-and-red Welsh flags and Toby jugs on hooks. An oak table contained photographic volumes on the region, while the walls were lined with shelves of poetry and a disintegrating hardcover series of Shakespeare whose red spines had so faded that to distinguish King Lear from Macbeth required much scrutiny. Either of these venerable characters, dormant on the overburdened shelves, could at any moment have crashed down into the rocking chair where Tooly sat upon a tartan blanket, which came in handy during winters, when the radiators trembled at the task ahead and switched off.

She tucked back her short black hair, points curling around un-pierced lobes, a gray pencil tip poking up behind her ear. The paperback she held before her aimed to discourage his interruptions, but behind its cover her cheeks twitched with amusement at the circling Fogg and his palpable exertion at remaining quiet. He strode around the table, hands in his trouser pockets, jingling change. (Coins were always plummeting through holes in those pockets, down his leg and into his shoe. Toward the end of the day, he removed it sock coming half off and emptied a small fortune into his palm.) It behooves them to act decisively in Afghanistan, he said. It behooves them to.

She lowered the book and looked at him, which caused Fogg to turn away. At twenty-eight, he was her junior by only a few years, but the gulf could have been twenty-eight again. He remained a youth in their exchanges, deferential yet soon carried away with fanciful talk. When pontificating, he toyed with a brass magnifying glass, pressed it to his eye socket like a monocle, which produced a monstrous blue eye until he lost courage, lowered the lens, and the eye became small and blinky once more. Whatever the time of day, he appeared as if recently awakened by a fire drill, the hair at the back of his head splayed flat from the pillow, buttons missing midway down his shirt and others off by an eyelet, so that customers endeavored not to spy the patch of bare chest inadvertently peeping through. His cargo pants were torn at the hip pockets, where he hooked his thumbs while declaiming; the white laces on his leather shoes had grayed; his untucked pin-striped shirt was frayed at the cuffs; and he had the tubular collarbones and articulated ribs of a man who scarfs down a bacon sandwich for lunch, then forgets to eat again until 3 A.M. His careless fashions were not entirely careless, however, but a marker in Caergenog that he was distinct in the village of his birth an urban sophisticate, no matter how his location, how his entire life, militated against such a role.

It behooves them? Tooly asked, smiling.

What they have to realize, he proceeded, is that we dont know even what the opposition is. My friends enemy is not my He leaned down to glimpse the cover of her paperback. She had thirteen fingers.

What?

Anne Boleyn did. Henry VIIIs wife. Had thirteen fingers.

I havent got to that part yet. Shes still only at ten. Tooly stood, the empty chair rocking, and made for the front of the shop.

It was late spring, but the clouds over Wales bothered little with seasons. Rain had pelted down all morning, preventing her daily walk into the hills, though she had driven out to the priory nonetheless and sat in her car, enjoying the patter on the roof. Was it drizzling still?

We took in the Honesty Barrel, didnt we? This was a cask of overstock that passersby could take (suggested contribution, 1 per book). The problem was not the honesty encouragingly, most people did drop coins into the lockbox but the downpours, which ruined the volumes. So they had become seasoned sky-watchers, appraising the clouds, dragging the barrel out and in.

Never put it out in the first place.

Didnt we? Forgetfulness pays off. She stood at the counter, gazing out the front window. The awning dribbled brown raindrops. Looked a bit like. Coffee, she said.

You want one? Fogg was constantly seeking pretexts to fetch cappuccino from the Monna Lisa Caf, part of his attempt to court an Estonian barista there. Since Tooly preferred to brew her own tea, Fogg was obliged to consume cup after cup himself. Indeed, Tooly had first discerned his crush on the barista by the frequency with which he needed the toilet, leading her to remark that his cappuccino conspiracy was affecting the correct organ but in the incorrect manner.

Back in a minute, he said, meaning thirty, and shouldered open the door, its bell tinkling as he plodded up Roberts Road.

She stepped outside herself, standing before the shop and contemplating the church parking lot across the street, her old Fiat 500 alone among the spaces. She stretched noisily, arms out like a waking cat, and gave a little squeak. Two birds fluttered off the church roof, talons out, battling over a nest. What species were those? But the birds wheeled away.

Caergenog just across the Welsh side of the border with England was populated by a few hundred souls, a village demarcated for centuries by two pubs, one at the top of Roberts Road and the other at its foot. The high ground belonged to the Butchers Hook, named in recognition of the weekly livestock market across the street, while the low ground, opposite the church and roundabout, was occupied by Worlds End, a reference to that pubs location at the outer boundary of the village. Worlds End had always been the less popular option (who wanted to carouse with a view of iron crosses in the church graveyard?) and the pub closed for good in the late 1970s. The building stood empty for years, boarded up and vandalized, until a married couple retired academics from the University of Bristol bought the property and converted it into a used bookshop.

Next page
Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Similar books «The Rise & Fall of Great Powers»

Look at similar books to The Rise & Fall of Great Powers. We have selected literature similar in name and meaning in the hope of providing readers with more options to find new, interesting, not yet read works.


Reviews about «The Rise & Fall of Great Powers»

Discussion, reviews of the book The Rise & Fall of Great Powers and just readers' own opinions. Leave your comments, write what you think about the work, its meaning or the main characters. Specify what exactly you liked and what you didn't like, and why you think so.