Publish with Us

Follow Penguin

Follow Penguinsters

Follow Penguin Swadesh

What You Are Looking for is in the Library

THE TWO-MILLION-COPY BESTSELLING JAPANESE NOVEL

The Top Ten Times bestseller
A Time Magazine Book of the Year
‘An undeniable page-turner’
New York Times

‘I ADORED this uplifting, hopeful novel ‘ Daily Mail
‘It made me laugh and cry and feel comforted’ 5***** Reader review
‘A tribute to the transformative power of books and librariesIrish Times

An inspirational tale of the love, comfort and growth you can find in the pages of a good book.
_________________
What are you looking for?

So asks Tokyo’s most enigmatic librarian, Sayuri Komachi.

But she is no ordinary librarian.

Sensing exactly what someone is searching for in life, she provides just the book recommendation to help them find it.

We meet five visitors to the library, each at a different crossroads:

– The restless retail assistant eager to pick up new skills
– The mother faced with a demotion at work after maternity leave
– The conscientious accountant who yearns to open an antique store
– The gifted young manga artist in search of motivation
– The recently retired salaryman on a quest for newfound purpose

Can she help them find what they are looking for?

Which book will you recommend?
_________________

‘An undeniable page-turner’ New York Times

For fans of The Midnight Library and Before the Coffee Gets Cold, this feel-good Japanese book shows how the perfect book recommendation can change a life.

SHORTLISTED FOR THE JAPAN BOOKSELLERS’ AWARD

I definitely want to visit this library. I feel kinder after this book’ 5***** Reader review
‘A quirky slice of feel-good fiction that you could recommend to anyone’ Mail on Sunday
‘Wonderful. It made me look for connection in my life’ 5***** Reader review

Times bestseller, August 2023

Happy Place

‘Hilarious and wise… Another knockout’ Taylor Jenkins Reid
‘One of my favourite authors’ Colleen Hoover
‘A must-read book of the year’ Lauren Asher

—–

Two exes. One pact.
Could this holiday change everything?

Harriet and Wyn are the perfect couple – they go together like bread and butter, gin and tonic, Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds.

Every year, they take a holiday from their lives to drink far too much wine with their favourite people in the world.

Except this year, they are lying through their teeth, because Harriet and Wyn broke up six months ago. And they still haven’t told anyone.

But the cottage is for sale so this is the last time they’ll all be here together. They can’t bear to break their best friends’ hearts so they’ll fake it for one more week.

But how can you pretend to be in love – and get away with it – in front of the people who know you best?

Brimming with characters you can’t help but fall for and off-the-charts chemistry, HAPPY PLACE is Emily Henry doing what she does best!

—–

‘Another Emily Henry masterpiece’ Hannah Grace, ICEBREAKER

Heartfelt and hilarious. This book is my happy place!’ Lucy Score, THINGS WE NEVER GOT OVER

Smart, sunny, sexy and also a gorgeous story of female friendship‘ Beth O’Leary, THE FLATSHARE

‘The master of witty repartee’ Daily Mail

‘A heart-tugging masterpiece from the queen of romance‘ Ali Hazelwood, THE LOVE HYPOTHESIS

‘One of the current stars of romantic fictionIndependent

‘If I could climb inside any book it would be this oneCulturefly

‘Emily Henry’s books should be prescribed. Not only will they make you happy, her latest may just make you fall in love with falling in love again Woman’s Weekly

Tender and sexy, bittersweet with Henry’s trademark warmth‘ Bolu Babalola, HONEY & SPICE

Happy Place, Number 1 Sunday Times bestseller, May 2023

Strange Sally Diamond

**Selected for BBC 2 Between the Covers 2023**

**WINNER Crime Novel of the Year, Irish Book Awards 2023**

**SHORTLISTED for The Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year Award**

**LONGLISTED for the Goldsboro Books Glass Bell Award 2024**

Sally Diamond cannot understand why what she did was so strange. She was only doing what her father told her to do, to put him out with the rubbish when he died.

