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      • Aser Al-Kotob

        The Acquisition List:  Fictions titles:  - The silence of the girls by Man-Booker awarded PAT BARKER.  - THE REGENERATION trilogy by PAT BARKER.  - THE NIGHT CIRCUS by Erin Morgenstern.  - THE STARLESS SEA by Erin Morgenstern.  - BEHIND CLOSED DOORS by B. A. Paris.  - THE KIND WORTH KILLING by Peter Swanson.  - BEFORE SHE KNEW HIM by Peter Swanson.  - THE COUPLE NEXT DOOR by Shari Lapena.  - Opposite of always by Justin Reynolds.  - American Gods by Neil Gaiman.  - And other 8 titles by Amazon publishing. Non-fictions titles:  - We have 4 titles by Allan and Barbara Pease.  - The lessons of history by will Durant.  - king warrior magician lover by Moore and Gillette.  - Never Eat Alone by Keith Ferrazzi. - Who’s Got Your Back by Keith Ferrazzi.   series for children:  - Dirty Bertie - Timmy failure.  Comics and graphic novels:  - American Gods (Graphic Novel) by Neil Gaiman. (Dark horse).

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      • Trusted Partner
        Fiction

        WHY I CAN'T WRITE

        How to survive in a world where you can’t pay rent, can’t afford to focus, be healthy or to remain principled. Dijana Matković tells a powerful story of searching for a room of her own in the late stages of capitalism.

        by DIJANA MATKOVIĆ

        It is a coming-of-age story for Generation Z. How to grow up or even live in a world where no steady jobs are available, you can’t pay your rent and can’t afford medical or living expenses. Moreover, it touches on how to be a socially engaged artist in such a world, and more so, a woman in a post-me too world? Dijana, a daughter of working-class immigrants, tells the story of her difficult childhood and adolescence, how should became a journalist and later a writer in a society full of prejudices, glass ceilings and obstacles. How she gradually became a stereotypical ‘success story’, even though she still struggles with writing, because she can’t afford a ‘room of her own’.   Dijana is a daughter of working-class immigrants, who came to Slovenia in the eighties in search of a better future. The family is building a house but is made redundant from the local factory when Yugoslavia is in the midst of an economic crisis. When her parents get divorced, Dijana, her older sister and mother struggle with basic needs. She is ashamed of their poverty, her classmates bully her because of her immigrant status, but mostly because of her being ‘white trash’. In the local school she meets teachers with prejudices against immigrants, but is helped by a librarian who spots her talent. When Dijana goes to secondary school, she moves in with her older sister who lives in Ljubljana, the capital of Slovenia. Her sister is into rave culture and Dijana starts to explore experimenting with drugs, music and dance. At the secondary school, she is again considered ‘the weird kid’, as she isn’t enough of a foreigner for other immigrant kids because she is from the country, yet she isn’t Slovenian enough for other native kids. She falls even deeper into drug addiction, fails the first year of school and has to move back to live with her mother. She takes on odd jobs to make ends meet. Whilst working as a waitress she encounters sexism and sexual violence from customers and abuse from the boss. She finishes night school and graduates. She meets many ‘lost’ people of her generation along the way, who tell her their stories about precarious, minimum wage jobs, lack of opportunities, expensive rent, etc. Dijana writes for numerous newspapers but loses or quits her job, because she isn’t allowed to write the stories she wants or because of the bad working conditions or the blatant sexual harassment. Due to the high rent in the capital, Dijana has to move to the countryside to live with her mother. She feels lonely there, struggles with anxiety and cannot write a second book, because she is constantly under pressure to make a living. She realises that she must persevere regardless of the obstacles, she must follow her inner truth and by writing about it, try to create a community of like-minded people, a community of people who support each other – all literature/art is social.

      • Children's & YA
        2015

        The Invisible Threads

        by Montse Torrents / Matilde Portalés

        A sensitive book about human relationships. With tender illustrations and a beautiful poetic text this album is about invisible threads, that you can not see but exist: those threads that connect you to the people you love, to the people you enjoy being with, to the people you learn from, and laugh and play with… Turn the pages and you will find the magic of these threads.

      • Children's & YA
        October 2020

        Wrong

        by Matilde Piran, Andrea Falcone

        Wrong is the story of a journey: Davide and Elisa, both 15, are on the run, looking for a place to be themselves. It’s also the story of a friendship and the search for a common language to express all those emotions that the two just can’t deal with.Davide is the invisible boy. He doesn’t like or dislike anything specific, girls and boys frighten him equally, he doesn’t fit in with any particular group, and he doesn’t know how to approach his own desires.Elisa’s family has just moved to the city from a small town so that her kid brother can get the therapy he needs. She doesn’t know anyone yet. What she knows is that her half-wit brother, will not help her make new friends.Through text and images, the story snowballs towards the meeting between Davide and Elisa, and between two different ways to go wrong and be wrong - and to do it together.

