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      • Rights2 Consultants

        Ruth Tellis and Clare Hodder founded Rights2 to offer a unique consultancy service, bringing their collective experience of over 35 years in Rights management to provide practical, no-nonsense solutions to real-world rights issues for publishers of all sizes. They manage rights sales on behalf of Practical Inspiration Publishing (www.practicalinspiration.com) in addition to running the Small Publisher Rights Showcase with the UK's Department for International Trade (https://rightsshowcase.wordpress.com).

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      • Rodin Educational Consultancy

        Rodin Educational Consultancyhas developed a range of Teaching Tools to Empower Thinking. With over 30,000 copies sold, Reflections on Classroom Thinking Strategies is a popular resource for teachers, with easy to use tools and worksheets for empowering students to think, and engage in a lifelong love of learning.

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      • Trusted Partner
        September 2015

        The Life Visa

        by Tan Zhongchi

        Mr. He Fengshan, born in Yiyang city of Hunan province, issued visas to thousands of Jews when he was the Consul General of the Chinese Embassy in Vienna but at the risk of his own life. Finally, he protected these Jews from being murdered by Nazi.

      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
        Humanities & Social Sciences
        November 2020

        Diplomatic tenses

        by Iver Neumann, J. Simon Rofe, Giles Scott-Smith

      • Trusted Partner
        Humanities & Social Sciences
        June 2024

        Passages

        On Geo-Analysis and the aesthetics of precarity

        by Sam Okoth Opondo, Michael J. Shapiro

        Passages: On geo-analysis and the aesthetics of precarity is a multi-genre and transdisciplinary text addressing themes such as colonialism, nuclear zones of abandonment, migration control regimes, transnational domestic work, the biocolonial hostilities of the hospitality industry, legal precarities behind the international criminal justice regime, the shadow-worlds of the African soccerscape, and immunity regimes related to the COVID-19 pandemic. This book invites inquiry into today's apocalyptic narratives, humanitarian reason, and international criminal justice regimes, as well as the precarity generated by citizen time and 'consulate time'. The aesthetic breaks emerging from the book's image-text montage draw attention to the ethics of encounter and passage that challenges colonial, domestic, and nation-statist sovereignty regimes of inattention.

      • Trusted Partner
        Biography & True Stories
        February 2017

        Jackie Chan:Never Grow Up, Only Get Older

        by Jackie Chan, Zhu Mo

        This is an autobiography of Chinese Kongfu star Jackie Chan. The book is a true recording of this international superstar’s growth and life experience for the last 50 years. It tells us the legendary actor’s stories, and also reflects a fantastic acting age.

      • The eagle’s flight

        by Patrizia Masci

        Paul, an english man, lives and works in New York as a journalist at the British Consulate. He shouldn’t complain, but his enthusiasm, joy and will to live seem to be disappearing. Valentina, lives and works in Rome as a translator for a publishing house. Young and dynamic, she’s dragging out a by now tired love story. An exciting adventure will make the two meet, jeopardizing Valentina’s life. In the end, this crazy adventure will prove to be a great unexpected gift Suddenly, all the thinking, the doubts… will vanish, buried in a simple word that will finally make sense: love. A romantic love story and a captivating crime novel.

      • Organization C.

        Detective Story from Berlin 1922

        by Gunnar Kunz

        Berlin, 1922: Hunger and poverty still dominate the streets, the devaluation of money is advancing, political assassinations shake the country. In Grunewald, the body of a young man is found who was shot and buried nine months earlier. Inspector Gregor Lilienthal is determined to find the murderer, even though the traces have long since cooled off. His brother Hendrik, a professor of philosophy at the university, and Diana Escher, Max Planck's physics assistant, support him in this with philosophical wit and scientific thoroughness. As it turns out, the dead man belonged to the notorious organization Consul, an association of former Freikorp soldiers who fight the young republic with terror and violence. Walther Rathenau is next on their hit list. In a race against time, Hendrik, Diana and Gregor try to uncover the conspiracy and prevent the attack. But the assassins are always one step ahead of them. Sutton publishing house, Erfurt 2007. 216 pages, 9.90 Euro. ISBN 978-3-86680-215-5

      • Biography & True Stories
        January 2001

        Searching for Frederick

        And Adventures Along the Way

        by Verner Bickley (author)

