Offers a furious homage to the homeless and a lyrical meditation on language and experience.
Set in a small village in the French Alps, this book relates the stories of sceptical, hard-working men and fiercely independent women.
This is a collection of portraits of a shepherd, a farmer, a painter and blind man, a sylph of Byzantine arrogance and a vagabond cyclist with primroses growing in her basket. The backgrounds range from Prague, Paris, Athens and Lahore, to countrysides and mountainscapes.
From the 1972 Booker Prize-winning author comes an examination of masculinity, social covenants and murder that develops into a masterclass in humanity, with an introduction by Benjamin Myers
An extended reflection by a masterful essayist on what it means to be human.
A succinct, urgent and never-before seen collection of Berger's writing on mineworkers and miners' strikes celebrating both his acclaimed writing and deep-rooted politics
Why should an artist's way of looking at the world have any meaning for us? Any artwork reflects the artist's intentions, but also its times: therefore all art is political
A powerful meditation on political resistance and the global search for justice
A deeply moving exploration of the relationship between thinking and drawing, from the author of the groundbreaking Ways of Seeing
A succinct, urgent and never-before seen collection of Berger's writing on mineworkers and miners' strikes celebrating both his acclaimed writing and deep-rooted politics
Longlisted for the Man Booker Prize, a story of love and resistance by one of our era's foremost novelists