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      • Dar El Gharneine 15/21

        Dar El Gharneine 15/21 and Dar Joussour Abdelaziz are two entities that have been founded in 2002 in Nouakchott, Mauritania, and devoted to editing and distribution of books and publications. They could, as guided by Mr Selami Ahmed El Meki, publish about 200 titles in Arabic and in French covering different disciplines and scopes. The two houses (Dar) have particpated in many exhibitions and are members of several associations around the world.

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      • Trusted Partner
        Technology, Engineering & Agriculture
        September 2023

        The Olive

        Botany and Production

        by Andrea Fabbri, Luciana Baldoni, Tiziano Caruso, Franco Famiani, Giovanni Agosteo, Barbera Giuseppe, Angjelina Belaj, Antonio Belcari, Karim Barkaoui, Giora Ben-Ari, Alon Ben-Gal, Giovanni Benelli, Rita Biasi, Iris Biton, Konstantinos Blazakis, Aureliano Bombarely, Antonio Brunori, Santa Olga Cacciola, Angelo Canale, Giovanni Caruso, Tiziano Caruso, Nicola Cinosi, Arnon Dag, Ran Erel, Daniela Farinelli, Louise Ferguson, Tommaso Ganino, Jesus A Gil-Ribes, Calero José Alfonso Gómez, Riccardo Gucci, Consolación Guerrero, Panagiotis Kalaitzis, Maurizio Lambardi, Lauri Pierre-Eric, Lorenzo León, Bianco Riccardo Lo, Enrico Maria Lodolini, Francisco Luque, Hanene Mairech, Picchi Malayka, Giulia Marino, Roberto Mariotti, Francesco Paolo Marra, G Medina-Alonso, José A Mercado, Maurizio Micheli, Soraya Mousavi, Monji Msallem, Dvora Namdar, Isabel Narváez, Elena Palomo-Ríos, Ruggero Petacchi, Pierluigi Pierantozzi, Malayka Samantha Picchi, Amalia Rosa Maria Piscopo, Fernando Pliego-Alfaro, Primo P

        The European or Mediterranean cultivated olive (Olea europaea L., subsp. europaea, var. europaea) is one of the most ancient cultivated fruit tree crops. Today, hundreds of olive varieties are grown to produce high-quality fruit for oil and for table olives consumption. The olive industry has undergone profound innovations in the past 30 years, due to scientific and technical advances, particularly in genomics, breeding, orchard management, mechanization and agro-ecology, although not all these developments are yet available to smaller producers. Olive cultivation has also spread to many countries outside the Mediterranean Basin, where it ihas been traditionally present for over 6,000 years. These new olive-growing countries are experiencing further expansion of the industry, due to increased awareness of the nutritional and health properties of extra virgin olive oil. This book is a much-needed update on olive biology and cultivation, with contributions from leading international experts, and includes: Biology Genetics and breeding Olive propagation and nursery Planting new olive orchards Horticultural management of olive orchards Plant protection Olive by-products (wood, leaves) Multifunctionality of olive groves and ecosystem services The Olive: Botany and Production is invaluable for researchers and students in horticulture and agriculture, as well as producers involved in olive orchard management.

      • December 2020

        I'm Scared too!

        by Ghazal Mousavi

        Each one of us, at a point in our lives, are scared of something. Most of these fears are created unconsciously and are baseless. As we grow older, these fears change or turn into new fears. This process is a natural process and feeling scared is a natural feeling as well. The little boy of this story is talking about his fears and how he used to be scared of other things which are no longer scary to him. What is important is not letting fear stop us from living our lives or doing what we love. You know what they say: “Be afraid and do it anyway!”

      • Literature & Literary Studies
        January 2018

        Beloved Delhi

        A Mughal City and her Greatest Poets

        by Saif Mahmood (Foreword by Rakhshanda Jalil; Preface by Sohail Hashmi)

        ‘A riveting resurrection of the city of poets, the city of history, Saif Mahmood’s learned and evocative book takes us to the heart of Delhi’s romance with Urdu verse and aesthetics.’—Namita Gokhale Urdu poetry rules the cultural and emotional landscape of India—especially northern India and much of the Deccan—and of Pakistan. And it was in the great, ancient city of Delhi that Urdu grew to become one of the world’s most beautiful languages. Through the 18th and 19th centuries, while the Mughal Empire was in decline, Delhi became the capital of a parallel kingdom—the kingdom of Urdu poetry—producing some of the greatest, most popular poets of all time. They wrote about the pleasure and pain of love, about the splendour of God and the villainy of preachers, about the seductions of wine, and about Delhi, their beloved home. This treasure of a book documents the life and work of the finest classical Urdu poets: Sauda, Dard, Mir, Ghalib, Momin, Zafar, Zauq and Daagh. Through their biographies and poetry—including their best-known ghazals—it also paints a compelling portrait of Mughal Delhi. This is a book for anyone who has ever been touched by Urdu or Delhi, by poetry or romance.

