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      • Petra Schier

        Petra Schier, Jahrgang 1978, lebt mit Mann und Hund in einer kleinen Gemeinde in der Eifel. Sie studierte Geschichte und Literatur an der Fernuniversität Hagen und arbeitet seit 2003 freie Autorin. Ihre sehr erfolgreichen historischen Romane erscheinen u.a. im Rowohlt Taschenbuch Verlag, ihre ebenfalls sehr beliebten Weihnachts- sowie Liebesromane bei Rütten Loening, MIRA Taschenbuch, HarperCollins und Weltbild.Unter dem Pseudonym Mila Roth veröffentlicht die Autorin verlagsunabhängig verschiedene erfolgreiche Buchserien.

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      • Kerstin Schulze

        Ein angesehener Privatbankier wird erpresst. In einem Luxushotel wird ein Escort-Girl brutal ermordet und die Vereinten Nationen sind Ziel eines Anschlagplans islamistischer Terrorristen.    In dem ersten Teil der Thriller-Trilogie »Geneva Girl – Todesursache unbekannt« geht es um Schwarzgeld, Mord und Terrorgefahr in einer der teuersten Städte der Welt: Genf. Im Mittelpunkt des Buches steht eine deutsche Praktikantin bei den Vereinten Nationen, die an Angststörungen und Klaustrophobie leidet, und zwischen die Fronten von Geheimdienst und Diplomatie gerät. Es handelt sich um eine brisante Mischung aus Psycho- und Politthriller. Die Idee zu dem Roman lieferte der nie aufgeklärte Tod des ehemaligen Ministerpräsidenten von Schleswig-Holstein Uwe Barschel im Genfer Hotel Beau-Rivage.

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      • Trusted Partner
        Teaching, Language & Reference
        December 2020

        Living politics after war

        by Johanna Söderström, Emmanuel Pierre Guittet

      • Trusted Partner
        April 2007

        50 Klassiker der Zeitgeschichte

        by Herausgegeben von Sabrow, Martin; Herausgegeben von Danyel, Jürgen; Herausgegeben von Kirsch, Jan-Holger; Beiträge von Baberowski, Jörg; Beiträge von Bavaj, Riccardo; Beiträge von Berg, Nicolas; Beiträge von Besier, Gerhard; Beiträge von Brink, Cornelia; Beiträge von Bruendel, Steffen; Beiträge von Diner, Dan; Beiträge von Dülffer, Jost; Beiträge von Eckel, Jan; Beiträge von Freimüller, Tobias; Beiträge von Gieseke, Jens; Beiträge von Grieger, Manfred; Beiträge von Große Kracht, Klaus; Beiträge von Gudehus, Christian; Beiträge von Hachtmann, Rüdiger; Beiträge von Hacke, Jens; Beiträge von Hettling, Manfred; Beiträge von Hohls, Rüdiger; Beiträge von Jessen, Ralph; Beiträge von Jureit, Ulrike; Beiträge von Keßler, Mario; Beiträge von Kleßmann, Christoph; Beiträge von Knigge, Volkhard; Beiträge von Koch, Magnus; Beiträge von Kramer, Nicole; Beiträge von Lemberg, Hans; Beiträge von Lemke, Michael; Beiträge von Lindenberger, Thomas; Beiträge von Loewy, Hanno; Beiträge von Lokatis, Siegfried; Beiträge von Mittler, Günther R.; Beiträge von Nolzen, Armin; Beiträge von Orth, Karin; Beiträge von Osterloh, Jörg; Beiträge von Piper, Ernst-Reinhard; Beiträge von Pohl, Karl Heinrich; Beiträge von Rödder, Andreas; Beiträge von Schaarschmidt, Thomas; Beiträge von Schieder, Wolfgang; Beiträge von Schildt, Axel; Beiträge von Schwendemann, Heinrich; Beiträge von Süß, Winfried; Beiträge von Thamer, Hans-Ulrich; Beiträge von Tönsmeyer, Tatjana; Beiträge von Wehrs, Nikolai; Beiträge von Wentker, Hermann; Beiträge von Wildt, Michael; Beiträge von Wolfrum, Edgar; Beiträge von Zimmermann, Michael; Beiträge von Echternkamp, Jörg

