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      • Trusted Partner
        August 2015

        Dai Ethnic Group: Water-splashing Festival in the Peacock Country

        by Fang Suzhen, Zhu Xunde

        Festivals of Chinese Ethnic Groups was co-authored by China's well-beloved authors of children's literature including Fang Suzhen, Tang Sulan, Wang Yimei, and was illustrated by celebrated Chinese illustrators such as Cai Gao, Chen Yadan and Zhu Xunde. This series covers intriguing, outstanding and poetic folk tales on festivals and customs from China's ten most representative ethnic groups. Showcasing their courage, gentleness and indomitable will, these delightful stories allow readers to learn more about the distinct and charming characteristics of these ethnic groups. Recommended as parent-child reading by CCTV during the Dragon Boat Festival, this series has won the Most Beautiful Picture Book 2020 prize given by China Library Journal. It was also nominated for the top picture books prize in China for the Chinese Government Award.

      • Trusted Partner
        July 2014

        Ambush

        by Fang Fang

        This collection of works by writer Fang Fang includes novelettes such as Ambush, My Beginning Is Also My End, Floating Clouds and Flowing Water, Performance Art, and Scenery that have already been translated into English, French, Japanese, Korean, Italian, Thai and Portuguese, and published abroad. Among these, Scenery won the National Outstanding Novelette Prize and caused a national sensation. It also established her as one of the representatives of China’s “new realists”. Her other works have also won her many national important prizes such as Fiction Monthly Hundred Flowers Awards.

      • 2018

        Treasuring Fang Dazeng

        by Feng Xuesong

        Treasuring Fang Dazeng: AWar Correspondent’s Stories is a photograph biography of Fang Dazeng, a pioneer war correspondent of China, and an outstanding photographer. This book is divided into 8 chapters. Each chapter reviews Fang Dazeng’s life history at this stage of his life. This book has two clues: First, the legend of life told by Fang Dazeng he himself’s photos. The second is the fate of the times recorded by Fang Da Zeng’s photographic works. Fang Dazeng he himself’s photos are taken by others. It is divided into the categories of he himself, his family members, his residence, his photographic works and news report. Fang Dazeng’s photo-graphic works generally have nine categories: humanities, scenery, folk customs, the phenomena of society, people’s livelihood, labor workers, war defense, post-war scene. Fang Dazeng’s legendary story is presented through hundreds of precious photos in the book. Readers can follow Fang Dazeng’s 25 years of short life to see the ups and downs of China’s quarter-century.

      • 2017

        Fang Dazeng: Disappearance and Reappearance

        by Feng Xuesong

        Fang Dazeng was a distinguished war correspondent with Ta Kung Pao, and the first one to report the Lugou Bridge Incident. He was also a famous correspondent to report on the frontline battlefield in the early stage of War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression. At 25, however, Fang disappeared from the frontline when he was publishing the most works and living the best moments. His works vanished from media, becoming the everlasting memory of his friends and relatives. By accident, CCTV reporter and author of this book Feng Xuesong learns the story of Fang Dazeng, and introduces him and his works to readers through documentary. People come to realize that many untitled images about War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression were taken by this photographer who died young. Therefore, he is called "the Chinese Capa" This book records Fang Dazeng's brief yet brilliant life, as well as the author's quest as a director of documentary following the trail of Fang Dazeng.

      • 2021

        Beloved China

        by Fang Zhimin

        Throughout Fang Zhimin’s short, yet glorious, life journey (1899-1935), he not only achieved immortal revolutionary accomplishments, but also left behind writings that have been handed down for generations. His works during imprisonment, including ‘Beloved China’ and ‘The Puritan Life’, have been widely read and praised. The book Beloved China, compiled and translated by Fang Zhimin’s great-granddaughter, includes these two notable essays and an appendix entitled ‘A Brief Chronology of Fang Zhimin’, to promote his immortal spirit.

      • 2018

        Fang Dazeng: Lost and Rediscovered

        by Feng Xuesong

        Fang Dazeng was a special war correspondent of Ta Kung Pao in the early days of the Anti-Japanese War, and was the first journalist to report on the Lugou Bridge Incident. He was famous for reporting on the frontal battlefield during the early years of the War of Resistance Against Japan. However, at the age of 25, he disappeared from the frontline of the War of Resistance Against Japan at the most colorful and splendid moment of his career. It tells Fang Dazeng’s growing experience in terms of his family, study, friends, teachers and so on, and also discloses some unpublished pictures collected by Fang Dazeng's family.