      • April 2020

        Illustrators Annual 2020

        by AAVV

        The Illustrators’ Exhibition at the Bologna Children’s Book Fair is one of the most important international events in the world of illustration. For more than 50 years, the Exhibition has featured works by the greatest names in children’s publishing over the past half century. The Illustrators Annual 2020 unites projects by the 76 artists selected from the boards created by more than 2,500 illustrators from around the globe. With a cover illustration drawn by Hassan Mousavi, winner of the Grand Prix BIB – Biennial of Illustration Bratislava 2019, in addition to the selected works the volume also features contributions by the five jury members: Valérie Cussaguet, Enrico Fornaroli, Lorenzo Mattotti, Cathy Olmedillas e Machiko Wakatsuki. The edition is completed by an interview with Javier Mariscal.

      • Open Your Hand, Baby!

        by Zahra Mousavi

        Open Your Hand, Baby! is a book of Chik Chikan series, which concentrates on helping toddlers with delicate gestures. It tries to improve their essential skills, such as holding objects, moving, and tying their shoelaces through lovely poems. Furthermore, using simple, adorable, and familiar illustrations along with relaxing colors make this poetry book for children more attractive and instructive. Thus, this title provides a perfect base for parents to practice these skills with toddlers while showing them affection and enjoying their time together, making this process a lovely and fun experience

      • Susu Can Not Sleep

        by Zahra Mousavi

        susu is a baby crocodile. In the first book, Susu wants to sleep, but he cannot, even though he is tired. Therefore, he tries different ways to help him sleep. Firstly, Susu eats his food and goes to bed, but it does not work. Susu’s mom comes and kisses him. Susu goes from side to side in his bed. Then, his father reads a few books to him, though Susu still cannot sleep. The bees bring him blankets. Then, Susu tries to sleep by counting from one to ten, he goes to the toilet, and then he counts the stars to fall asleep, but he cannot! Finally, after trying different ways, Susu slowly falls asleep and closes his eyes. Susu Wants a Kiss starts in the morning when Susu wakes up and wants a kiss to start the day. Then, at lunchtime, he wants a kiss, and his mother gives him one. Even when he is hurt and crying, he wants her mom to kiss him, and at night while drinking milk, her mom kisses him. The story ends when he is going to sleep, but what is needed? A kiss that daddy gives to him

      • Science: general issues

        A Botany of Violence: 528 Years of Resistance & Resurgence

        by Pablo Escudero, Ghazal Jafari, Pierre Bélanger

        Smuggled and stolen by the Jesuits and the Spanish Monarchy in the 17th century, transplanted by Britain and Holland in India and Indonesia during the 18th century, mapped by German explorer Alexander von Humboldt in the 19th century, weaponized by the U.S. in the 20th century, and monopolized by global pharma in the 21st century, the story of the Cinchona plant—the tree called ‘fever’—literally lies at the base of modern civilization. The quest to find the cure for malaria and to control the production of quinine as seen in the corporate monopoly in Africa today also traces deep roots of territorial dispossession and labor exploitation that lie between the Amazon and the Andes. Behind the mask of heritage preservation and resource conservation, five centuries of graphic evidence put into sharp relief the uneven scales of racialized, gendered violence that are rooted in territorial injustices and underpinned by state nationalism.Bringing the map and the territory closer together, state-sanctioned policies of resource extraction and environmental destruction are interwoven with contemporary narratives of sovereignty and self-determination. Like a geopolitical treatise, the archival activism of this book rebuilds relations with the Cinchona plant, by reclaiming territorial histories of its peoples and its ancestral lands to confront the oppressive structures of the settler-state. Overlooked, suppressed, and marginalized, the long history of resistance movements and rebellions led by Indigenous and Afro-Latina women not only reveal the settler-colonial force of the nation-state. Their contemporary resurgence in the 21st century proposes a counter-map: a way challenge to the plague of violence and weaponization of resources of the past five centuries and its transformation into a regenerative flora of the future.