      • Children's & YA
        February 2019

        Raspberry Hill

        Ghosts and spooks for middle grade readers by Finland’s rising crime queen.

        by Eva Frantz

        Raspberry Hill is a sanatorium in the middle of the healing countryside, where city dwellers with lung diseases end up. Many of the child patients treated there are from poor families–like Stina. She’s lived on Seaman Street in southern Helsinki in a small room with her five siblings and the mother since the father died in the war, and now she is very sick.   The sanatorium feels like a castle to Stina. It is vast and full of long corridors and echoes. It is also a very lonely place, until one day Stina meets Ruben. The boy starts turning up when they should be sleeping, taking her on nightly expeditions to forbidden parts of the building– like the eastern wing, which has recently burned down.   Little by little Stina starts to realize that everything is not quite right in the sanatorium. Why isn’t her mother writing back to her? Why do the nurses seem so afraid? What really happened in the fire? And what is Ruben trying to warn her about?   Raspberry Hill is crime author Eva Frantz’s first children’s book–a suspenseful horror story for middle grade readers. It starts a series of stand-alone horror novels set in early 20th century that take their young readers on a journey back in time.

      • Children's & YA
        October 2010

        Patrik and the Senior Squad

        A witty and hilarious middle-grade series about retired people fighting crime.

        by Malin Klingenberg

        In a small-town school a boy sits in a class room, deep in thought. He’s called Patrik, and today will be the most exciting day of his life, although he doesn’t know it yet.   Soon enough the class tearaway, Irene, bullies Patrik into escaping from school. When he ends up on a wrong bus full of pensioners, it appears that one of the senior citizens has been kidnapped – and a group of villains are very interested in taking the other pensioners out of the game too…   In the Senior Squad series pensioners are living a secret life scuppering the evil plans of lowlifes with the help of two clever children, Patrik and Irene. The series includes six books: Patrik and The Senior Squad (2010), Irene and the Moneyhoover (2013), Fake Bernice (2015), The Fantastic Alfredo (2016), Rakel’s Miracles (2017) and The Magnificent Senior Match (2020).   The Senior Squad series has been praised for its crazy humor, quirky characters and action-filled plots that are perfect for young readers. The fourth novel of the series, The Fantastic Alfredo, was awarded with Runeberg Junior Prize in 2017.

      • Children's & YA
        October 2017

        The Pearl Fisher

        A grand take of friendship, longing – and a kingdom of stories by an award-winning author.

        by Karin Erlandsson

        There is a kingdom where the bottom of the ocean is covered with colourful pearls. There is one pearl that everyone wants–the eye gemstone. The story says that whoever finds it will never need to long for anything anymore, and generation after generation people have left their families to search for it, never returning.   Two girls set out for the hunt: Miranda who believes herself to be the most skilled pearl fisher of all, and small Syrsa who has a rare ability: she can hear the pearls singing, whispering, murmuring… Their page-turning adventure grows in the series of four books to epic proportions: to a grand tale of friendship and what truly matters in life.   The exciting, multi-layered story, located in skilfully constructed world with forests, mountains, fields and seas has been praised by readers and critics.

      • Children's & YA
        October 2018

        The Bird Master

        A grand take of friendship, longing – and a kingdom of stories by an award-winning author.

        by Karin Erlandsson

        There is a kingdom where the bottom of the ocean is covered with colourful pearls. There is one pearl that everyone wants–the eye gemstone. The story says that whoever finds it will never need to long for anything anymore, and generation after generation people have left their families to search for it, never returning.   Two girls set out for the hunt: Miranda who believes herself to be the most skilled pearl fisher of all, and small Syrsa who has a rare ability: she can hear the pearls singing, whispering, murmuring… Their page-turning adventure grows in the series of four books to epic proportions: to a grand tale of friendship and what truly matters in life.   The exciting, multi-layered story, located in skilfully constructed world with forests, mountains, fields and seas has been praised by readers and critics.

