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      • Borobudur Agency

        Borobudur Agency act to represent Indonesian publishers and authors for children’s and young adult books; picture books; comic books; fiction: novels, literary works; non-fiction: cookbooks, fashion (especially Muslim wear for women), social studies, Indonesian arts and culture, as well as interactive digital textbooks and software. We facilitate members of IKAPI, book publishers who assign the agency to promote their rights for overseas licensing, and accordingly promote the works of Indonesian authors for international readership.

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      • Bollati Boringhieri editore S.r.l. a socio unico

        Our publishing company was founded in 1957 by Paolo Boringhieri focusing on science, mythology and ethnology. In 1987 Giulio Bollati joined the company, taking with him his expertise in history, philosophy , and literary fiction.Since then , the two souls of the publisher scientific studies and humanities have followed intertwined paths.  In 2009 Bollati Boringhieri was a cquired by Gruppo editoriale Mauri Spagnol (GeMS) a group including 11 publishing companiesand 20 imprints. On the non fiction side, we are strongly interested in every project that shows human comprehensive history.  Gems of our list include, among others Edmund de Waal , Jim Al Khalili, Nick Bostrom, Adam Rutherford, Hannah Fry,Jonathan Gottschall , Frank Close, Max Tegmark.

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      • Travel & holiday guides
        May 2012

        Borneo

        Sabah Sarawak Brunei

        by Tamara Thiessen

        Straddling the equator, Borneo is the third largest island in the world. Largely covered in rainforest, with a magnificent coastline, it is easy to see what attracts visitors. Comprised of Sabah, Sarawak and Brunei, Borneo’s unique biodiversity and cultural kaleidoscope appeals to both adventurers and those looking for a unique cultural experience. _x000D_ Updated throughout, this revised guide caters for all with information on how to trek through one of the region’s national parks, catch a glimpse of an orang-utan, spend the night in a longhouse, or shop in the bustling markets. From the highlands and islands of Sabah and Sarawak, to the mosques and mysticism of the Sultanate of Brunei, Borneo is a mesmerizing mix of cultures, endangered animals, tropical rainforest and carnivorous plants. This new edition of Borneo provides the most comprehensive information available on the island, from its ethnographic and natural history, to accommodation and tours. _x000D_ _x000D_

      • July 2020

        Notodontidae of the Indonesian Archipelago (Lepidoptera)

        Volume 1

        by Alexander Schintlmeister

        This book is the first comprehensive work on oriental Notodontidae (Lepidoptera) outside mainland Asia. The studied area includes also Borneo Island, the Malayan Peninsula, entire New Guinea with adjacent islands. All species are illustrated in both sexes with a total number of 1272 specimens on 51 colour plates. Genitalia photos of both sexes as well as detailed distribution maps are provided for each species. The book deals in the first volume with 298 species and contains descriptions of 99 new notodontid taxa. A second volume will treat with the remaining 160 species and include also a comprehensive biogeographic analysis.

      • Picture books, activity books & early learning material
        February 2022

        Nenek Tata and the Mangrove Menace

        by Judith Vun Price, Jacqui Vun

        Stories about grandparents delight children. So, when children read how Nenek Tata’s adventure on what started out as a normal day turns a bit scary, their delight will explode.   It’s all because this day turns out to be not-so-normal. When Nenek Tata gets inside the gloomy jungles of the swamp, a huge, dripping, brown monster emerges. And, when the monster follows her, she must defend her home to the last … until she discovers the monster’s identity.   This scary story is set in Malaysia’s eastern-most state of Sabah and is told in the style of a Malaysian hantu folk tale. Its little bit of fright delights children because of the funny twist in the end. In the way many stories grandparents tell young children, this one entertains while teaching them about the dangers of the swamps and jungles.   Illustrations show reflections of stories about grandparents.   Dynamic, full-colour illustrations transform the tranquil landscape as the storm approaches and the drama unfolds. Consequently, the growing mystery draws the reader in: What is this monster, where did it come from?   Artful storytelling captures north Borneo’s beautiful native vegetation and animals, and exquisite textures and patterns. It shows children and adults interested in distant times and places a melding of cultures. This fine attention to detail offers young readers a wild and rollicking adventure, keeping them on the edge of their seats to the very end.