      • Trusted Partner
        August 2015

        Buyi Ethnic Group: The Bull King Festival

        by Tang Sulan, Chen Xunru

        Festivals of Chinese Ethnic Groups was co-authored by China's well-beloved authors of children's literature including Fang Suzhen, Tang Sulan, Wang Yimei, and was illustrated by celebrated Chinese illustrators such as Cai Gao, Chen Yadan and Zhu Xunde. This series covers intriguing, outstanding and poetic folk tales on festivals and customs from China's ten most representative ethnic groups. Showcasing their courage, gentleness and indomitable will, these delightful stories allow readers to learn more about the distinct and charming characteristics of these ethnic groups. Recommended as parent-child reading by CCTV during the Dragon Boat Festival, this series has won the Most Beautiful Picture Book 2017 prize given by China Library Journal. It was also nominated for the top picture books prize in China for the Chinese Government Award.

      • Trusted Partner
        August 2015

        Tibetan Ethnic Group: The Sacred Bathing Festival

        by Bing Bo, Chen Yadan

        Festivals of Chinese Ethnic Groups was co-authored by China's well-beloved authors of children's literature including Fang Suzhen, Tang Sulan, Wang Yimei, and was illustrated by celebrated Chinese illustrators such as Cai Gao, Chen Yadan and Zhu Xunde. This series covers intriguing, outstanding and poetic folk tales on festivals and customs from China's ten most representative ethnic groups. Showcasing their courage, gentleness and indomitable will, these delightful stories allow readers to learn more about the distinct and charming characteristics of these ethnic groups. Recommended as parent-child reading by CCTV during the Dragon Boat Festival, this series has won the Most Beautiful Picture Book 2018 prize given by China Library Journal. It was also nominated for the top picture books prize in China for the Chinese Government Award.

      • Trusted Partner
        August 2015

        Chaoxian Ethnic Group: The Fivegrain Ceremony for Crows

        by Tang Sulan, Zhou Weizhao

        Festivals of Chinese Ethnic Groups was co-authored by China's well-beloved authors of children's literature including Fang Suzhen, Tang Sulan, Wang Yimei, and was illustrated by celebrated Chinese illustrators such as Cai Gao, Chen Yadan and Zhu Xunde. This series covers intriguing, outstanding and poetic folk tales on festivals and customs from China's ten most representative ethnic groups. Showcasing their courage, gentleness and indomitable will, these delightful stories allow readers to learn more about the distinct and charming characteristics of these ethnic groups. Recommended as parent-child reading by CCTV during the Dragon Boat Festival, this series has won the Most Beautiful Picture Book 2019 prize given by China Library Journal. It was also nominated for the top picture books prize in China for the Chinese Government Award.

      • Trusted Partner
        August 2015

        Han Ethnic Group: Celebrating the Dragon Boat Festival

        by Xiao Mao, He Xu

        Festivals of Chinese Ethnic Groups was co-authored by China's well-beloved authors of children's literature including Fang Suzhen, Tang Sulan, Wang Yimei, and was illustrated by celebrated Chinese illustrators such as Cai Gao, Chen Yadan and Zhu Xunde. This series covers intriguing, outstanding and poetic folk tales on festivals and customs from China's ten most representative ethnic groups. Showcasing their courage, gentleness and indomitable will, these delightful stories allow readers to learn more about the distinct and charming characteristics of these ethnic groups. Recommended as parent-child reading by CCTV during the Dragon Boat Festival, this series has won the Most Beautiful Picture Book 2021 prize given by China Library Journal. It was also nominated for the top picture books prize in China for the Chinese Government Award.

      • Trusted Partner
        August 2015

        Li Ethnic Group: Sing and Dancing on the Third Day of the Third Month

        by Bing Bo, Zheng Xiaojuan

        Festivals of Chinese Ethnic Groups was co-authored by China's well-beloved authors of children's literature including Fang Suzhen, Tang Sulan, Wang Yimei, and was illustrated by celebrated Chinese illustrators such as Cai Gao, Chen Yadan and Zhu Xunde. This series covers intriguing, outstanding and poetic folk tales on festivals and customs from China's ten most representative ethnic groups. Showcasing their courage, gentleness and indomitable will, these delightful stories allow readers to learn more about the distinct and charming characteristics of these ethnic groups. Recommended as parent-child reading by CCTV during the Dragon Boat Festival, this series has won the Most Beautiful Picture Book 2022 prize given by China Library Journal. It was also nominated for the top picture books prize in China for the Chinese Government Award.