      • Children's & YA
        October 2017

        Upside Down

        by Vuokko Hurme

      • Children's & YA
        October 2020

        Night Express

        All aboard a magical express train heading towards Christmas!

        by Karin Erlandsson & Peter Bergting

        Dania’s granny lives in an old station building next to a disused railway. Every year Dania, her big sister Nanda and their parents move to their grandmother’s for December in the run-up for Christmas. Granny has become older and more forgetful during the past years, and sometimes she speaks nonsense.   One evening Granny seems exceptionally absentminded before disappearing from her room. The same night Dania hears something and sneaks out to see it with her own eyes: an express train is pulling up at the station.   Dania manages to stop the night train and the adventure begins. She boards the train that returns every night. On the train she meets Konrad, and it soon transpires that everyone on the night train has lost someone they love. With the help of a key from Granny and a mysterious music box, Dania and Konrad are able to bend time itself.   Will the children find their lost loved ones? And who has actually lost whom?   An enchanting and wildly riveting story brimming with the magic of Christmas has 24 chapters and is also splendid for reading out loud.

      • Children's & YA
        August 2020

        Radio Popov

        What if you were all alone in the world – but one night you discovered that the Sharp Ears always hear you when you sigh?

        by Anja Portin

        Nine-year-old Alfred lives virtually alone. His mother has disappeared long ago, and his father, who stays away on business trips, doesn’t always seem to remember that Alfred exists. One night, Alfred sets off in the company of the mysterious Sneak, who puts things through letterboxes–not just newspapers, but apples, woollen socks and sandwiches.   Thus begins an unforgettable adventure that changes everything, and not just for Albert. Sneak turns out the eccentric Amanda Lehtimaja, a paperwoman who is one of the Sharp Ears. At Amanda’s home Alfred finds an old radio transmitter designed by a Russian physicist, A.S. Popov. He starts making a secret, nightly radio broadcast that all the other forgotten children in the city listen to.   But how can Amanda and Alfred help the children, and what will Alfred’s father do when he notices that his son is gone? And who exactly are the Sharp Ears?   “Some stories start with a trivial little whimsical idea, like someone deciding to find out if they would sleep better on the hallway floor than in their own bed. Like I decided to do one night.”   Radio Popov is an exciting and humorous, warm-hearted story that brings to mind the most beloved classics of children’s literature, like the fairy tale novels of Astrid Lindgren.

      • Children's & YA
        August 2020

        Ruby's Secret

        What if you could move objects by willpower?

        by Vuokko Hurme

        Ruby’s family has a secret: they have wonderful powers of colour. The Hues are able to control the colours of their own possessions, and they can handle them and move them about by willpower. Ruby’s colour is red and her big sister Skye’s is blue, while their little brother Forrest is still looking for his colour and practising hard.   When the Hues, hiding their secret skills, move into the Gertrude Rinne condominium, something changes: Ruby no longer wants to be an eternal outsider. She wants to play in the yard with the other children. So she has to make an impression on her new friends–at all costs.   On top of all this, Ruby’s head is turned by a charming but mischievous girl named Liia. And what is the strange greyness that threatens not just the Hues but everyone else as well?   Ruby’s Secret is the first book of four about the Hues family. Reetta Niemensivu’s expressive line drawing illustrations complete the text with red finishing touches.

      • Children's & YA
        October 2019

        Close Your Eyes, Iris!

        Why do you have to go to sleep, even if you’re not a bit tired? How do you know you’re sleepy? And what’s the sleepy monster?

        by Virpi Kaarina Talvitie et al.

        Iris is cross. She’s in the middle of a game, and her mother, tired out by the baby, is angrily telling her to go to bed. Why are grown-ups allowed to stay up later? Why do you have to go to bed if you’re not tired? And why doesn’t sleep come anyway? Who on earth is the Sandman?   Her dreams take Iris with them into the forest, to a farm, under the water and finally to the mountains. At that point the dream becomes a little frightening when Iris meets a sleepy monster suffering from insomnia! Fortunately, when Iris wakes up in the morning everything is back to normal. Even her mother is more cheerful.   Close your Eyes, Iris! is a book about the fascinating and still largely unknown world of sleep. Many exciting aspects of sleep receive a child-level explanation which will also interest adult readers: how do fish sleep? And what about jellyfish, which don’t have brains or eyes? How can bears sleep all winter? How do sleep and sleeplessness affect the human brain, nervous system and cells? Why is it sometimes really difficult to wake up?

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