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      • Trusted Partner
        Historical fiction
        2021

        Faride

        by Irene Rozdobudko

        The beginning of the novel takes place in the 20s of the last century in the Crimea. Crimean Tatars, Ukrainians and Jews live peacefully in the village. We see a company of children of different ethnic backgrounds. Before World War II, these children graduated and were preparing for adult life. Young Crimean Tatar woman Faride works in a kindergarten. Crimea is occupied by the Nazis. They gather all the Jews to shoot them outside the village. Faride taught Jewish children from her kindergarten to say that they were Tatars, and gave them new Crimean Tatar names. The Nazis tortured her, but the children were saved. 50 years later she was awarded the title of the Righteous Among the Nations. In 1944, Crimea was liberated from the Nazis by the Soviet army. Stalin accused the Crimean Tatars of collaborating with the Nazis and ordered their expulsion from the Crimea, even those who had fought in the Soviet army. One night they are all driven from their homes and taken for months in wagons, designed to transport cattle, to camps in Siberia. Half of them died on the way from starvation and disease. Faride manages to save her young son, leaving him in the village with neighbors, but she finds herself in a Stalinist concentration camp, where she works on cutting trees. After Stalin's death, Crimean Tatars were still not allowed to return home to Crimea; they were relocated to Uzbekistan, where they lived under police surveillance until 1989, when the Soviet Union began to disintegrate. Faride returns, but her son did not come to meet her, and strangers live in her house. Faride returns forgotten, tortured by both the Nazis and the Soviet regime. The novel is based on real events, it shows the life story of one woman in parallel with the tragic history of the entire Crimean Tatar nation.

      • Trusted Partner
        Humanities & Social Sciences
        June 2012

        Cultures and caricatures of British imperial aviation

        Passengers, pilots, publicity

        by Gordon Pirie, Andrew Thompson, John Mackenzie

        The new activity of trans-continental civil flying in the 1930s is a useful vantage point for viewing the extension of British imperial attitudes and practices. Cultures and caricatures of British imperial aviation examines the experiences of those (mostly men) who flew solo or with a companion (racing or for leisure), who were airline passengers (doing colonial administration, business or research), or who flew as civilian air and ground crews. For airborne elites, flying was a modern and often enviable way of managing, using and experiencing empire. On the ground, aviation was a device for asserting old empire: adventure and modernity were accompanied by supremacism. At the time, however, British civil imperial flying was presented romantically in books, magazines and exhibitions. Eighty years on, imperial flying is still remembered, reproduced and re-enacted in caricature. ;

      • MAMMOTH AND OTHER ANCIENT ANIMALS OF SIBERIA

        by Albert Protopopov et al

        Asian Northeast has been excavating over 75% of all mammoth bones globally. There is a research centre focused on these ancient animals here. Palaeontologists of the Fauna Department of the Academy of Sciences of the Sakha Republic (Yakutia) worked to compile this encyclopaedia. This book presents unique contents related to sensational findings of mammoth’s, cave lion’s, woolly rhino’s and other ancient animals’ bones excavated in the northern Siberia. Text bodies go along with illustrations visualizing the animals’ images, as well as with real photos of paleontological findings. The book would be a real catch for those who take interest in the history of the Earth and its ancient inhabitants.

      • February 2021

        Heaven is a Small Circle

        Novel

        by Carolina Schutti

        This novel by Carolina Schutti broaches different concepts of freedom and identity. Two separate plot lines outline the fate of two women. At first glance, these women could not be more different but little by little, certain parallels reveal themselves.The first-person narrator, a young woman, is losing control over her life, her feelings, her language and her body. At the same time, however, her perceptions remain crystal clear. Now she is expected to learn to manage her temper at an asylum. While Mark, the only person she is attached to there, is about to be discharged, she is repeatedly thinking about her own departure.Ina, the second protagonist, has already departed – to Siberia, where she would like to run a roadside inn at an ice road. However, she finds herself facing a tough adventure with obscure Boris and only notices too late that she is caught in a trap. The story gets more thrilling with every chapter. In Schutti’s poetic and yet powerful style, both women’s lives come together.