      • December 2019

        Otros vislumbres

        Poesía contemporánea de la India

        by Varios autores

        Otros vislumbres. Poesía actual de la India recupera las varias formas en que la poesía se manifiesta en una vastedad históricamente sinuosa y compleja: formas que oscilan entre el ghazal y el poema en prosa, entre el salmo y el epigrama, entre el monólogo dramático y un lirismo pop. Estamos ante nuevas formas de la voz que representan nuevos sujetos en un tiempo nuevo. Hay en estas páginas una condición de cruce: puentes entre culturas, experiencias, poemas, Otros vislumbres. Poesía actual de la India recuerda que la poesía habita en el intersticio, en el in-between, en el vislumbre. Gustavo Osorio de Ita

      • The Arts: General Issues
        September 2017

        The Artist, The Censor, and The Nude

        A Tale of Morality and Appropriation

        by Glenn Harcourt, Pamela Joseph, Francis M. Naumann

        Thoughtful and rigorous, the book provides an excellent survey of contemporary censorship. – Publishers Weekly   This hybrid book examines the art and politics of “The Nude” in various cultural contexts, featuring books of canonical western art censored in Iran. Featuring American artist Pamela Joseph’s feminist appropriation of these images as well as Iranian and other Middle Eastern contemporary artists Aydin Aghdashloo (Iran), Boushra Almutawakel (Yemen), Ana Lily Amirpour (Great Britain/USA), Gohar Dashti (Iran), Daryoush Gharahzad (Iran), Shadi Ghadirian (Iran), Bahman Ghobadi (Iranian Kurdistan), Tanya Habjouqa (Jordan), Katayoun Karami (Iran), Hoda Katebi (USA), Simin Keramati (Iran/Canada), Mohsen Makhmalbaf (Iran/ Great Britain), Shohreh Mehran (Iran), Houman Mortazavi (Iran), Manijeh Sehhi (Iran), and Newsha Tavakolian (Iran/USA).

      • Geography & the Environment

        Sea Ice? Now You Don’t!

        A Green Humour Collection

        by Rohan Chakravarty

        The multi-award winning series of comics, Green Humour is back as the third anthology- Sea Ice? Now You Don’t! From penguins balancing their nests on thin ice to tigers basking in their own glamour whilst worrying about their future, from ghazal-loving bats to whales dumping marine plastic waste right back at us- meet an array of wild animals with their own list of concerns, and their own brand of humour. The comics will take you from the high skies to geothermal mines in the very bottom of the ocean, and from sweltering tropical mangroves to the icy poles, engaging you in discussions about ecology, biology, nature conservation, and the politics of governing nature. This is a wild ride for sure, but not one which needs you to leave your brains at home! Sea Ice? Now You Don’t is the third in the series of Green Humour collections, after Green Humour for a Greying Planet and Pugmarks and Carbon Footprints, and includes comics published in periodic columns with platforms like DW News, The Hindu, Roundglass Sustain, and Gocomics.

      • March 2011

        The Half-Inch Himalayas

        by Agha Shahid Ali

        A stellar collection of early work from a renowned poet.

      • Historical fiction
        August 2013

        The Geneveh Project

        by Quentin Cope

        The Geneveh Project It’s 1987 and the location is the Arabian Gulf. A war is raging between Iran and Iraq, two of the largest oil producers in the Middle East. British entrepreneur Declan Doyle is confronted by Mohsen Raza, the much feared head of the IRG, Iranian Revolutionary Guard. The Iranian blood-letting battle with the Iraqis has been going on for too many years. It is at a stalemate and choking the cash struck Iranians to the point of humiliating surrender. Doyle agrees to embark on a last ditch operation coded 112/406 but more widely known as ‘The Geneveh Project’. The plan is to get oil out of Iran in a way that has never been attempted before. Will he succeed? ... Can he succeed?   Not if the American CIA have their way. Doyle is committed to the Geneveh Project but the covert activities of Colonel Oliver Gresham leave a trail of pain and suffering that provide him with fewer and fewer choices. He has to complete the work on time or else the leader of the fanatical IRG will want to know why - with life threatening consequences. The simple question is, can the hard headed British entrepreneur complete the Geneveh Project in time? The head of the Iranian Rev Guard has put his life on it. The CIA have put a billion dollar submarine on it.

      • August 2020

        Second Chance

        by Dr. Kavita Bhatnagar

        She was only 26, pretty, intelligent, earning well and – divorced. Ragini had been on cloud nine once her marriage was fixed and certain that she was going to get all the love she had dreamed of – her marriage would be perfect and she would really live happily ever after. But soon the marriage turned abusive and Ragini walked out of the bitter, hurtful existence – shaken, but determined to create anew life for herself. This is the story of Ragini’s quest for love and companionship. Her efforts make her interact with different suitors and take her on a roller coaster emotional ride. Ragini’s travails to marryagain show myriad hues where deceit and pretence come face to- face with hope and aspiration. Will life give her a second chance?

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