      • Changeons de voie

        by Edgar Morin and Sabah Abouessalam

        If we struggle to make sense of the current pandemic, at least let us draw conclusions for the future. A microscopic virus in a faraway Chinese town has caused the world to unravel. There may have been pandemics in the past, but COVID-19 has been radically different in the fact that it has launched a worldwide polycrisis with multiple factors, interactions and uncertainties, all intricately woven. The aftermath will be an uncertain adventure where the worst and the best (which is yet to make a grand entrance) will compete. But the worst is not set in stone, and the unexpected can still happen. A brilliant analysis by the philosophical father of intricacy.

      • Z Special Unit

        by Gavin Mortimer

        The incredible story of the origins and operations of a wartime special forces unit that defied the odds. Z Special Unit, one of the most intrepid but arguably the most unsung of Allied Special Forces of the Second World War waged a guerrilla war against Japan for two years in the south-west Pacific. On some of their 81 operations Z Special Unit slipped into enemy harbours in canoes and silently mined ships before vanishing into the night; on others they parachuted into the dense Borneo jungle to fight with headhunters against the Japanese and on one occasion they landed on an Indonesian island and smuggled out the pro-Allied sultan from under Japanese noses. The Japanese weren't the only adversary that Z Special Unit encountered in the brutal terrain of the Pacific. In the mango swamps of Borneo and the dense jungle of Papua New Guinea they were faced with venomous snakes, man-eating crocodiles and deadly diseases. But it was the enemy soldiers who proved the most ruthless foe, beheading those Z Special Unit commandos who fell into their hands. Drawing on veteran interviews as well as operational reports and recently declassified SOE files, Gavin Mortimer explores the incredible history of this remarkable special forces unit and the band of commandoes that defied the odds.

      • October 2020

        Adventures in Conservation

        A Wildlife Vet in the Jungle

        by Hannah Emde

        The jungle makes her feel at home: Hannah Emde is a twenty-sevenyear old veterinarian dedicated to wildlife conservation. Sheworks with the elusive clouded leopard in Borneo, with endangeredscarlet macaws in Guatemala or occasionally with a four-metre-long python in the wild. The young vet travels all across theglobe to protect animals from extinction and is fascinated by thetropical rainforest. Emde writes compellingly about the beauty ofthe jungle and describes in powerful, urgent terms why exotic animalslike lemurs in Madagascar or bull sharks in Costa Rica becameendangered. She points out how each and one of us canhelp protecting their habitats.

      • Graphic novel & Manga artwork
        April 2015

        Me vs Big Slacker Baby vol. 1

        by Annisa Nisfihani

        Me VS Big Slacker Baby (BSB) tells a story about Arin, a high school girl with obsessive compulsive toward cleanliness, who encounters Alvan, her schoolmate who stays at a boarding house owned by her parents.   Alvan’s behavior is the polar opposite of Arin, in which, although he is a very bright student but he is also one of the laziest and messy guys Arin has ever known. This establishes an interesting and hilarious conflict between them, where Alvan learns from Arin in becoming a tidier person, while Arin also learns from Alvan in improving her mark in school assignments and exams.   This romantic-comedy masterpiece is written and illustrated by Annisa Nisfihani, a young and talented comic artist from Tenggarong, East Borneo. Even though her hometown is quite far from the big cities and blackouts also occurred quite often, Annisa’s perseverance in pursuing her dreams ultimately paid off as BSB got its second reprint within less than a month of its initial publication.

      • BANGSA MELAYU (Satu Kajian Ilmiah Lengkap Mengenai Umat Islam Sebelah Timur) Mengandungi Peta dan Gambar Rajah Karya Salih Jawdat

