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      • Ellermann Verlag im Dressler Verlag GmbH

        A test company Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. In venenatis iaculis leo, et ornare sapien. Praesent euismod ante libero, sodales feugiat nisi rutrum ac. Vestibulum ut tortor leo. Donec a lobortis elit. Nam elit ante, auctor non ante quis, viverra dapibus ipsum. Maecenas id facilisis orci, sed maximus urna. Vestibulum euismod vel orci finibus viverra. Suspendisse gravida rutrum erat, non ultrices dui sagittis vel. Etiam bibendum lacus vestibulum nisi fringilla blandit. Etiam ut ultrices mi. In hac habitasse platea dictumst. Integer in dapibus leo, vel blandit urna. Vestibulum gravida mollis mattis. Fusce a maximus urna. Donec pretium dolor fermentum nunc commodo sollicitudin. Cras ac magna rutrum, ullamcorper enim in, condimentum lorem. Fusce sodales, nunc nec vestibulum ornare, ligula tellus mollis purus, fermentum fringilla nisl nibh sed mauris. Nullam auctor est euismod nibh pellentesque ultrices. Integer at arcu felis. Fusce condimentum suscipit ex faucibus viverra. Vivamus mauris ligula, ullamcorper id lectus eu, vestibulum iaculis mauris. Sed a libero vel nisl tincidunt sagittis sed a libero. Sed sit amet congue leo, non blandit risus. Duis aliquam, justo vitae tincidunt auctor, augue nunc pellentesque nibh, eu commodo erat tellus non risus. Ut elit turpis, fringilla et purus quis, suscipit lacinia velit. Etiam quis nunc nec mauris vulputate efficitur eget eget ante. In hac habitasse platea dictumst. Morbi cursus, lacus at tincidunt condimentum, leo tortor gravida lacus, ac faucibus nisi lorem ac velit.

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      • Bebel Books

        Founded in 2012 by Bebel Abreu, Bebel Books strives to occupy the narrative space with constructive and critical content.

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      • 2020

        REB

        Escuadrón nº 1

        by Dani Vera

      • Mountainbiking für Kids

        Technic, Safety, Motivation and Fund

        by Karen Eller, Holger Meyer

        Enjoy riding a mountain bike What’s the right age to take my kids on a bike tour? Which bike makes sense? How can I make sure that they are safe on the way and how do I make the trail fun for them? These topics are not only important for passionate bike riders when their kids start their first steps on a kids training bike. Former pro mountain biker and parent Karen Eller and Holger Meyer will answer all the questions. Starting with the advice of the “right” bike, talking about the necessary equipment and showing fun but important driving techniques for uphill and downhill tracks. First and foremost – the fun factor for the kids and their safety. The book will also have interviews with bike manufactures, physiotherapists and mental coaches to summarize their recommendations.

      • Fantasy
        November 2017

        The Man and the Wall

        by Sercan Leylek

        A young Jewish girl,  Anna Sophie, is magically caught inside a brick wall during World War II, while German soldiers are raiding the library where she works. Just as magically, her presence inside the wall is discovered seventy years later by a young Muslim immigrant named Yakamoz. The wall in this story can be found in real-life central Oslo, next to the National Library, where Anna Sophie worked. Is The Man and the Wall fantastic realism, or is it realistic fantasy? Whatever it might be, the story of Anna Sophie and Yakamoz keeps you captured till The End.

      • Mystery
        June 2018

        Sondre

        by Åshild Norun

        On a quiet Thursday night, police officers arrive at Ingrid's door carrying a terrible message. Sondre is dead. Ingrid is told that her son was hit by a train after walking into an underground tunnel. The police have already decided that the young man committed suicide. He entered the tunnel of his own free will, dressed in a black suit and white shirt. Ingrid is not that easily convinced. How is it even possible, that her lively, bright and strong-willed boy could have killed himself? Why? Immediately after the funeral, she starts acting on her doubts. But her desperate search for answers is met with a wall of secrecy, lies and deception. This only makes her more adamant. She can't even grieve, until she finds out what led to her son's demise.

      • Film scripts & screenplays
        August 2020

        Convertible

        by Åshild Norun

        It's 1967, and a young Norwegian family leaves Norway for California, looking for opportunity and the free and easy lifestyle. The young immigrants settle in a nice house in the suburb. The couple both find jobs, and the twin girls go to school. Dad buys a convertible, just like mom always wanted. She invites her three siblings for a Christmas visit. Two of them stay on, and the younger sister finds an American boyfriend. Every one wants a piece of the American pie, but the price gradually dawns on the blue-eyed immigrants, as they discover simmering racial divides and unrest over the Vietnam war, and watch the terrifying assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Robert Kennedy on the nightly news. The American dream is bittersweet.