        Narrative of eight-years research, in Scotland, England and Hong Kong, as well as world-wide, with useful addresses and contact information. Intermixed with fascinating stories and provocative reflections from the author's own life experience, mainly in Asia. VERNER BICKLEY shared in his wife's research for the Biography of Frederick Stewart. His own career as cultural and educational practitioner and educator provided useful insights and leads. "Verner Bickley writes in a mostly light-hearted vein, with a gentle humour." — Sir James Hodge, British Consul General, Hong Kong"Verner and Gillian Bickley's methodical investigations are a handshake down the years. Their fascination with Frederick Stewart (1836-1889) produced Gillian's biography, The Golden Needle, in 1997. Dr Verner Bickley's Searching for Frederick and Adventures Along the Way is a behind-the-scenes 'bookumentary', explaining in detail how and why the Bickleys undertook the endeavour. For genealogists and Hong Kong historians, Verner Bickley's book is a fascinating guide to biographical research. It contains contact numbers and addresses for Hong Kong and British public record offices, libraries, archives, registries, plus Web sites and top tips on searching, such as where to start and how to synthesise documents." —SCMP

      • Thriller / suspense

        Dominium Dei

        by Thomas Greanias

        The assassination of Caesar's chief astrologer explodes into revelations of a supersecret organization known as Dominium Dei—the "Rule of God"—and an imperial plot to establish the rule of Rome forever. DOMINIUM DEI. In his global blockbusters Raising Atlantis, The Atlantis Prophecy and The Atlantis Revelation, New York Times bestselling author Thomas Greanias masterfully blended ancient mysteries and modern conspiracies. In this spectacular new thriller set in Ancient Rome, Greanias reveals the master plan to shape our world’s reality and has crafted a timeless epic adventure. DOMINIUM DEI. Welcome to the New World Order. Welcome to Rome at the end of the first century. No one from slave to senator can escape the Reign of Terror under Emperor Domitian. Caesar has declared himself Lord and God of the Universe. Before him all must bow or die in the Games. Enter the innocent playwright Athanasius. Wrongly accused of treason by jealous rivals, he is condemned to the scripted "reality" of the arena. Death is guaranteed. Against all odds he escapes, alone with a secret that will shake the world. But Athanasius has unleashed the wrath of Rome. Now the empire will hunt him down to the ends of the earth, stopping at nothing to ensure that the secret of Dominium Dei—the "Rule of God"—dies with him.

      • Occult studies

        Michael Psellus On the Operation of Daemons

        by Marcus Collisson

        Michael Constantine Psellus (1018-1178 C.E) was one of the most notable writers and philosophers of the Byzantine era. The Byzantine domain was effectively the eastern Greek speaking part of the Roman Empire centred on Byzantium (Constantinople, modern Istanbul) which split off from the Latin West in 364 C.E. Its intellectual legacies helped lay the foundations for the Italian Renaissance. It was the fall of Constantinople in 1453 that released a tide of Greek reading scholars into Western Europe, particularly Venice. With them came much of the magical and Hermetic knowledge which the Greeks in their turn had inherited from the Egyptians. The Key of Solomon was one such text. It is therefore essential to the understanding of such magical texts that one understands exactly how the Byzantines understood the nature of daemons. Psellus forms the bridge between the ancient world, Byzantine Greek, and the grimoire conception of the nature of daemons. Hailing from Constantinople, Psellus' career was an illustrious and practical one, serving as a political advisor to a succession of emperors, playing a decisive role in the transition of power between various monarchs. He became the leading professor at the newly founded University of Constantinople, bearing the honorary title, 'Consul of the Philosophers'. He was the driving force behind the university curriculum reform designed to emphasise the Greek classics, especially Homeric literature. Psellus is credited with the shift from Aristotelian thought to the Platonist tradition, and was adept in politics, astronomy, medicine, music, theology, jurisprudence, physics, grammar and history.