      • Trusted Partner
        August 2015

        Man Ethnic Group: Flowers of Nian xi and the May Festival

        by Xiao Mao, Zhu Hong

        Festivals of Chinese Ethnic Groups was co-authored by China's well-beloved authors of children's literature including Fang Suzhen, Tang Sulan, Wang Yimei, and was illustrated by celebrated Chinese illustrators such as Cai Gao, Chen Yadan and Zhu Xunde. This series covers intriguing, outstanding and poetic folk tales on festivals and customs from China's ten most representative ethnic groups. Showcasing their courage, gentleness and indomitable will, these delightful stories allow readers to learn more about the distinct and charming characteristics of these ethnic groups. Recommended as parent-child reading by CCTV during the Dragon Boat Festival, this series has won the Most Beautiful Picture Book 2023 prize given by China Library Journal. It was also nominated for the top picture books prize in China for the Chinese Government Award.

      • Trusted Partner
        August 2015

        Miao Ethnic Group:Hundreds of Thousands Flowers Bloom on the Eighth day of the Fourth Month

        by Wang Yimei, Liao Zhenghua

        Festivals of Chinese Ethnic Groups was co-authored by China's well-beloved authors of children's literature including Fang Suzhen, Tang Sulan, Wang Yimei, and was illustrated by celebrated Chinese illustrators such as Cai Gao, Chen Yadan and Zhu Xunde. This series covers intriguing, outstanding and poetic folk tales on festivals and customs from China's ten most representative ethnic groups. Showcasing their courage, gentleness and indomitable will, these delightful stories allow readers to learn more about the distinct and charming characteristics of these ethnic groups. Recommended as parent-child reading by CCTV during the Dragon Boat Festival, this series has won the Most Beautiful Picture Book 2024 prize given by China Library Journal. It was also nominated for the top picture books prize in China for the Chinese Government Award.

      • Trusted Partner
        August 2015

        Tujia Ethnic Group: Basking Dragon Robe on the Sixth Day of the Sixth Month

        by Wang Yimei, Cai Gao

        Festivals of Chinese Ethnic Groups was co-authored by China's well-beloved authors of children's literature including Fang Suzhen, Tang Sulan, Wang Yimei, and was illustrated by celebrated Chinese illustrators such as Cai Gao, Chen Yadan and Zhu Xunde. This series covers intriguing, outstanding and poetic folk tales on festivals and customs from China's ten most representative ethnic groups. Showcasing their courage, gentleness and indomitable will, these delightful stories allow readers to learn more about the distinct and charming characteristics of these ethnic groups. Recommended as parent-child reading by CCTV during the Dragon Boat Festival, this series has won the Most Beautiful Picture Book 2025 prize given by China Library Journal. It was also nominated for the top picture books prize in China for the Chinese Government Award.

      • Trusted Partner
        June 2019

        The Crow and the Sparrow

        by Fang Suzhen, Paola De Gaudio

        The Crow and the Sparrow is according to the folktales of Bangladesh. Once upon a time, a sparrow and a crow were looking for food, and the crow tried to play a trick to eat the sparrow. The sparrow saw the malice of the crow, and it calmly came up with a solution. The cruel and cunning crow was burned to black, and the honest sparrow lived happily.

