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Ross Raisin

    January 1, 1979

    Ross Raisin is a British novelist whose work delves into the darker aspects of the human psyche and social alienation. His style is characterized by its raw intensity and a keen insight into the inner lives of characters often found on the fringes of society. Raisin explores themes of isolation, adolescence, and the search for identity within harsh environments, with his prose celebrated for its authenticity and stylistic command. His novels offer readers unsettling yet compelling explorations of complex human experiences.

    A Hunger
    God's Own Country
    A Natural
    Read This If You Want To Be A Great Writer
    Waterline
    • Waterline

      • 288 pages
      • 11 hours of reading

      Mick Little's journey unfolds as he navigates the decline of Glasgow's shipbuilding industry, prompting a move to Australia with his wife, Cathy. After years of struggle and loss, including Cathy's death, he returns to a transformed home where the shipyards have vanished. Now, Mick faces the challenge of rebuilding his life while grappling with profound guilt and the longing for a fresh start. The narrative explores themes of loss, resilience, and the search for redemption in the wake of personal and societal change.

      Waterline
    • 3.9(204)Add rating

      This book demystifies the writing process, empowering you to write your own novel or short story. The author explains expert technique in a clear and jargon-free way, with examples from the fifty greatest writers of our time. For aspiring writers of all ages and abilities, Read This If You Want to Be a Great Writer will motivate and strengthen your writing talent.

      Read This If You Want To Be A Great Writer
    • Moving again, as her husband is transferred from club to club, she is lost, disillusioned with where life has taken her.

      A Natural
    • In one of the most celebrated debut novels of recent years, Ross Raisin tells the story of solitary young farmer, Sam Marsdyke, and his extraordinary battle with the world. Expelled from school and cut off from the town, mistrusted by his parents and avoided by city incomers, Marsdyke is a loner until he meets rebellious new neighbour Josephine. But what begins as a friendship and leads to thoughts of escape across the moors turns to something much, much darker with every step.

      God's Own Country
    • Anita is a talented chef in a high-end London restaurant - who has risen doggedly up the ranks, finally, to sous chef. At home, however, her husband Robert is suffering from dementia and declining rapidly. Now Anita will have to make a decision about his, and her own, future- whether to be faithful to his last apparent plea for mercy, or to the person who he once used to be. A decision complicated by ambition, and by the guilt of her own past; complicated also by her intensifying friendship with another man, Peter, and the temptation of a new life. A Hunger takes us inside the real, untelevised world of a restaurant kitchen; into dementia's fracture of selfhood; and - in a first-person narration which does not use the word 'I' - immerses us uniquely inside the mind of Anita to experience every year of her life, from a young child to the carer of her ailing husband, for whom she must make the most difficult choice of all.

      A Hunger