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      • VOLATILIUM / NEFELI publishing

        Volatilium is the international picture books offshoot of Nefeli Publishing, an established Greek publisher specializing in literary fiction, theatre, history, and art theory since 1979. Volatilium is also the younger sibling of Tsalapeteinos, Nefeli’s acclaimed picture books imprint launched in 2009. Tsalapeteinos has published works by renowned authors and illustrators like Wolf Erlbruch, Hervé Tullet, Marianne Dubuc, Erin E. Stead, Christoph Niemann, Greg Pizzoli, Célia Chauffrey, Émile Jadoul, Seng Soun Ratanavanh and Lisa d’Andrea among others. Volatilium is committed to presenting high quality picture books to a wide international audience.

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      • Verlag Europa-Lehrmittel Nourney, Vollmer GmbH & Co. KG

        Verlag Europa-Lehrmittel The publishing houses Europa-Lehrmittel and Pfanneberg are well known for teaching and learning materials for vocational training and further education. As our books are also in demand internationally, we have published some of our titles in English and French.

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      • 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!

      • Far Far Away...

        by Rodoula Pappa/Kostas Markopoulos

        ONCE upon a time in a little village there lived Yellow, Red, Green, and Blue. They lived in peace until one day… A great storm blew in from far away. When the sun was high in the sky again, they noticed something shiny at the edge of Yellow’s roof. That’s when their troubles began…

      • Dandelion

        by Rodoula Pappa/Lisa D'Andrea

        THE CIRCLE OF LIFE through the “eyes” of a dandelion seed. Through concise text filled with emotion we experience the wonder, joy and hardships a little seed goes through in its journey. Brightly colored images bring the seed’s journey to life. We see the little seed carried by the wind from its flower bed, across fields and forests to city parks. The stunning artwork is filled with life and the feeling of awe at nature’s resilience and beauty. Little readers learn about the four seasons and the life cycle of plants. We discover that nothing truly ends. We are all part of the circle of life. To be born, to transform, to die and be reborn again.

      • This is how books are made

        and what this means for the environment

        by Rodoula Pappa/Kostas Markopoulos

        HOW is a book made? How are paper and ink made? What is a publishing house and what does it do? What goes on at the printer’s and the bookbinder’s? And what impact does producing a book have on the environment? Did you know that for every book produced a tree has to be cut? That making paper can be a heavily polluting procedure? How have we come to make and buy books that you can scratch and sniff, that float in the bathtub or glow in the dark? What does this all mean for our environment and what can we do to protect it? This book contains not one but two texts! — A very short one, for little readers but also for busy grownups; — and a longer one, for those of us who want to learn more about how a book is really made!

      • Lilo and Loli

        by Rodoula Pappa

        LILO AND LOLI are sheep. Apart from being sheep, Loli and Lilo are friends. Yet it was their fate one day to be separated. Will they ever see each other again?

      • Once Upon a Time a Cage

        by Rodoula Pappa/Celia Chauffrey

        A LITTLE CAGE feels lonely because, unlike all the other cages, it’s not home to a bird. So it sets off in search of one. It meets a busy swallow, an independent sparrow, some noisy ducklings, a smug nightingale, a snooty peacock and finally a wise old owl. At the end of its journey it learns that the best way to make lasting friends is to take good care of them while respecting their freedom.

      • Once upon a time a Little Deer

        by Rodoula Pappa/Celia Chauffrey

        ONCE upon a time, in a town neither small nor big, there was a Zoo. In it lived all kinds of animals from all over the world. Among them a little deer. It had been brought there from far away while still a tiny baby, all alone. It had never seen the big wide world outside the Zoo, only heard stories about it by its friends in the nearby cages. Until one moonlit night… The door is open! Does it dare leave the cage? It must decide quickly.

      • When I grow up...

        by Rodoula Pappa/Fikos

        MEET professionals at work. What do an astronaut, a teacher, or a pediatrician have to say about their jobs? What is it like to be a lawyer, a farmer, or a film director? Maybe you want to become like one of them when you grow up?

      • The Little Pilot

        by Stavros Zafeiriou/Frida Kritikou

        A YOUNG PRINCE in a country with no airplanes, who dreams of becoming a pilot. A pilot who teaches young princes how to fly with their dreams. A king who forbids his subjects from dreaming. A dragon who scorches wash hung out to dry. A mischievous snow elf who likes to hang out with plump snowmen. A small whale that sings its freedom. These are just some of the characters in this captivating tale. And if all goes well in our story, our protagonist will learn that a whole elephant in a boa’s stomach is not the same thing as a boa that has swallowed an elephant whole. But will things go well?

      • The Boy with the Tree

        by Rodoula Pappa

        ONCE upon a time, a tree started to grow on a boy’s head. It just happened naturally; it was spring after all. But it’s one thing for a tree to grow in the countryside and quite another for it to grow on a boy’s head. Imagine the problems this would create-for example, when watching a movie, a play or a circus show, or riding a bus, and, of course, at school. So the boy started to hide his tree under a woollen hat. But with summer approaching and the tree still growing, he wasn’t able to hide it any longer. And when the town found out the truth, everyone was shocked. Was there a danger this could spread to other children? To the rest of the town? Just in case, the town decided the boy should stay home for the remainder of the school year...

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