      • September 2020

        Mignon ad the Dragon

        by Samaritana Rattazzi

        Mignon is the daughter of a peasant family in medieval Siberia. She’s small, as sweet as honey, and so sensitive that she can communicate with any animal. She lives a simple, serene life in the forest she loves so much. That is until one day she finds a mysterious blue egg that contains a magical creature that will change her destiny

      • Historical fiction (Children's/YA)
        March 2020

        Natural Histories: Mammoth Mission

        by Xavier-Laurent Petit

        Amouksan is the oldest living person in the world. She lives in Siberia, on the edge of the world, near the spirit realm. Nowadays, all she has left are memories, and three precious objects that have been given to her: a leather talisman, photographs, and a magnificent dress she has only worn once, a very long time ago. Her trapper father wished to have a son, so that he could teach him how to hunt deer in the winter, and salmon fishing in the summer. That is how he came to raise Amouksan as a boy. But that year, they discovered together a giant who came all the way back from the ice ages. A Mammoth. It will have them embark on the most incredible journey of their lives.

      • Children's & YA

        The Moon is Like a Golden Boat

        by Juhani Püttsepp, Gundega Muzikante

        White Raven 2021Every time Keete looks at pictures from her childhood where she’s holding her teddy bear Pätsu in her lap, she wonders what life would have been like without war. Her parents would certainly have been able to keep working as teachers without living in terror of the communists deporting them to Siberia. The whole family could have spent nights without having to hurry to the bomb shelter or see their precious hometown in ruins. In peacetime, she could have kept living on the second floor of their cherry-red home instead of setting off on a harrowing journey across the Baltic Sea to Sweden. Years and years later, Keete thinks about how lucky today’s kids are to grow up without war. And she still cradles Pätsu in her arms – a teddy bear who helped her get through life’s perils.

      • Fiction
        2018

        Five Fingers

        by Māra Zālīte

        Five Fingers was the winner of the 2013 Annual Latvian Literature Award for Best Prose. It is a fictionalised childhood memoir in which the author describes her family's return from Siberia in the 1950s and life in Latvia in the late 1950s and early 1960s.

      • Biography & True Stories

        A Nurse's Story

        Medical Missionary in Korea and Siberia, 1915-1920

        by Delia Battles Lewis

        ​Delia Battles left her small town in Ohio to train as a nurse in New York City and then went on an adventure of a lifetime. She found fulfillment in her work as a medical missionary in Korea, training native nurses at the mission hospital in another small town, Haeju. Her life of service there was interrupted by WWI, when she was called to be part of a Red Cross unit on the Eastern Front. She traveled on the Trans-Siberian railroad, encountered fleeing refugees in Harbin, and then worked in a typhus hospital and helped establish a Red Cross hospital in Omsk. At the end of the war, she returned to Korea to work in a hospital in Seoul, just in time to witness the first stirrings of the Korean Independence movement.

      • September 2021

        Sinking Islands

        by Cai Emmons

        Sinking Islands continues the story of Bronwyn Artair, a scientist who possesses the power to influence the natural forces of the Earth. After several successful interventions, including one in Siberia, she has gone into hiding, worried about unintended consequences of her actions, as well as about the ethics of operating solo. But circumstances call her to action again, and an idea takes shape: What if she could impart her skill to other people? Gathering a few kindred souls from climate-troubled places around the world—Felipe from São Paulo, where drought conditions are creating strains on day-to-day life; Analu and his daughter Penina from a sinking island in the South Pacific; and Patty from the tornado-ridden plains of Kansas—she takes them to the wilds of Northern New Hampshire where she tries to teach them her skill. The novel, realistic but for the single fantastical element, explores how we might become more attuned to the Earth and act more collaboratively to solve the enormity of our climate problem.

      • Biography & True Stories
        February 2020

        In Siberia's Prisons

        by Yoann Barbereau

        Midnight Express in Siberia. A gripping contemporary story of escape. “The scene unfolds not far from Lake Baikal, where I live and love and am lucky enough to be loved, in Irkutsk, the capital of eastern Siberia. It’s morning, men in balaclavas appear out of nowhere. My daughter screams. She’s five years old. I’m arrested right in front of her, then beaten – expertly – and interrogated. Worst of all I’m branded with that ignominious word I struggle to commit to paper: paedophile. These men hidden behind balaclavas and shadows want my skin. They have set in motion an implacable and brutish process of destruction that has a name, a name I know, invented by the KGB: Kompromat.” Inside Siberia’s prisons, I try to understand. In the psychiatric hospital where I’m later interned, I try to understand. I’m guaranteed fifteen years of a gruelling camp. The story of my escapes can begin.