      • The Arts

        The Turner Erotica

        A Biographical Novel

        by Robert J. Begiebing

        The Turner Erotica: A Biographical Novel by Robert J. Begiebing.   J. M. W. Turner (1775-1851), the greatest British landscape painter and one of the most revolutionary influences on Western art since the eighteenth century, left upon his death a rich and varied legacy to Britain’s National Gallery, including more than 19,000 sketch studies containing considerable erotica.  When John Ruskin, Turner’s greatest supporter at the time, discovered the erotic works, he, with the help of National Gallery Keeper Ralph Wornum, burned most of the material they found offensive.  The Turner Erotica  follows narrator William James Stillman (the young American artist, Consul to Rome and Crete, friend of Ruskin, and acquaintance of Turner) as he pursues a dangerous quest across Britain, Europe, and New England to discover and save the few remaining studies that through theft and betrayal escaped Ruskin’s outraged fire.  In his quest, Stillman enlists the help of Pre-Raphaelite William Rossetti, the liberated American painter Allegra Fullerton, and Sir Richard Burton (the greatest linguist, swordsman, pistol-shot, and covert agent for the British government in the 19th century).  Stillman’s obsession with the surviving erotic studies arises out of their potential value to British art history and his deep sense that the studies contain a secret clue to the master’s celebrated body of public work.

      • Children's & young adult: general non-fiction
        October 2023

        The Incredible Story of the Ingenious Max Aub

        by Miguel Alayrach and Meluca Redon

        The Incredible Story of the Ingenious Max Aub is an illustrated biography intended for a young audience that narrates the most important moments of his personal life, family, and milestones in his professional career. At the age of twelve, Max Aub wrote his first poem, a clear indication of his literary vocation. A life dedicated to literature. A child who grew up between two countries: France and Spain, fleeing from war. An adult who, in the exile of three wars, continued to pursue his passion and left behind a vast body of work: poetry, narrative, theater... despite the inherent adversities of the times in which he lived.

      • The natural world, country life & pets
        October 2013

        A Guide to Wild Spain, Portugal and Gibraltar

        by Clive Finlayson, Geraldine Finlayson, Stewart Finlayson

        A Guide to Wild Spain, Portugal and Gibraltar is a unique book that brings together the history of exploration of the 'wild' country that is the Iberian                Peninsular in the 19th Century.                             The authors retrace the footsteps taken by four British naturalists based in Gibraltar and Jerez: Abel Chapman, a vitner from Sunderland, among whose               achievements was the saving from extinction of the Spanish ibex and large involvement in the establishment of Africa's first game reserve, now the Kruger National Park; Walter Buck, a native of Jerez who became British Vice-Consul in that city, and together with Chapman described the countryside, people and wildlife of Spain in two classic books Wild Spain (1893) and Unexplored Spain (1910); Leonard Howard Loyd Irby, an army officer and keen ornithologist who devoted his time to the study of birds in southern Iberia aftern his arrival in Gibraltar in 1868 and published his findings in his Ornithology of the Straits of Gibraltar (1875);and William Willoughby Cole Verner, also a military man, who was a keen naturalist and explorer and wrote in 1909 My Life among the Wild Birds in Spain on his retirement in Algeciras.                            Quoting liberally from the works of these intrepid naturalists and embellishing the book with their own exquisite photographs, the Finlayson family has produced an evocative image of a landmass so diverse that their predecessors, Chapman and Buck, recognised that "included within its boundaries are nearly all the physical conditions of Europe and northern Africa".                            The book is, however, not only a fascinating travelogue but also a plea for conservation as some of wild Iberia's treasures are now under serious threat. The grand Egyptian vulture,for example, the authors maintain, may well be extinct in Andalucía in a decade's time. Happily there is a counter-balance with the recovery of some species like the glossy ibis and the purple gallinule.                             A Guide to Wild Spain, Portugal and Gibraltar is a multi-facetted, cleverly conceived book that is directed at anyone who has an interest in the natural history of the three territories that make up the Iberian Peninisular. It tells the reader where to go to find unique species or natural phenomena like the migration of birds of prey. In substance, it is visually stunning 21st Century snapshot of one of Europe's ecologically richest lands.                             Author's Note: Clive Finlayson is a Gibraltar-born biologist and his work has included research into the ecology of birds and that of the Neanderthals. His wife,                 Geraldine, was also born in Gibraltar and is a biogeographer. She has worked on many field projects including inside the Doñana National Park. Their son, Stewart, is a keen naturalist and is reading for a PhD in biology. He is intimately familiar with the wildlife of Iberia and also heads the Gibraltar Museum Caving Unit.