      • Trusted Partner
        October 2009

        Die Gespenster von Berlin

        Unheimliche Geschichten

        by Sarah Khan

        Ein Gespenst geht um in Friedrichshain und setzt teure Autos in Brand. Ein politisch motivierter Sühneakt? Sarah Khan geht der Sache nach und macht in alten Archiven der Stadt eine fürchterliche Entdeckung: Im Tunnel des Stettiner Bahnhofs, heute Nordbahnhof, wurden 1945 verwundete Wehrmachtssoldaten ermordet. Im Mietshaus in Prenzlauer Berg will niemand lange wohnen bleiben, auch Sarah Khans Freundin Heike nicht. Durchs Treppenhaus spukt eine im Zweiten Weltkrieg verhungerte Klavierlehrerin. Wer war diese Frau? Sarah Khan sucht in alten Berliner Adressbüchern, auf Deportationslisten und findet ihren Namen schließlich im Totenbuch der Elias-Gemeinde aus dem Jahr 1945. Ob mal jemand was gehört hat, von Spukhäusern, unerklärlichen Vorkommnissen? hat Sarah Khan Freunde und Bekannte, zugezogene und alteingesessene Berliner gefragt. Die Auskünfte haben es in sich. Haarsträubende Ereignisse, unerklärliche Vorkommnisse, jenseitige Erfahrungen. Die Gespenster haben eine Botschaft, sagt Sarah Khan, sie macht sich zur Vermittlerin. Mit Geschichten, die uns Schauer über den Rücken jagen. "Sarah Khan forscht Gespenstern nach und fördert deutsche Geschichte zutage. Meisterhaft recherchiert, großartig geschrieben, zutiefst unheimlich." Daniel Kehlmann

      • Trusted Partner
        Biography & True Stories
        May 2015

        Zeng Guo Fang's Diary

        by Tang Hao Ming

        This book gives a vivid description to Zeng Guofan, the most prominent but controversial person in modern China. The diary was written by Zeng himself and it was a record about his activities and thinking and decisions back in time. It is the most complete compilation of Zeng's diary.

      • Trusted Partner
        April 1991

        betrifft: Sarahs Cousin

        Roman

        by Raymond Federman, Peter Torberg

        »Ich kann schon die Einsprüche hören. Nicht schon wieder!Warum eigentlich nicht? Ein Thema so gut wie jedes andere und ziemlich in Mode heutzutage.«Ein Autor wie Raymond Federman darf diese bestürzende Wahrheit so lakonisch in Erinnerung rufen, denn sein ›Thema‹ heißt Deportation und Vernichtung. ›Post-Holocaust‹ hat Raymond Hederman seine Literatur genannt. Das schriftstellerische Werk des heute in den Vereinigten Staaten lebenden Avantgarde-Autors bringt der Suhrkamp Verlag seit vergangenem Jahr neu heraus oder stellt es, wie den vorliegenden Roman - ›betrifft: Sarahs Cousin‹, erstmals in deutscher Übersetzung vor. Das Versteck im Wandschrank bewahrte Raymond Federman davor, wie seine Eltern und Schwestern am 16. Juli des Jahres 1942 aus Paris nach Auschwitx deportiert zu werden. Er »hat den Tod hinter sich« — aber nicht vom Tod wollen Raymond Federmans Romane erzählen, sondern vom Überleben, vom zweiten Leben eines Verschonten.Sarah und ihr Cousin warten aufeinander: er wartet wegen eines verspäteten Weiterflugs nach Israel auf dem Flughafen jener Stadt, in der er geboren wurde; sie erwartet seit Stunden mit ihrem Mann Elis auf einem israelischen Flughafen ihren Cousin. Beide, Sarah hier und ihr Cousin dort, sehen tiefbewegt von schmerzhaften, schuldbeladenen und selbstzweiflerischen Erinnerungen an ein geteiltes Schicksal ihrem ersten Wiedersehen seit 35 Jahren entgegen. Der Schrecken in ihrer Vergangenheit, durch den ihnen auch ein »Mehr an Leben verliehen worden war«, ist datierbar auf den 16. Juli des zweiten Invasionsjahres, als sie die Deportation ihrer Eltern und Geschwister überlebten: die neunjährige Sarah auf der Straße, weil ihre Mutter sie zum Einkaufen schickte, kurz bevor die Familie abgeholt wurde; der drei Jahre ältere Cousin im Wandschrank, in den ihn seine Mutter stieß, als die Soldaten kamen. Auf dem Land versteckt, überlebten Sarah und ihr Cousin, fanden sich nach dem Krieg wieder, bevor sich ihre Wege trennten. Er emigrierte nach Amerika und wurde ein berühmter Bildhauer, sie, weil ihr das Visum wegen einer Krankheit verweigert wurde, wanderte aus, um in einem Kibbuz mitzuhelfen, ein neues jüdisches Land und Leben aufzubauen.Das ist die Geschichte, die Raymond Lederman erzählt - oder genauer: er denkt nach über diese Geschichte, die in »betrifft: Sarahs Cousin« aus nichts anderem besteht als den melancholisch-heiteren Spekulationen über Form und Möglichkeiten, diese Überlebensgeschichte mitzuteilen.

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