Ediciones del Lirio
In this version 2023 of Book Fair of Frankfurt, the Mexican editorial Ediciones del Lirio has wished to participate on these books and culture global encounter.
View Rights PortalIn this version 2023 of Book Fair of Frankfurt, the Mexican editorial Ediciones del Lirio has wished to participate on these books and culture global encounter.
View Rights PortalNational Prize for Publishing 2011 Spanish Ministry of Culture Bologna Prize Best Children's Publisher of the year 2015
View Rights PortalA murder, eight witnesses and none of them remembers what happened.Memory is a specialized clinic lost in the mountain. One day, a patient is found hanged. But the suicide looks very much like amurder in disguised. All of would be so much easier if the patients didn’t suffer from amnesia, but they no longer have instantmemory. They are like gold fishes stucked in their tank.Jeanne Ricoeur is a young police inspector tormented by her past. When she is put in charge of this impossible case, she discoversa special community, that of strange victims of life with shattered memories, the daily haunted of Post-it notes and memos.Tragic irony: whereas the patients would give anything to remember, she only wishes to forget her past. While she desperatelytries to piece together the puzzle of the drama, her own demons resurface ... But soon, she is on the threat. Someone wants toassassinate her and she has no idea why.With Memory, Arnaud Delalande offers us an efficient thriller, cinematographic at will and breathtaking.
It would be wrong to consider the 19th century as distant or over. In many aspects, such as the intense politicization of European societies, the diversity of mobilization and protest practices, ideological and cultural inventiveness, and critical reflection on modernity and progress, this period is a laboratory rich in experience and lessons. Restoring the great political dynamics and tensions that run through it allows us not only to better understand the forms of historical change, but also to find one's bearings in an uncertain present. By placing the imperial expansion of Europe in the context of the globalization of the time and its interactions with America, Africa and Asia, Nicolas Delalande and Blaise Truong-Loï propose a history of the 19th century that is neither homogeneous nor self-centered, but profoundly renewed by the contributions of the most recent research in history and social sciences.