      • Anarchism
        March 2011

        Christian Anarchism

        A Political Commentary on the Gospel: Abridged Edition

        by Christoyannopoulos, Alexandre, A01

        Christian anarchism has been around for at least as long as “secular” anarchism. Leo Tolstoy is its most famous proponent, but there are many others, such as Jacques Ellul, Vernard Eller, Dave Andrews or the people associated with the Catholic Worker...

      • Literary studies: fiction, novelists & prose writers

        The New Ray Bradbury Review #2

        by William Touponce (author)

        An annual dedicated to the life and writings of one of America’s most prolific and popular authorsLike its pioneering predecessor, the one-volume review published in 1952 by William F. Nolan, The New Ray Bradbury Review contains articles and reviews about Bradbury but has a much broader scope, including a thematic focus for each issue. Since Nolan composed his slim volume at the beginning of Bradbury’s career, Bradbury has birthed hundreds of stories and half a dozen novels, making him one of this country’s most anthologized authors. While his effect on the genres of fantasy, horror, and science fiction is still being assessed (See Ray Bradbury: The Life of Fiction, Kent State University Press, 2004), there is no doubt of his impact, and to judge from the testimony of his readers, many of them now professional writers themselves, it is clear that he has affected the lives of five generations of young readers.The New Ray Bradbury Review is designed primarily to study the impact of Ray Bradbury’s writings on American culture. It is the central publication of The Center for Ray Bradbury Studies, a newly established archive of Bradbury’s writings located at Indiana University. This review is designed principally to study the impact of Ray Bradbury’s writings on American culture. In this second number, scholars discuss Bradbury’s view of the role of art and aesthetics in our modern technological lives. Included are Bradbury’s correspondence with renowned Renaissance art historian and aesthetician Bernard Berenson, a fragment from Bradbury’s screenplay “The Chrysalis,” a review of Now and Forever, and insightful essays by Jon Eller and Roger Lay.Fans and scholars will welcome The New Ray Bradbury Review, as it will add to the understanding of the life and work of this recently honored author, who received both a National Book Award and a Pulitzer Prize.

      • Literary studies: fiction, novelists & prose writers

        The New Ray Bradbury Review #3

        by William Touponce (author)

        The New Ray Bradbury Review is designed principally to study the impact of Bradbury’s writings on American culture and is the chief publication of The Center for Ray Bradbury Studies—the archive of Bradbury’s writings located at Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis. Like its pioneering predecessor, the one- volume review published in 1952 by William F. Nolan, The New Ray Bradbury Review contains articles and reviews about Bradbury but has a much broader scope, including a thematic focus for each issue. While Bradbury’s effect on the genres of fantasy, horror, and science fiction is still being assessed, there is no doubt about his impact, and to judge from the testimony of his admirers, many of them now professional writers themselves, it is clear that he has affected the lives of five generations of readers.In this third number, the Center presents an all-archival issue devoted to Bradbury’s fragments. A prolific writer, Bradbury composed openings for stories that he never finished, together with pages of notes, sketches, and drafts that he kept in suspension for possible use in some form at some place in various narrative projects he was considering, as well as fragments of completed stories that are now lost. These pages are of great interest to anyone drawn to Bradbury’s creative mind, for they reveal his imagination at its most spontaneous. Readers will be excited to discover in this issue Bradbury’s sketches for “The Venusian Chronicles,” revealing a landscape and characters that, while clearly incomplete, carry on the themes of The Martian Chronicles. Included is a checklist of Bradbury’s extensive fragments, compiled by Donn Albright and Jonathan R. Eller.Fans and scholars alike will welcome The New Ray Bradbury Review, as it will add to the understanding of the life and work of this eminent author, whose work has received both a National Book Award and a Pulitzer Prize.

      • Eliminate Neck Pain

        by Anders Aasen Berget / Lennart Krohn-Hansen

        The book provides a complete guide onhow to reduce ongoing neck pain, get rid oflong-term neck pain and how most efficientlyto strengthen your own neck It is writtenin plain language, for all to understand, andgives actionable advice and exercises.The book is part of a series with books onback, neck, shoulder and knee pain.

      • No-Knead Baking

        by Ina-Janine Johnsen

        No-knead baking is theeasiest and best way to get good results. Juststir it all together to make the dough! Thetechnique is brilliant when you want healthypastries, while not having much time, equipmentor previous experience. Best of all, itworks for all types of baked goods, fromsweet cinnamon buns to crunchy pizza traysand lovely fresh bread.