Now Sally is the centre of attention, not only from the hungry media and police detectives, but also a sinister voice from a past she cannot remember. As she begins to discover the horrors of her childhood, Sally steps into the world for the first time, making new friends and big decisions, and learning that people don’t always mean what they say.

But who is the man observing Sally from the other side of the world? And why does her neighbour seem to be obsessed with her? Sally’s trust issues are about to be severely challenged . . .

*****
‘In Sally Diamond, Nugent has given us an astounding creation with a singular voice . . . an absorbing, twisty, compulsive psychological thriller with surprising humour and pathos’ Sunday Independent

‘Strikingly well-observed and consistently surprising’ The Times

‘Incredible’ Sara Cox

‘Strange indeed . . . and smart, too! Shocking, disturbing and utterly original, Strange Sally Diamond will grip you from first page to last’ Paula Hawkins

‘Irresistibly compelling, this dark story is shocking yet endearing. A brilliant read that will suck you in’ Crime Monthly

‘Liz Nugent has outdone herself. Twisted and twisty, dark and gripping, no one is going to forget Sally Diamond in a hurry!’ Graham Norton

‘It creeped me out (in a good way) . . . Terrific’ Ian Rankin

‘Dark, compelling and deeply moving’ Ruth Ware

‘So, so good! Sally gets under your skin and worms her way into your heart. I didn’t want it to end’ Jane Fallon

‘I’m lost in admiration for Liz and her writing . . . vivid, pacy, taut but so very moving’ Marian Keyes

‘Jaw-droppingly clever . . . One of the best books I’ve read in a long, long time. I can’t stop thinking about it’ Lucy Foley

‘An outstanding achievement which transforms the dark psychological thriller map with both bravura and delicacy. One for the ages’ Maxim Jakubowski

Riverside Stories: Writings from Assam

Stories abound in Assam’s fields, ponds, rivers, forests, hills and cities. Most of its people wear each other’s clothes, eat each other’s food and speak each other’s languages. Diversity and amalgamation are the primarily identifiable elements of people from Assam. Yet, everyday patriarchy and politics of boundaries have resulted in so much confusion and conflict. Thankfully, we are witnessing emerging voices of people who experience life differently because of their own identities and locations and propose an inclusive space for us all. The women and transpeople who have contributed to Riverside Stories come from this diversity and bring their stories of multiple experiences from Assam to the world. This collection of fiction, non-fiction, poetry and visual stories, puts on record the experiences of the self, the very personal, within homes, in the environment, with politics, and with disappointments, desires, hopes and memories for a future. In putting together this anthology, it is our hope that we have complicated—more than it already is—the notion of whose and which stories can be told.

Stress to Zest

Stress to Zest takes you on a journey to help you understand how seven common stress factors impact the human mind:

  • Financial Stress: The weight of bills, debts and financial uncertainty.
  • Relationship Stress: The tides of love, conflict and connection.
  • Job Stress: The demands of work, deadlines and ambition.
  • Health Stress: The fragility of our bodies and minds.
  • Competition Pressure: The race against others and ourselves.
  • Social Pressure: The expectations that shape our choices.
  • Parental Pressure: The balancing act of nurturing and self-care.

In this collection of stories set in diverse contexts across the globe, you’ll meet characters from all walks of life grappling with these stressors. Their journeys are not mere survival tales; they’re blueprints for transformation. Witness how they navigate the storm, find resilience and discover a newfound zest for life.

The Fertile Earth

Vijaya and Sree are the daughters of the Deshmukhs of Irumi. Hailing from a lineage of ancestral aristocrats, their family’s social status and power over villagers on their land is absolute. Krishna and Ranga, brothers, are the sons of a widowed servant in the Deshmukh household.

When Vijaya and Krishna meet, they forge an intense bond that is beautiful and dangerous. But after an innocent attempt to hunt down a man-eating tiger in the jungle goes wrong, what happens between the two of them is disastrous, the consequences reverberating through their lives into young adulthood.

