Your Search Results

      • Piergiorgio Nicolazzini Literary Agency (PNLA)

        The Piergiorgio Nicolazzini Literary Agency (PNLA), established in 2000, represents writers in Italy and worldwide, either direct or through co-agents in several territories.PNLA negotiates film and TV rights with major Italian and international production companies. PNLA represents foreign publishers, agents and writers from the United States, the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, from Europe, South America and the Asian countries (China, Korea, Japan).

        View Rights Portal
      • PIE International Inc. (PIE Books)

        Established in 1971, PIE International built their reputation for outstanding art direction and high-quality production over the years, starting with an extensive collection of Design & Art books, and later expanding to include Children's books, Comic & Manga Arts and Lifestyle books. “My First Earth Picture Book” is the latest title in the educational series by Akemi Tezuka. A total of 880,000 copies from this series have been printed in Asia. “Houses with a Story” by Seiji Yoshida is our latest bestselling Comic Art book, which has reprinted four times in four months. We are very excited to have this great opportunity to reach you all!

        View Rights Portal
      • Trusted Partner
        The Arts
        December 2023

        Baroquemania

        by Laura Moure Cecchini

      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
        August 1998

        Antonio Vivaldi

        Eine Biographie

        by Michael Talbot, Konrad Küster

      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
        September 1976

        Barockkonzert

        Novelle

        by Anneliese Botond, Alejo Carpentier

        Barockkonzert, entstanden 1974, ist ein überaus anregender und vergnüglicher historisch- phantastischer Kurzroman des kubanischen Schriftstellers und Musikologen Alejo Carpentier (1904–1980). Ein Mexikaner, der zu Beginn des 18. Jahrhunderts nach Venedig reist, erlebt im Ospedale della Pietà eine ausgefallene 'jam-session' mit Starbesetzung: Außer den siebzig Waisenmädchen des Orchesters wirken Vivaldi (Geige), Scarlatti (Cembalo) und Händel an der Orgel mit – dazu des Mexikaners Diener, der schwarze Filomeno (Schlagzeug).

      • Trusted Partner
        August 1997

        Lúcios Bekenntnis

        Roman

        by Mário Sá-Carneiro, Berthold Zilly, Berthold Zilly

        Mário de Sá-Carneiro wurde 1890 in Lissabon geboren. 1912 veröffentlichte er seinen ersten Erzählband. Im gleichen Jahr ging er nach Paris, um Jura zu studieren, gab das Studium jedoch bald wieder auf und kehrte nach Lissabon zurück. 1914 erschienen seine ersten Gedichte sowie sein Roman A confissão de Lúcio (dt. Lúcios Bekenntnis, 1997). Gemeinsam mit Fernando Pessoa, mit dem ihn eine enge Freundschaft verband, gründete er die Zeitschrift Orpheu, deren zwei einzige Nummern 1915 erscheinen und zu einem Fanal der Avantgarde und des portugiesischen Modernismo gerieten. 1916 beging Mário de Sá-Carneiro in Paris Selbstmord.

      • Food & Drink

        NO MORE FUSS AT THE TABLE

        How to heal your child in total safety

        by Lucio Piermarini

        The invention of the finicky child and the on-demand approach to food. Why is my child not eating? Why this loss of appetite? Why must meals always be so such an ordeal?These are just a few of the many questions asked by parents, not only when weaning their children but even when feeding their newborns.Lucio Piermarini, pediatrician and author of the best-seller Io mi svezzo da solo! [I’ll do my weaning myself!], clarifies these and many more doubts from a basic premise - there are no healthy finicky children. The idea of the finicky child is a misconception, for in fact our bodies are perfectly capable of self-regulating the daily intake of food they need from day one.On the strength of sound scientific data and of thirty-years’ professional experience, and in an engaging and accessible style, the author illustrates the mechanism regulating appetite and the way the first days of life connect to and influence later stages of development. He emphasizes the need to respect the right of children to self-determination, illustrates the findings of cutting-edge food science research andexplains the role of the on-demand approach in allowing children to develop independence and appreciation of food.Not a text of pediatric nutrition but a go-to-guide for parents to better understand their children and learn to avoid unnecessary pressures by respecting the child’s instinctive and natural inclinations.

      • Fiction

        Requiem for the Roses

        by Alejandra Ángeles

        Five young women - Alicia, Paula, Alondra, Constanza, and Marcela, are all cello students at the National Music Conservatory. They will run into a profesor who is obssessed with roses and young women, as much as he is obsessed with Vivaldi’s Four Seasons, which becomes the central leitmotif of Requien for the Roses, and the only common denominator between the women. Their five voices, and the voice of the professor, tell the story in a rhythm that closely follows Vivaldi’s score: Spring, Summer, Fall, and Winter are each one divided into three movements. The story follows the music. The novel is centered on the disappearance of three of the women – Alicia, Paula, and Alondra. Each one of them is a season: Alicia is Spring, Paula is Summer, and Alondra is Fall. Constanza, who is Winter, may or may not suffer the same destiny as their three predecessors. It may be up to her, or it may be up to the reader. While the destinies of Alicia, Paula, and Alondra has already been determined by their captor, and that of Constanza is up for grabs, Marcela, the fifth woman, search for answers as Alicia was her best friend. She immediately sets her eyes on the cello professor and his strange hobbies and habits.

