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008 170906t20182018enk 000 1 eng d
010 _a 2017491519
020 _a9781509842421
_qhardback
020 _a150984242X
_qhardback
020 _a9781509885602
_qpaperback
020 _a9781509842438
_qpaperback
035 _a(OCoLC)on1016937548
040 _aNZTPP
_beng
_cNZTPP
_dCDX
_dYDX
_dNZHAU
_dOCLCF
_dSINLB
_dDLC
042 _alccopycat
050 0 0 _aPR6116.
_bPOW 2018
082 0 4 _223
100 1 _aPowell, Jim,
_d1949-
_eauthor.
245 1 0 _aThings we nearly knew /
_cJim Powell.
264 1 _aLondon :
_bPicador, an imprint of Pan Macmillan ,
_c2018.
264 4 _c©2018
300 _a280 pages ;
_c20cm
500 _aDomestic fiction Fiction Psychological fiction Romans, nouvelles, etc
520 _aThere's a bar at the crossroads on the way out of town. Or the way in, depending on whether you're coming or going. Marcie and her husband have run it for years. They had children once, but not any more. After thirty years of marriage, there aren't many secrets left. Couples often tell themselves that, although it's not always true. Arlene appeared in the bar one day not long before Franky Albertino came back, thinking she'd find someone she'd once known, looking for a man named Jack. Franky was hoping that people might have forgotten the mess he left the first time around. Both of them were wrong. Women were always Franky's problem. Women and money. What Arlene's problem is isn't clear. It's obvious she has a history, but then which of us doesn't? As Arlene gets closer to finding Jack - her father? Her lover? - the bar becomes a scene of a great unravelling; secrets buried a lifetime ago are dragged into the light. In Things We Nearly Knew, Jim Powell invites us to consider how much we know about the ones we love and finally asks: would you want to know the truth?
650 0 _aMan-woman relationships
_vFiction.
650 0 _aFamily secrets
_vFiction.
650 0 _aMarried people
_vFiction.
906 _a7
_bcbc
_ccopycat
_d3
_encip
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_gy-gencatlg
942 _2lcc
_cBK
_h6116
_iPOW
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