Years later, when violent uprisings rip across the countryside and the Marxist, ultra-left Naxalite movement arrives in Irumi, Vijaya and Krishna are forced to navigate the insurmountable differences of land ownership and class warfare in a country that is burning from the inside out—while being irresistibly drawn back to each other, their childhood bond now full of possibilities neither of them are willing to admit.

The Fertile Earth is a vast, ambitious debut that is equal parts historical, political, and human, with the enduring ties of love and family loyalty at its heart. Who can be loved? What are the costs of transgressions? How can justice be measured, and who will be alive to bear witness?

Phantoms of August

An unnamed narrator takes it upon himself to discover the truth behind the assassination of Sheikh Mujibur Rehman—who led Bangladesh’s independence movement from Pakistan, which was achieved in 1971—and his entire family. With literary greats for company, the narrator negotiates his complicated personal life and his philosophical and literary musings even as he locates a gun to shoot the assassins who are still alive. Hallucinatory, flitting between reality and dreams, and traversing the length and breadth of Dhaka, this is a fever dream of a novel—an individual’s quest while navigating the scarred and traumatized mind of a nation.

Our City That Year

A city teeters on the edge of chaos. A society lies fractured along fault lines of faith and ideology. A playground becomes a battleground. A looming silence grips the public.

Against this backdrop, Shruti, a writer paralyzed by the weight of events, tries to find her words, while Sharad and Hanif, academics whose voices are drowned out by extremism, find themselves caught between clichés and government slogans. And there’s Daddu, Sharad’s father, a beacon of hope in the growing darkness. As they each grapple with thoughts of speaking the unspeakable, an unnamed narrator takes on the urgent task of bearing witness.

First published in Hindi in 1998, Our City That Year is a novel that defies easy categorization—it’s a time capsule, a warning siren and a desperate plea. Geetanjali Shree’s shimmering prose, in Daisy Rockwell’s nuanced and consummate translation, takes us into a fever dream of fragmented thoughts and half-finished sentences, mirroring the disjointed reality of a city under siege. Readers will find themselves haunted long after the final page, grappling with questions that echo far beyond India’s borders.

The Book of Discoveries

Mortal danger follows the Pandavas and Panchali into exile.
Back in Hastinapur, the bloody-minded Kauravas continue to scheme for total domination.
Both Arjuna and Duryodhana approach Krishna for help.
Is war between the cousins inevitable? Or will the elders manage to avert it?
The Book of Discoveries is the eagerly awaited second instalment of the Mahabharata trilogy, which began explosively with The Book of Vows. Imagined afresh and composed in a style that captures the power, charm and ambiguity of Vyasa’s Mahabharata, this book dramatizes the stunning prelude to war—one that is full of thrilling adventures, fateful encounters and life-altering revelations.
Grounding his telling in the original Sanskrit version, Majmudar has recreated the ancient epic for a contemporary audience. His finest work yet, this is one of the most accessible, magical and unputdownable retellings of the Mahabharata. The Book of Discoveries will be followed by The Book of Killings.

The Lost Symbol (Hindi)/The Lost Symbol/द लॉस्ट सिम्बॉल

अमेरिका के कैपिटॉल बिल्डिंग में हॉर्वर्ड के सिम्बॉलॉजिस्ट रॉबर्ट लैंग्डन सायंकालीन लैक्चर देने जाते हैं तभी अजीबोगरीब घटना घटती है। वहाँ एक पाँच चिह्नों वाली वस्तु मिलती है और लैंग्डन पाते हैं कि वह कोई प्राचीन आमंत्रण है जिसे पाकर अतीत के ज्ञान को हासिल किया जा सकता है। लेकिन इसी बीच जब उनके गुरु का अपहरण हो जाता है, तो उन्हें पता चलता है कि उन्हें छुड़ाने का एक मात्र रास्ता उस आमंत्रण को स्वीकार करना ही है।
क्या लैंग्डन अपने गुरु को छुड़ा पाते हैं?
क्या वह प्राचीन ज्ञान को हासिल कर पाते हैं?
यहीं द लॉस्ट सिम्बॉल की कहानी है। 

error: Content is protected !!