      • History of other lands

        Reconstructing Russia

        The Political Economy of American Assistance to Revolutionary Russia, 1917–1922

        by Leo C. Bacino

        Reconstructing Russia focuses on the Wilson administration’s efforts to find some way to provide economic support to Russian Siberia as a counterpoint to German economic influence. The connection between the Wilson administration’s efforts to provide economic assistance in Siberia and the Marshall Plan becomes even more significant at the close of the twentieth century as contemporary debates are waged over the issue of economic assistance to the former Soviet Union. Bacino places Wilson’s Russian policy in a new light and examines it from a government-wide perspective. He analyzes several significant issues and gives a fresh look at one of the most confusing episodes in Wilsonian foreign policy.

      • October 2019

        Matuta

        by Nathalie Tuleff, Jean Lucas, Laure Guillebon

        A story by Nathalie Tuleff set to music by Jean Lucas and illustrated by Laure Guillebon.   To the sound of accordion, jew’s harp, conchs, trombone, nose whistle or bombo by Jean Lucas, Nathalie Tuleff tells and sings a fascinating journey from the Siberian plains to Africa. The initiatory trip undertaken by Matuta in the heart of a wild nature, off the beaten track, is also a story of contemplation, sadness and joy, friendship and solidarity. With this ode to the boundless curiosity, to the meeting with others and the world, the two artists, who have the habit of performing together on stage, sign their first collaboration with Trois Petits Points and their first audio book.    Little Matuta is numbed by the terrible history of her tribe. Everything seems grey to her and she can no longer get up in the morning. One day, the old Maschenka comes to take her out of her yurt and to transmit her the taste of discovery.     https://soundcloud.com/trois-petits-points/extrait-de-matuta

      • Fiction

        The Psychedelic Traveller

        Short Stories

        by ANTHONY JAMES

        A collection of short stories from adventures and fantastic imaginings aroud the world.  Each story is set in a different country, from Brazil to Siberia, from new Zealand to India. Each story is a cameo in itself, each one of a different mood, be it playful, or dark, of conflict or good humour. Stories will remind those who travel widely of the pitfalls and opportunities and remind all the readers that there is nothing more wonderful than this wonderful world and the ppeople in it.

      • The Other Amsterdam

        by Dato Turashvili

        In his latest novel Turashvili tells a story of how he went to the Netherlands to explore the story of his grandfather, a Soviet soldier Melenti Maskhulia who fought alongside guerrillas against the Nazi regime. After returning to his homeland, Maskhulia was announced a deserter and the Soviet government sent him to Siberia, sentensing him to ten years of imprisonment. But this is the story narrated by his daughter, while his widow thinks that the only reason Maskhulia was in the Netherlands was his lover and that he had not fought against the Nazi regime for even a day.

      • Travel & holiday guides
        February 2010

        Lake Baikal

        Siberia's Great Lake

        by Marc Di Duca

        Keen geographers know that Baikal is the world's largest freshwater lake and that it's home to unique species such as the nerpa freshwater seal. But Lake Baikal is much more than a body of water. Here, two cultures – Russian and Mongol – meet. The area is steeped in shamanism and Buddhism, while the lake's shores are scored by the tracks of the Trans-Siberian Railway. This is the first English-language guide dedicated to Lake Baikal and its surroundings. It provides full coverage of activities, wildlife, culture and religion, as well as practical information on travelling in this diverse corner of Siberia._x000D_

      • KARINA: 12 DAYS IN TAIGA

        by Victoria Gabysheva

        A terrible tragedy happened  in a village far away from civilized settlements. A three-year old girl disappeared in the wild Siberian taiga. Eight old people lived out their days in this godforsaken  place. The nearest settlement was 100  km  away. Little Karina was staying with her grandmother there, and no one noticed how she went into the forest ... she was waiting to be found for 12 days... How did she manage to survive these cold autumn dark nights, prolonged rains without food, wearing tights and T-shirt?

      • Technology, Engineering & Agriculture

        The Immortals

        Stories from Our Future

        by Alberto Giuliani

        One day, a soothsayer on the shore of Lake Baikal, Siberia, told Alberto Giuliani that he would die a violent death sometime between 2020 and 2021. He never fully believed the prophecy, until it was confirmed by a shaman in Vrindavan, India. The shaman told him to always wear a yellow sapphire on his right index finger. The stone would help him choose between life and death, when the fateful day would come. The two prophecies have left Alberto with a hunger to know what the future of humanity will look like – because he may not be here to witness it firsthand. And so, he started travelling, in search for an answer.

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