From a literary master, a novel of ghosts and history and family legacy, of the unexpected acts of care that shine light into our dark. <p/>Ghosts don't exist.
They don't. End of.
Story, however.
It is haunting.
Everything tells it. <p/>It all starts when Petra and her little sister Patch hear a horrifying story from the past and find themselves making up a ghost. <p/>Is it imaginary? Is it real? <p/>Then it all starts again thirty years later when Petra, now estranged from Patch, finds a phantom horse kicking the furniture to pieces in her bedroom. <p/>What to do? She phones her sister. <p/>In a chiarascuro dance through our increasingly antagonistic era, Glyph asks if we're attending to the history that's made us and to the history we're making. <p/>A funny, warm and clear-eyed take on where we are now, Glyph is about what our imaginations are for and how, in a broken, brutal and divided time, we rekindle care, solidarity, resistance and openness. This anti-war novel, Ali Smith's most soulful, playful and vital yet, is a work of lightness that goes deep to counter the forces currently flattening the modern world.