
| ISBN: | 9781615538508 |
| Editions: |
27 other editions
of this product
|
- 1 Edwin of the Iron Shoes
- 2 Ask the Cards a Question
- 3 The Cheshire Cat's Eye
- 4 Games to Keep the Dark Away
- 5 Leave a Message for Willie
- 5.5 Double
- 6 Kingdoms of Light
- 7 Eye of the Storm
- 8 There's Something in a Sunday (A Sharon Mccone Mystery)
- 9 The Shape of Dread
- 10 Trophies and Dead Things
- 11 Where Echoes Live
- 12 Pennies on a Dead Woman's Eyes
- 13 Wolf in the Shadows
- 14 Till The Butchers Cut Him Down
- 15 Wild & Lonely Place (A Sharon McCone mystery)
- 15.5 McCone and Friends
- 16 The Broken Promise Land
- 17 Both Ends of the Night
- 18 While Other People Sleep
- 19 A Walk Through the Fire
- 20 Listen to the Silence
- 21 Dead Midnight (Sharon McCone Mysteries)
- 22 The Dangerous Hour (Muller, Marcia)
- 24 The Ever-Running Man
- 25 Burn Out
- 26 Locked In
- 27 Coming Back
- 28 City of Whispers
- 28.5 Skeleton in the Closet
- 29 Looking for Yesterday
- 30 The Night Searchers (Sharon McCone Mystery)
- 30.5 Merrill-Go-Round
- 30.6 Tell Me Who I Am
- 31 Someone Always Knows
- 32 The Color of Fear
- 33 The Breakers
- 34 Ice and Stone
- 35 Circle in the Water (A Sharon McCone Mystery)
- Dominion
- Reader's block
- Vanishing Point
- Hope
- Escape Velocity
- Frontier Worlds
- Sometime Never...
- Halflife
- To the Slaughter
- Time Zero
- The Banquo Legacy
- Demontage
- Option Lock
- Kursaal
- Grimm Reality
- Revolution Man
- Unnatural History
- The Sleep of Reason
- Mad Dogs and Englishmen
- The Taint
- The Face-Eater
- The Ancestor Cell
- The Space Age
- Parallel 59
- The Janus Conjunction
- Beltempest
- The Eight Doctors
- Vampire Science
- The Bodysnatchers
- Genocide
- War of the Daleks
- Alien Bodies
- Legacy of the Daleks
- Dreamstone Moon
- Seeing I
- Placebo Effect
- Vanderdeken's Children
- The Scarlet Empress
- The Taking of Planet 5
- The Fall of Yquatine
- The Turing Test
- Father Time
- EarthWorld
- Eater of Wasps
- The Slow Empire
- Dark Progeny
- The City of the Dead
- The Adventuress of Henrietta Street
- Trading Futures
- The Book of the Still
- The Crooked World
- Camera Obscura
- History 101
- The Infinity Race
- Reckless Engineering
- Timeless
- Emotional Chemistry
- The Deadstone Memorial
- The Gallifrey Chronicles
- Casualties of War
- The Domino Effect
- Doctor Who: Apollo 23
- Doctor Who: Kursaal
- "Doctor Who", to the Slaughter
- Doctor Who: Vanishing Point
- Doctor Who: Legacy of the Daleks
- Doctor Who: the Gallifrey Chronicles: Gallifrey Chronicles
- Doctor Who: Demontage
- Doctor Who: Option Lock
- The Dating Game: Parallel Parking No. 6
- The Face-Eater (Doctor Who Series)
- Beltempest (Doctor Who Series)
- Doctor Who: Seeing I
- Doctor Who: The Janus Conjunction
- Doctor Who: Eater of Wasps
- "Doctor Who" the Deadstone Memorial
- Doctor Who and the Taint (Doctor Who Series)
- Revolution Man (Doctor Who Series)
- Doctor Who (Dr Who Big Finish)
- Placebo Effect (Doctor Who Series)
- This is Not a Novel
- Hope (Doctor Who)
- Doctor Who: Emotional Chemistry (Doctor Who (BBC Paperback))
- Sometime Never... (Doctor Who)
- The Fall of Yquatine (Doctor Who (BBC Paperback))
- Unnatural History (Doctor Who Series)
- Camera Obscura (Doctor Who)
- Escape Velocity (Doctor Who)
- The Scarlet Empress (Doctor Who series)
- Time Zero (Doctor Who)
- History 101 (Doctor Who)
- Father Time (Doctor Who)
- Doctor Who: Reckless Engineering (Doctor Who (BBC Paperback))
- The Adventuress of Henrietta Street (Doctor Who)
- Doctor Who: Halflife
- The Shadows of Avalon
- The Blue Angel
- Doctor Who: Dark Progeny
From Wittgenstein’s Mistress to Reader’s Block to Springer’s Progress to This Is Not a Novel, he has delighted and amazed readers for decades. And now comes his latest masterwork, Vanishing Point, wherein an elderly writer (identified only as “Author”) sets out to transform shoeboxes crammed with notecards into a novel—and in so doing will dazzle us with an astonishing parade of revelations about the trials and calamities and absurdities and often even tragedies of the creative life—and all the while trying his best (he says) to keep himself out of the tale. Naturally he will fail to do the latter, frequently managing to stand aside and yet remaining undeniably central throughout—until he is swept inevitably into the narrative’s starting and shattering climax. A novel of death and laughter both—and of extraordinary intellectual richness.



