      • Poetry by individual poets

        Echoes of Memory

        Selected Poems of Lucio Mariani

        by Lucio Mariani

        In Rachel Zucker's re-imagining of the Greek myth, Persephone is a daughter struggling to become a woman. Unlike the classical portrait of a maiden kidnapped by a tyrant, Zucker's Persephone chooses to travel to the Underworld and assume her role as Hades' queen. Caught between worlds - light and dark, innocence and power, a mother's protection and a lover's appeal - Persephone describes the strangeness of the Underworld and the problems of transformation and transgression. The arrangement of Zucker's poems reflects Persephone's travels between the Underworld and the Surface. Both spare and lyrical, they are written as entries in Persephone's diary and as letters between Persephone, Demeter and Hades. The language - strange, urgent, direct - is pulled and changed as Persephone journeys from one world to another revealing the struggle of unmaking and remaking the self.

      • Education

        Citizenship as Politics

        International Perspectives from Adult Education

        by Lucio-Villegas, E.

        This book holds two main concepts: citizenship and adult education, and presents a diverse scope of ideas and experiences from different countries and perspectives in a rich indication to edify liberating practices and researches. Citizenship is closely linked with participation. When people are encouraged to take part in an authentic process of decision making, people do participate in public affairs. Here is the true meaning of citizenship related to the old idea to take part, to get involved in public issues and transform their community through participation. On the other hand, Lifelong Learning’s concepts and practices seem to have forgotten that adult education is more than the preparation for a job. Adult education is learning for democracy; researching communities searching for a school for all; transforming communities; struggling for our rights; becoming awareness about environmental hazards; edifying the city or expressing ourselves through theatre or public art. Lifelong Learning’s concepts and practices seem to have forgotten that life is more than the labour market. The entire life of women and men are the substance of what adult education is made of. The book is not only addressed to scholars, under and postgraduate students interested in citizenship and adult education, but also to practitioners working in communities in a participatory way.

      • Fiction
        April 2022

        Agente Malintz (Agent Malintz)

        by Rodrigo Lucio / Miguel Ángel Vallejo

        A simulation imposes itself on reality. An uncertain threat approaches. This graphic novel advances between glimpses of chained futures in which a scientist abandons everything for absolute understanding and a rebellious young woman discovers the cruelty of an interplanetary empire.

      • Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945)
        March 2004

        Hungry Generations

        A Novel

        by Daniel C. Melnick

        At the center of “Hungry Generations” is the great European piano virtuoso Alexander Petrov, one of the émigré geniuses who lived in the incredible community of gifted Europeans in Los Angeles during the Second World War. Fleeing from Nazi Germany, the legendary classical pianist – like Schoenberg, Stravinsky, the Werfels, and the Manns – settled in L.A. and attempted to raise a family there on the edge of the Pacific. In September of 1972, Jack Weinstein – a young composer and a distant relation of Petrov – is newly arrived in L.A., living near Venice beach and seeking a job in the movie studios. Jack develops a friendship with the émigré virtuoso, who is nearing seventy and struggling to maintain his psychic and physical health in the midst of intense conflicts with his wife and his adult children. The renowned pianist tells the young man stories of his life from the thirties to the present, and soon Jack is absorbed into the family life of the Petrovs. Jack becomes a catalyst for confrontations among the Petrovs, as he intrudes on the family’s delicate balances. He falls in love with the pianist’s daughter, Sarah, who becomes Jack’s troubled muse, and in one climax, the father erupts in jealousy and desperation, assaulting his daughter’s lover. The son Joseph Petrov is a gifted, cynical, intense pianist himself, who also befriends Jack; resentments – new and old – build between son and father, and these too erupt in destruction and self-destructiveness. Also, Joseph is gay, and after a surreal New Year’s Eve party at the Polo Lounge, he makes a pass at drunk, dismayed Jack. Then there is Petrov’s wife, Helen, and her confession to Jack is one of the final assaults on the young composer. The remarkable expatriates living in Los Angeles during World War II figure both in Petrov’s stories and in Jack’s inner struggle to resurrect himself in the face of his experience of the Petrovs, of music, of sex, of the movie studios, of L.A. itself. During the year 1972-73, Jack composes a piano sonata infused with his love of Petrov’s famed recording of Beethoven’s Hammerklavier Sonata as well as the music of Stravinsky and Schoenberg – those composers even begin to enter Jack’s dreams, simultaneously blessing and critiquing him as he works in his Venice apartment. Hungry Generations paints a vivid portrait of the conflicts and struggles which erupt in L.A.’s singular expatriate community. At the center of the novel is finally the confrontation between émigré parents who survived the Holocaust at the peculiar remove of Los Angeles and their grown children. Each “hungry generations” reveals its yearning for meaning, love, and transcendence.

      • The Arts

        Milano e La Scala

        (1778 - 1920) Nascita dell'industria lirica

        by Antonio Schilirò

        Nineteenth-century musical Italy is, according to Bruno Barilli's famous definition, 'the country of melodrama', and the theatre is its space par excellence, and La Scala favoured the establishment of Milan as the capital of the opera industry. This requires an articulate and complex organisation that, in addition to the artists, includes agents, impresarios and technical personnel in the sector and enables the 'turnkey' transfer of Italian opera performances to the other side of the planet. And in Milan, the Teatro alla Scala was built with the intention of being the centre of this production system. The theatre, inaugurated in 1778, was built thanks to the obstinate, tenacious and passionate determination of the most illustrious families of the Lombard aristocracy, after a fire had destroyed the Regio Ducal Teatro on the night of 25 February 1776. It was the nobles who entirely financed the construction of the new Teatro Grande at La Scala, receiving in exchange a box with an adjoining dressing room.

      Subscribe to our

      newsletter