      • September 2020

        Un poeta nacional

        by Feiling, C.E.

        The young poet Esteban Errandonea receives from the Minister an implausible assignment: to travel to the South and convince Elizabeth Askew, widow of a British consul murdered by an anarchist, to return to the Capital. Errandonea accepts the charge as Inspector of Prisons because he feels it is his chance to become the man of action he perhaps longs to be. The poet embarks on a sea journey to a ranch in the south, and allows himself to be enveloped in a web of intrigue, power and violence. His intellectual cynicism does not save him from becoming intimately involved, as befits every hero.

      • Biography: historical, political & military

        James Monroe

        Oberlin’s Christian Statesman and Reformer, 1821–1898

        by Catherine Rokicky (author)

        Catherine M. Rokicky explores this abolitionist politician's years at Oberlin during the antebellum period, as well as his travels that would put him in contact with important men such as Frederick Douglass; his election to the Ohio House or Representatives from 1856 to 1859 and the Ohio Senate from 1859 to 1862; his work with Jacob D. Cox and James A. Garfield on behalf of black rights (they became known as the Radical Triumvirate); his term as president pro tem of the Ohio Senate; and his appointment by President Lincoln as U.S. consul at Rio deJaneiro. Monroe was later elected to the United States Congress in 1871, where he served for five terms. Following his retirement from Congress in 1881, he returned to Oberlin where, as an endowed professor of political economy and modern history, he influenced students who would become important progressive reformers.

      • Fiction

        The Hours Taken From Us

        by Mónica Castellanos

        These are the days of Franco and Hitler. Among the thousands of refugees from the Spanish Civil War, Guillermina Giralt and Francesc Planchart, two young Catalans will live one of the most moving stories in their attempt to survive the French internment camp in Argelès-sur-Mer. But they will not be the only ones. Thousands of men, women and children, intellectuals, artists, peasants, workers will leave their homes, face inhuman conditions of life and fight to preserve the most precious thing they have: their lives.  In that uncertain future a man will emerge, the Mexican consul Gilberto Bosques who risking his life and his family’s, will suffer the arrest of the Gestapo and go beyond his diplomatic functions to save thousands of people from the most cruel and harrowing persecution of history.

      • Fiction
        March 2020

        Hannah

        by Christian Galvez

        Florence under the Nazis. Two timelines. A palindrome that joins two generations. An unknown hero. A story based on real events Florence, 1944. German consul Gerhard Wolf, the Guardian of Ponte Vecchio, saved the lives of hundreds of Jews during the Nazi occupation, kept the Germans from stealing the artworks in the Uffizi gallery, and saved Ponte Vecchio from being destroyed by mines. Florence, 2019. Hannah returns to Spain from Florence because her grandmother, Hannah, is dying. With her will go one of her deepest secrets: how she lived through the Nazi occupation of Florence in 1944. Hanna will find a Wehrpass, a Nazi passport belonging to a soldier who died in combat in 1943, and next to her grandmother’s name, she sees the text: “Hannah, girl number 37. G. Wolf.” Why did her Jewish grandmother’s name appear in a Nazi passport?

      • Historical fiction
        September 2019

        Nigrinus. The condemnation of memory

        by Xavier N. Cervera

        The greatest Roman of his time, Marco Cornelio Nigrino Curiacio Materno, suffers the damnatio memoriae (the condemnation of memory) for posing a threat to Trajan aspirations, the other candidate to Caesar’s chair. Nigrino carved the most brilliant military career of his time, became the most awarded general, was named consul and ruled the Aquitaine, Moesia, and Syria provinces. However, the emperor Nerva is forced to choose Trajan as his successor. The chance of a civil war disappears with a quick movement that leads to the cessation of Nigrino, his forced exile and the prohibition of mentioning his name. Nigrino and his family, from Edeta, fought to keep their memory alive no matter how regardless of the difficulties imposed by those who saw their disgrace as a chance to inherit their influences and great fortune. Historical novel thoroughly set in the 1st century, retrieving the character of one of the most important personalities of our history, forgotten during nearly twenty centuries. The Edetan Marco Cornelio Nigrino, condemned to memory due to his rivalry with Trajan to gain Caesar’s chair.

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