        by Translators: Haji Mohammad Seman Siti Sara Haji Ahmad

        Buku ‘Ummat al-Malayu ini adalah hasil karya Salih Jawdat, iaitu seorang pegawai kanan di Jabatan Pendidikan Mesir ketika itu. Menurut penulis, maklumat dan data tentang bangsa Melayu beliau perolehi secara langsung hasil perbualan lisan dengan Y.A.M Tunku Mansor Ibni Abdul Hamid, iaitu putera kepada baginda Al-Sultan negeri Kedah semasa baginda sedang melanjutkan pelajaran di negara tersebut. Karya ini juga adalah buah tangan yang  dihasilkan atas rasa kasih kepada putera raja itu dan juga bangsa Melayu yang juga merupakan saudara seagama dengan penulis. Buku ini secara umumnya memuatkan tentang perihal sejarah, sosial dan geografi serta hasil mahsul dan kekayaan bumi alam Melayu seluruh nusantara termasuk kepulauan Borneo dan Filipina. Beliau banyak menyentuh tentang adat resam orang Melayu termasuk suku-suku yang berada di daerah pendalaman kepulauan nusantara. Pemerian tentang nama tempat, suku, negeri dan pergunungan yang dinyatakan adalah agak purba yang mungkin sudah banyak berubah.  Semoga buku dan terjemahan ini dapat menjadi salah satu sumber yang berguna untuk rujukan tentang sejarah kedudukan dan kepentingan bangsa Melayu sebagai suatu keluarga besar di alam nusantara.

      • Fiction
        October 2016

        The Disappearence of the Luft

        by Christian Kahl

        After selling his IT start-up, Matthias Endesfelder leads a happy-go-lucky life as a multimillionaire. When he goes on his annual diving holiday to Makating - a luxury resort in Malaysia - he meets beautiful employee Darlene and falls in love with her. He spontaneously decides to accompany Darlene to a jungle expedition, to look for her missing brother. The latter had spent some time by the Luft people, one of the last tribes of the virgin forest, who also vanished without a trace. On the expedition, Matthias will soon discover that the timber mafia is destroying the jungle piece by piece through extensive slash-and- burn practices and that it has Borneo’s economy and politics firmly under its control. Appalled by this, he promises the Penan people, another threatened tribe, that he will buy a piece of the jungle for them to survive. Shortly afterwards, a stranger steels all the satellite phones of the expedition participants, who therefore lose their only connection to the civilised world. A short while later, Darlene will also go missing. Day by day, the group’s situation becomes more and more hopeless, but Matthias is driven by his wild hope to find Darlene…

      • August 2022

        Berani

        by Michelle Kadarusman

        'Berani’, set in Indonesia, was inspired by a real-life experience and is focused on the critical plight of orangutan which are found on the islands of Sumatra and Borneo, and the only Great Apes found outside Africa.    Endangered and incredibly smart, these beautiful creatures share an astounding 97% of our human DNA. In ‘Berani’ which means ‘brave’, three distinct voices are interwoven to bring the novel to its fitting and rightful finale: two youth and Ginger Juice, the species so close to humans in behaviour and intelligence that the inner voice presented in the novel is totally relatable and believable.

      • Colonialism & imperialism
        January 2017

        Reading Colonies

        Property and Control of the British Far Eas

        by Rohan B. E. PRICE

        By 1945, everywhere one looked in the Far East the British Empire was being openly questioned or was failing outright. Yet in the previous century, the British had been the pre-eminent imperial power from Weihaiwei to North Borneo. Reading Colonies: Property and Control of the British Far East investigates how the British held on for so long. Rent control legislation, and other measures of property law such as land improvement opportunities, are nominated as key tools used to frustrate decolonization in most Eastern colonies. British colonial administrations tried long and hard to inhibit the dialectical discord between their colonial hierarchism and local forms of nationalism with the prompts and plaudits of property policy. In cases where indigenous landlordism masqueraded as patriotism, independence came quickly (Ceylon and Burma). Where public housing established itself as a key post-war plank of social policy, freedom from British rule was a more gradual affair (British Malaya and Hong Kong). This study concludes that British colonial regimes did not offer a share of their industrial modernity to stay at the apex of political power, but readily adjusted old-style landlordism to keep nationalist usurpers at bay.

      • August 2020

        Blue Sky Kingdom

        An Epic Family Journey to the Heart of the Himalaya

        by Bruce Kirkby

        One morning at breakfast, while gawking at his phone and feeling increasingly disconnected from family and everything else of importance in his world, it strikes writer Bruce Kirkby: This isn’t how he wants to live. Within days, plans begin to take shape. Bruce, his wife Christine, and their two children – seven-year-old Bodi and three-year-old Taj – will cross the Pacific by container ship, then travel onward through South Korea, China, India, and Nepal aboard bus, riverboat, and train, eventually traversing the Himalaya by foot. Their destination: a thousand-year-old Buddhist monastery in the remote Zanskar valley, one of the last places where Tibetan Buddhism is still practiced freely in its original setting.   In this refuge, where ancient traditions intersect with the modern world, Kirkby discovers ways to slow down, to observe and listen, and ultimately, to better understand his son on the autism spectrum – to surrender all expectations and connect with Bodi exactly as he is.   Recounted with wit and humility, Blue Sky Kingdom is an engaging travel memoir as well as a thoughtful exploration of modern distraction, the loss of ancient wisdom, and the challenges and rewards of intercultural friendships.