      • Fiction
        April 2018

        The libertists

        by Diana Correia Brígida

        It all began in Paris in the year 1980. Communities who defended philosophical theories began to exist only in France, after the death of Jean-Paule Sartre. It did not take long to spread themselves throughout Europe, with a goal to defend them, but in the worst way. "We are condemned to freedom" is Jean-Paul Sartre's phrase that advertised in a brochure, the Community Libertista. In these communities, spread-philosophical theories that defend the hard way. When Nicole and Matilde suggest to friends join one of the Communities, which everyone accepts, begins the first day of the most difficult phase of their lives. Every time your freedom will be slipping through fingers that are increasingly arrested and linked to the rigor of an army. It is ahead moments of great tension, to call for a major decision of the group.

      • Count to ten

        by Paolo Cammilli

        Fortunato, Diletta, Rosa, Nino, Pietro, Salvatore. Six children locked in a circle, as if to protect themselves. Seven years older, four and a half years younger. At that age, hide-and-seek is serious. Those who count are alone, but those who hide challengethe darkness. At that age, death does not exist and you do not find it even if you look for it, at most with death you play it. At that age, the sun shines without thinking about the night. Yet in the block number 4, a popular building of the Cielo Rosso area, south of Catania, two children disappear, a few months from each other. A nightmare that repeats itself. Already ten years before a little girl had disappeared, then found dying along the railway tracks that lap the buildings. Only one element, macabre and mocking, unites the three cases: the little ones are lost in the dark while they are playing hide and seek. No one has seen anything, no one knows anything. Or maybe too much. Hundreds of families, mired in misery, are and are frightening. The investigation, soggy and timid, takes blind alleys and rots like the railings of the balconies. Oscar Baldisserri, a forty-five-year-old man with no head or tail who is catapulted among those shabby concrete walls, is the only one asking questions. Because all that violence and resignation without a glimmer of hope for the future are incomprehensible to those who did not grow up in the Red Sky. In an unstoppable descent into the environmental, social, human degradation of the most ambiguous Italian province, thanks to the help of a taciturn child and Matilde, who will kindle in him a tender and ruthless passion, Oscar will cross the banks of his conscience in order to extract the truth from the silence.

      • Fiction

        Matilda’s Story

        by Elisa Guidelli

        Matilda of Canossa (Italian: Matilde di Canossa, 1046-1115) is a fascinating yet rarely mentioned character, in spite of her great importance in the history of the European Middle Ages. Countess of a vast buffer territory between the Lazio region and Garda that held the balance between Papacy and Empire, she soon entered into the ongoing conflict between the two. Initially taking on the role of peacemaker (also because she was cousin to Henry IV on her mother’s side), as demonstrated by the famous “meeting of Canossa” (28th January 1077), she subsequently proved an open supporter of the papacy and the Reformation. With this choice, she put her powers – granted to her mainly by former emperors – and her very supremacy at stake: after Henry IV declared her a traitoress, cities rebelled against her rule, and many of her territorial possessions were overrun by the imperial army. A woman of great power, the unconventional Matilda of Canossa found herself at the heart of an epoch-making conflict, extolled by one faction (who called her “the Daughter of St. Peter” and “the Handmaid of the Lord”) and slandered by the other (who accused her of being a whore, and Pope Gregory VII’s lover). Her gender played a key role here: though entitled under Longobard law to inherit her family’s holdings, she still needed a man to support and vouch for her. This led her to marry for the second time – another doomed marriage, this time to a young boy; it also led her to adopt Count Guido Guerra as a son and, lastly, to surrender to the new emperor, Henry V, who – in exchange for the emperor’s appointment as her heir – once again acknowledged her authority over the northern Italian part of the Canossa holding, by virtue of their commonly known kinship. Thus, it wasn’t until the end of her earthly life that Matilda was able to devote herself to prayer and meditation, which she had been drawn to since childhood – an inclination discouraged, however, by Pope Gregory VII himself, due to her invaluable political and military role in support of the papacy. Following her death in 1115, her memory – immortalised by the monk Donizone – was consolidated with the Church’s claim to the donation of her possessions, as well as a series of myths and legends – both learned and popular in nature – that began spreading in the Late Middle Ages all the way down to our times, transforming her into a legendary character within and without the lands of the Po Valley. Recalling her life thus gives us the chance to open a window onto a crucial period in medieval history, and on the men and women who lived through it. THEMES, CONTENT AND STRUCTURE:A tale of life, losses, love, struggles, downfall and redemption, violence and passion… these are the themes running through this historical novel devoted to Matilda. A work of historical fiction that reconstructs the key events in her life, from childhood to youth and on through adulthood and old age, in an attempt to restore the character’s great power.

      • December 2020

        Why I can't like him/her?

        by Anna Claudia Ramos, Antônio Schimeneck

        Adolescence is a time of many doubts, anxieties and uncertainties. In this phase, sexuality is unfolding, and we are going through — because everyone has gone, is going or will go through — self-questions about all conditions, all desires, including regarding sexuality. If on the one hand, we see in beautiful social networks beautiful movements of self-acceptance and discovery, on the other hand we live in a time of great obscurantism and attempt to cage the desires and contain the experiences of young people – whether at home or at school, and unfortunately, many times, with public authority initiative. This book asks this of young people, who often find themselves trapped by a cultural need (or family pressure) to create heteronormative bonds, when, in fact, they feel the desire for people of the same sex. But this book also understands that it is necessary to take this issue to the world, so that everyone reflects on otherness, sexuality and, mainly, the many possibilities of affection and desire. Por que não consigo gostar dele/dela? is a book with two sides, two covers, four stories and many testimonials.