      • Gastroenterology
        October 2020

        Medicom Conference Reports UEGW 2020

        UEGW 2020

        by Dr. Rachel Giles

        Peer-reviewed Conference Report

      • Children's & YA
        August 2021

        Wie die Farben nach Grauland kamen

        Ein Märchen von der Möglichkeit der Veränderung durch Krisenzeiten

        by Judith Zacharias-Hellwig + Jörg A. Gattwinkel SAC

        „Wie die Farben nach Grauland kamen“ – ein Märchen mit aktuellem Bezug Sunny, der kleine Wolf, findet sich nach einer ausgiebigen Streunerei durch den Wald in GRAULAND wieder. Wie schon der Name verrät, so scheint in diesem Land wirklich alles grau und trostlos zu sein. Da den kleinen Wolf die Neugier packt, nutzt er die Möglichkeit, das Leben und Treiben in GRAULAND zu beobachten, wobei er auf ein kleines Mädchen trifft, das ihm nicht mehr aus dem Kopf geht. Er nimmt wahr, dass da etwas ist, was die Menschen zunehmend in Angst und Schrecken versetzt. Mit dieser Situation scheint sich für die Bewohner GRAULANDs alles zu verändern.  Als auch noch ein Befehl des Königs durchs Land geschickt wird, ist plötzlich nichts mehr so, wie es einmal war...

      • Humour

        Petra Pettersens perfekte plan

        Åtte uker til jul

        by Lene Lauritsen Kjølner

        This is the first book in a new series - planned as a series of at least four. A feelgoody novel - not crime - which takes place just before and at Christmas - with lots of humour, charm, love, conflicts - at a lovely island in the south of Norway. "Petra Pettersen works in a book store. She is married to Einar, fisherman at Hvasser, and has two grown daughters. Its a safe and predictable life, but she is bored. Petra have a dream. She wants to work «with art", but dont know what exactly. Suddenly she experiences a Eureka moment. That occurs just after she baked her traditonal christmas-cake, and just before Einar begins to exercise, but is purely coincidential. Just when Petra thinks she lives under a black cloud, she suddenly see hope. But the plan is not perfect. After all: is the hunky lawyer as good as he seems? Is it wise to participate at a cookery course and dismantle wild boars just before christmas? And what does she really know about her daughters' life? A meeting in a wine cellar might just solve Petras complicated plan. Or maybe not? Perhaps it is aunt Bertha's wonderful Christmas cake that changes everything?"

      • September 2020

        I Don't Like Mondays

        by Clara Clementine Eliasson

        Akin to Emma Cline’s The Girls and classic Thelma & Louise, I DON’T LIKE MONDAYS is an emotionally-charged whirlwind of a debut novel, loosely based on the infamous ‘I don’t like Mondays’ 1979 school shooter Brenda Ann Spencer, focusing on the months leading up to the event. ‘Her name was Elisabeth Sumner, but I called her B. She made my life an adventure when I thought nothing was ever going to happen. I have to tell the story of her and everything we experienced, because in all other stories, she was just the girl behind that shooting. And I need to write about my own guilt in what was to come.’ San Diego 1978. Fifteen-year-old Julie leads a lonely, closeted life in a white picket fence suburb, when her neighbour B suddenly knocks on her door. B brings with her adventure, danger and kisses tasting of cinnamon and whisky—along with the scent of dead birds, gunpowder and rage. What was to follow sent shock waves throughout the USA and the world, reverberating still today. Forty years later, when B escapes from prison where she’s been jailed for the 1979 shooting, Julie’s memories of their wild, impossible summer come back to haunt her; the summer B took her on an unbridled road-trip where danger and desperation were their constant companions. But what happened that summer to cause B to commit the heinous act, and what was Julie’s role in it? In this absolutely remarkable debut novel, Clara Clementine Eliasson pens a deft and passionate tale about the obsession of first love, the utter despair of feeling doomed from the start, and of the freedom of running wild in the hot, feverish nights among the flowering citrus trees of southern California. Hurtling at an impossible speed toward a dreadful end, I DON’T LIKE MONDAYS reminds the reader of the tragic yet life-affirming Thelma & Louise, the hope of innocence in the face of evil in Emma Cline’s The Girls, as well as the blinding fury toward an unfair world in Joyce Carol Oates’ Foxfire.   * The term ‘I Don’t Like Mondays’ was coined by Brenda Ann Spencer in an on-air radio interview minutes after the shooting. Spencer’s bizarre response to the question why she opened fire on the elementary school across the road inspired Bob Geldof to pen the unforgettable hit song of the same name. The character B  in Eliasson’s book is inspired by the real life Brenda Ann Spencer.

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