      • Fiction

        Kreta the Time Traveler

        by Gülşah Ozdemir Koryürek - Selin Saygili

        "Time Traveler Kreta" is a science-fiction children's book that tells the effects of our consumption habits on the climate crisis to children aged 8 and above, through the adventures of two alien friends, Kreta and Shiva. While the text is based on the climate crisis, topics such as sustainability, how the world works, time and space, exploration, scientific and technological progress are also covered. The adventurous Earth journey of Kreta and Shiva progresses in a fictional reality that emerges with the narration of scientific data about the climate crisis and ends with proposals for solutions. Kreta, an inquisitive and excited time traveller, want to embark on every adventure without thinking about the end and thus become an experienced time traveller. Once Kreta gains enough experience, they will find their profession and acquire new skills. On the other hand, their friend Shiva is a mature, somewhat lazy, poet alien cat who tries to rein in Kreta in every adventure. Kreta and Shiva travel to the planet Earth to meet humans, but they encounter strange creatures that are not human-like: dinosaurs! Yes, they find the Earth, but they are at the wrong time to meet people. They don't get along well with the dinosaurs and leave Earth, but Kreta is determined to find humans. When they try their luck once again, this time, they go to the 2070s of the world. Despite technological progress, they encounter a dark and hot planet where oxygen and water are scarce. In the world of the 2070s, among robots and other strange creatures, they finally find a human being: Omer. What they learn from Omer, an engineer specializing in climate research, surprises Kreta and Shiva. In the 2070s, the world is struggling with the effects of a big problem called climate change, and this problem cannot be solved. In the light of this information, a brand new task comes before Kreta and Shiva. This mission is to go back to the 2010s, the deadline when the climate crisis can be averted, and deliver a video message to the people. When Kreta and Shiva reach the world of the 2010s, they accidentally land in the middle of Omer's birthday party. Their aim is to deliver the video message to Omer, but during the party, they fail to do so, and they start following Omer. Both at the birthday party and while they follow Omer, Kreta and Shiva witness the culture of waste in the World of the 2010s: huge vehicles designed for people's tiny bodies, aeroplanes, plastic packaging used to present gifts, decorations, single-use plastic serving plates and glasses and vast amounts of waste food... Kreta and Shiva understand why they have been teleported to this date when problems of the 2070s could have been prevented. Kreta and Shiva eventually find Omer in an enormous hotel where his Youtuber mother is visiting for a launching event. They have funny moments when they introduce themselves to Omer. Yet, they manage to deliver the video to Omer and tell him about the problems that will happen in the future. However, when he watched the video, Omer realizes that the problem cannot be solved immediately. He thinks that he cannot persuade other people, either alone or as a child; he cannot change their consumption habits. He tries to ask his mother for her support, but he can't make his mother, who is always busy, listen to him. Kreta and Shiva decide to stay a little longer and help Omer, and they achieve their goals in the launching meeting of Omer's mother. They manage to show the video to thousands of people. The fact that most of the viewers are children is a great advantage because they understand the climate change problem best. Children do not remain silent to the call of the message and take action for the Earths future. The book's pedagogical structure and the scientific data on which it is based were established with experts in these fields. The reading of scientific data was done by the engineer members of the Sustainability Steps Association. The reading in the pedagogical context was carried out by PCG Teachers. The video mentioned in the story is embedded in the book via QR code and can be watched with English subtitles on Youtube.

      • Humanities & Social Sciences
        2020

        Late Prehistoric Human  Remains in Semporna

        by Eng Ken Khong

        The finding of prehistoric human remains in Sabah  has  been  scarce  until the  discovery  of  two  late  Metal  period  burial  sites  in  Semporna  between  years 2002 and 2007, i.e. Melanta Tutup and Bukit  Kamiri. Prior to this, only a handful of human teeth  found  at Melanta  Tutup  (Neolithic)  in  2002–2003  and  later  in  2005  at  Gua  Balambangan  (late  Palaeolithic), an island off the northern tip of Kudat.  While these teeth had provided ample information  about the prehistoric people, the discoveries of two  burial  sites  at  Semporna  have  provided  several  well‐preserved  prehistoric  human  remains.  They  provide a glimpse into these people’s identity, living  conditions and environment.