      • Libelo de Sangre

        by Sandra Aza

        Madrid, winter of 1620. The happiness of the marriage formed by Sebastián Castro, a renowned clerk of the Villa, and Margarita Carvajal staggers when both become the main suspects of a blood libel: lawsuits that blame the Jews for sacrificing Christian children to collect their blood and whose jurisdiction belongs to the Holy Inquisition. With the bonfire hanging over them, their son Alonso, a thirteen-year-old boy, begins a desperate search for a way to save them, a purpose that tears her out of her warm existence and shows her the ice of life. In spite of everything, three headlights turn on light in the shadows of her misfortune: friendship, hope and a dream. Friendship is provided by Juan and Antonio, two rogue vagabonds. Hope beats in a bag full of money that seems to be pulling the strings of destiny. And the dream awaits him in college, where he plans to study law, become a lawyer, and exercise a law capable of preventing innocent people like his parents from suffering the rigors of injustice. Blood Libel is a fascinating story of love and friendship set in Madrid during the Golden Age, a vibrant but bleak time in which, while faith in God lit hearts, crimes against it lit bonfires.

      • Children's & YA

        CELIA, THE GIRL WHO SANG WITH HER HANDS

        by Text: Juan Francisco Bascuñán / Illustrations: Valeria Cis

        Celia is a girl like many others her age, but she has something special: she can speak with her hands and hear with her eyes, because her ears don’t function - she is deaf. The story is told through the letters that the girl writes to her mother. Celia arrived in Santiago de Chile to live with her aunt and uncle, while her family remains in Colombia. She writes to her mother about her difficult experiences at school, where no one knows how to speak in sign language. However, thanks to the commitment of the director, she achieves important changes in the school, which is enriched by opening up to the world of deaf people and getting to know, through her, the culture of another country. The book has two attached resources, which help to bring deaf and hearing children closer together: a manual of the alphabet of the Chilean sign language included in the book, as well as a video that shows the pages in the sign language transcription and the reading version in off on the publisher’s website.

      • Children's & YA

        THE CHILEAN FOREST

        by Written by: Pablo Neruda /Illustrations: Antonia Lara /Original script and editing: Juan Francisco Bascuñán

        “Whoever does not know the Chilean forest, does not know this planet”. This profound and radical message by Neruda regards the wonderful forests of southern Chile, home to countless living beings: some who come out to meet those who enter it, others that always remain hidden. “A rotten log: what a treasure!”: the poet finds the point where life and death are one, the forest soil, where the cyclical becomes a reality, what dies will return in time to be part of the living again. “It is a vertical world: a nation of birds, a crowd of leaves”. Neruda does not say directly that we have to take care of the forests, but he helps us to know them, to discover them, to love them. And in this path what naturally follows is to protect them... This text is part of the memories of Neruda, I confess I have lived (Memoirs).

      • Lifestyle, Sport & Leisure
        April 2021

        Sueños de la Euro

        El torneo que reconcilió a un continente

        by Miguel L. Pereira

        As Paul Auster once said, football is the miracle that allowed Europe to hate itself without destroying itself. The ball has done more than any other political project for brotherhood in a land too used to fighting with itself. After each conflict, it was necessary for the ball to be there to make the continent a space of union and not a perpetual trench. For this reason, every time the European Championship is held, there is a part of the world that looks into each other's eyes and shakes hands. For this reason, when we write about the 60 years of history of this emblematic tournament, we are really drawing our memories, our fears and our desires as Europeans. Because the dreams of Delaunay, Panenka, Charisteas, Aragonés or Éder are also our dreams.

      • On puppy's nose, a grasshopper

        Haiku on the four seasons

        by Rodoula Pappa/Seng Soun Ratanavanh

        Such a deep sleep! On our puppy’s nose, a grasshopper!

      • Biography & True Stories

        Aerial Roots

        The grandmother big lies

        by Vanessa Gani / Vanny Gani

        How would you feel if you found out your grandmother was a big liar? The protagonist believed that the grandmother was a famous French actress, but comes to suspect that she might be a prostitute. In search of the truth, after finding documents from her  grandmother with eight different names, she travels with her family to the places where she lived, Romania, Israel and France, and makes surprising discoveries. Read to find out how this Jewish grammy escape to the war and ends up in Brazil. This is not a sad story.

      • 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?"

      • ABSOLVO TE

        by Georgi Bardarov

        EUROPEAN LITERATURE PRIZE FOR 2021! https://www.euprizeliterature.eu/authors/georgi-bardarov The novel “Absolvo te” is based on two true stories – one about World War II and the Holocaust, and the other about the Arab-Israeli conflict. The main characters are a Palestinian, a Jewish man and a Nazis officer. Each of them must forgive and look past each other’s sins. They’re all in need of “Absolve te”, which translated from Latin means ‘’forgiveness of all sins’’.

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