$8.00 Flat rate shipping on all standard orders

Free Shipping on orders over $75*

Thorns: A study in human frailty

$1667


Description

Traumatised by what he witnessed in the streets of Sarajevo during the 1990s siege, newsman James Lambert flees back to England, seeking peace and recovery in the beauty and apparent tranquillity of the countryside. He'd narrowly escaped death from a Serbian shell and watched his Bosnian lover die

Haunted by memories and the reverberating clamour of guns he takes on a small farm in the Welsh Marches, with a commission to write about the conflict.

Though entranced by the unspoiled beauty of the landscape he settles slowly into a community which seems to him a time warp of ideas and behaviour.

His seclusion is disrupted by a vulnerable girl's appeal to find a home for her young horse and his kindness to her drags him into the mesh of her family's secret guilt.

A letter draws him back to Bosnia and he becomes involved in covering the ongoing search for the bodies of the missing.

His relationship with the girl is threatened by the enmity of her ex-boyfriend but it develops into a love which brings with it dreadful consequences.



Author: Frances Brand
Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: Frances Brand
Published: 10/18/2018
Pages: 426
Weight: 1.01lbs
Size: 8.00h x 5.00w x 0.95d
ISBN: 9781916270800

About the Author
Brand, Frances: - Former journalist Frances Brand is based in the west of England among the glorious countryside of the Marches where a crow or raven can fly quickly over the border into Wales. She gave up journalism when the internet was giving regional papers a hard time to begin a new career running a popular bed and breakfast. She was latterly the editor of a farming newspaper, working closely with farmers and others involved in agriculture so knows at first hand the problems and vicissitudes of farming in the 21st-century and what conflicts can arise in a claustrophobic rural society. She witnessed at close quarters the trauma inflicted on the farming community during the UK foot and mouth disaster of 2001. She feels very strongly that so many people have lost touch with the countryside and its benefits, not least the ability of the landscape to inspire and comfort and renew optimism. She breeds horses and dogs at her home in the Shropshire Hills

Specifications

  • Publication Date
  • Dimensions
    8 in, 5 in, 0.95 in
  • Pages
    426
  • Publisher
    Frances Brand

Reviews (0)

Thorns: A study in human frailty by Brand, Frances
Frances Brand

Thorns: A study in human frailty

$1667

Traumatised by what he witnessed in the streets of Sarajevo during the 1990s siege, newsman James Lambert flees back to England, seeking peace and recovery in the beauty and apparent tranquillity of the countryside. He'd narrowly escaped death from a Serbian shell and watched his Bosnian lover die

Haunted by memories and the reverberating clamour of guns he takes on a small farm in the Welsh Marches, with a commission to write about the conflict.

Though entranced by the unspoiled beauty of the landscape he settles slowly into a community which seems to him a time warp of ideas and behaviour.

His seclusion is disrupted by a vulnerable girl's appeal to find a home for her young horse and his kindness to her drags him into the mesh of her family's secret guilt.

A letter draws him back to Bosnia and he becomes involved in covering the ongoing search for the bodies of the missing.

His relationship with the girl is threatened by the enmity of her ex-boyfriend but it develops into a love which brings with it dreadful consequences.



Author: Frances Brand
Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: Frances Brand
Published: 10/18/2018
Pages: 426
Weight: 1.01lbs
Size: 8.00h x 5.00w x 0.95d
ISBN: 9781916270800

About the Author
Brand, Frances: - Former journalist Frances Brand is based in the west of England among the glorious countryside of the Marches where a crow or raven can fly quickly over the border into Wales. She gave up journalism when the internet was giving regional papers a hard time to begin a new career running a popular bed and breakfast. She was latterly the editor of a farming newspaper, working closely with farmers and others involved in agriculture so knows at first hand the problems and vicissitudes of farming in the 21st-century and what conflicts can arise in a claustrophobic rural society. She witnessed at close quarters the trauma inflicted on the farming community during the UK foot and mouth disaster of 2001. She feels very strongly that so many people have lost touch with the countryside and its benefits, not least the ability of the landscape to inspire and comfort and renew optimism. She breeds horses and dogs at her home in the Shropshire Hills
View product