      • BALAI CERAP ASTRONOMI: MENJUNJUNG WAHYU MENGUKUH TAMADUN

        by Editors: Ibnor Azli Ibrahim and Mohd Hafiz Safiai

        Buku yang diberi judul Balai Cerap Astronomi: Menjunjung Wahyu Mengukuh Tamadun ini mengandungi 13 bab berkaitan perkembangan dan peranan balai cerap meliputi topik perbahasan berikut: balai cerap dalam lipatan sejarah Islam; kemunculan balai cerap astrofiqh dan khidmat bakti terhadap Islam; Balai Cerap Al-Biruni: mutiara falak Sabah; Balai Cerap Al-Khawarizmi Negeri Melaka bukti perkembangan ilmu falak di Malaysia; balai cerap astrofiqh sebagai penjana ekonomi; peranan balai cerap moden masa kini; kepelbagaian program di balai cerap: “astronomi untuk semua”; cabaran modal insan dalam balai cerap astronomi di Malaysia; sumbangan balai cerap astronomi amatur dalam memaknai hubungan insan dan angkasa; keperluan kajian topografi rukyat al-hilal dalam pembinaan Observatorium Indonesia; deskripsi historis dan prospektus ilmiah kaleidoskop observatorium Imah Noong Indonesia; and Observatorium Ilmu Falak Universitas Muhammadiyah Sumatera Utara (OIF UMSU) dan kontribusinya dalam penelitian waktu subuh. Buku ini diharapkan dapat menyemarakkan semangat penyelidik dalam meningkatkan kemajuan ilmu falak, sekali gus menjadi wadah dalam memartabatkan budaya penyelidikan ilmu falak di mata dunia.

      • Fiction
        May 2020

        Glorious Boy

        by Aimee Liu

        WHAT WILL IT TAKE TO SAVE TY? This is the question that haunts Claire and Shep Durant in the wake of their four-year-old’s disappearance. Until this moment, Port Blair’s British surgeon and his young wife, a promising anthropologist, have led a charmed life in the colonial backwaters of India’s Andaman Islands—thanks in part to Naila, a local girl who shares their mysteriously mute son’s silent language. But with the war closing in and mandatory evacuation underway, the Durants don’t realize until too late that Naila and Ty have vanished. While Claire sails for Calcutta, Shep stays to search for the children. Days later, the Japanese invade the Andamans, cutting off all communication. Fueled by guilt and anguish, Claire uses her unique knowledge of the islands’ tribes to make herself indispensable to an all-male reconnaissance team headed back behind enemy lines. Her secret plan: rescue Shep and Ty. Through the brutal odyssey that follows, she’ll discover truths about sacrifice that both shatter and transcend her understanding of devotion.

      • The natural world, country life & pets

        Natural Journey

        An encounter between Arts and Science

        by Josefina Hepp, Vivian Lavin, María José Arce

        “Natural Journey” aims to remove the old-fashioned tension between art and science in order to approach nature’s shapes and colors with astonishment and without being distracted from the main task: to learn from it and listen to its call in the midst of the climate crisis.  Botanical illustration is the art that allows us to enter the world of plants through our senses. But it is also a scientific record that provides botanists and scholars with subtle and precise representations that no technological device can reproduce.  A botanist, an illustrator and a journalist are touched by the journey led by other women who inspired them with their environmental sensitivity and awareness. When reading “Natural Journey”, you will be taken into a pleasant walk through six types of plants whose names take after their identifying characteristics. “Travelers”, some inspire and others move (without legs or wings), “dangerous”, even lethal, colors and characteristics that define them, “deceitful”, traps and camouflages to get what they want, “rebels”, those who dodge the rules, undisciplined, stubborn and defiant, and  “hungry” from the Plant to the Animal Kingdom,  nutrient-capture strategies, “flamboyant”, as emerged from delirium. The book also contains each plant’s data sheet and mapping.

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