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      • The Parisian Agency

        Founded in 2010, the Parisian agency is a literary agency based in Paris. We represent a selected group of international writers of literary fiction such as multi-awarded Icelandic author Gudrun Eva Minervudottir and Hungarian novelist Arpad Kun, winner of the prestigious Aegon Award. We also represent the stunning illustrated books of the British and the Bodleian Library (UK) abroad. Last, we are now open to represent new lists in literary fiction, crime fiction and non fiction. Welcome to the Parisian Agency!

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      • Trusted Partner
        Literature & Literary Studies
        June 1972

        The Parlement of Foulys

        by Geoffrey Chaucer, D. Brewer

        This edition of the best of Chaucer' s shorter poems ranges widely over the major concerns necessary to a full understanding of the text, including its occasion, literary tradition, sources, rhetoric, language, metre, mythology and themes. It is an edition which will appeal both to students and to general readers who wish to extend their knowledge of medieval English poetry. ;

      • Trusted Partner
        Humanities & Social Sciences
        July 2018

        Louis XIV and the parlements

        by John J. Hurt

      • Trusted Partner
      • February 2020

        Rebellious knowledge

        Diderot's battle for the Great French Encyclopedia

        by Klaus Möckel

        France, middle of the 18th century. In a time of feudal rule, moral decline and fierce religious disputes, the still little known philosopher Diderot and his publisher Le Breton decide to publish an encyclopedia of knowledge and thus of spiritual enlightenment. But this "Great Encyclopedia" met with bitter resistance. The prefect of police and his informers, the archbishop of Paris, the courts of justice, and dark men of all stripes fight the work. While Diderot rallies comrades-in-arms around him (d'Alembert, Voltaire, Rousseau), he is exposed to constant threats. Intrigues are instigated, the affair of a young abbé and an assassination attempt on the king conjure up the highest dangers. The allies fall out, and in the end the work is betrayed, almost causing it to fail.In this historically well-founded, exciting novella by the author and Romanist, who was already successful with "The King's Playgirls", "Gold and Galleys" and "Hot Goods under the Lily Banner", the contrasts of an entire epoch collide. Not only the mentioned persons, but also the king himself and his mistress, the famous Pompadour, intervene in the events. Nobles of different colors, clergymen, rich citizens like the publisher Le Breton, but also craftsmen, lackeys, prostitutes, populate an exciting event filled with contradictions.The controversies surrounding the "Great French Encyclopedia", hitherto little noticed by literature, are full of drama and challenge comparison with the religious and secular conflicts of our day.

      • October 2020

        Anne of Green Tomatoes

        The right to be safe and secure

        by DUSTIN MILLIGAN

        In the vines of Leamington, Ontario, lives Anne, a green tomato. Every day at the market, the red tomatoes are set out on display. When there is a shortage of red tomatoes, the veggislature orders that green tomatoes be painted red to fill the basket at the market. Anne must learn to outsmart the veggislature or be caught and painted for the market.

      • Children's & young adult: general non-fiction

        Ces grands procès qui ont changé le monde

        by Francesca Trop

        Comment concevoir les règles les plus justes et les plus universelles, afin de permettre à tous de mieux vivre ? Des premiers mythes de l’humanité jusqu’à l’histoire contemporaine, cet album documentaire raconte, commente et illustre 24 grands procès, répartis sur tous les continents, qui ont, chacun à leur façon, fait avancer la société.  - How to imagine the fairest and most universal rules, in order to allow everyone to live better? From the first myths of humanity to contemporary history, this documentary album tells, comments and illustrates 24 major trials, spread over all continents, which have, each in their own way, pushed society forward.

      • History
        July 2015

        Tocqueville, Jansenism, and the Necessity of the Political in a Democratic Age

        Building a Republic for the Moderns

        by David Selby

        This engaging work exploring the influence of Jansenism on Alexis de Tocqueville’s life and works is the most comprehensive treatment of the subject to date. More than just an intellectual biography, the author demonstrates that once this Jansenist connection is understood, Tocqueville’s political thought can be applied in new and surprising ways. Moving from the historical sociology of Jansenism in seventeenth and eighteenth-century France to contemporary debates over the human right to education, the role of religion in democracy, and the nature of political freedom, Selby brings Tocqueville out of the past in order to make him relevant to the present. Holding valuable lessons for historians as well as political scientists and sociologists, this fresh new interpretation of Alexis de Tocqueville’s political thought is a reminder that there is still much to learn from the great theorist of democracy.

      • Humanities & Social Sciences
        November 2015

        Het jaar dat de muur viel

        De val van het communisme in het Oostblok

        by Jule Hinrichs

        November 2014 saw the quarter-century anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, one of the most poignant events in the past century. The inhabitants of Berlin broke the graffiti-covered concrete down with hammers or pickaxes and climbed over the wall. The historic milestone was followed on televisions around the world. After forty years of separation between communism and capitalism, the Iron Curtain opened on November 9th 1989. Which economic and political developments preceded this event? The arrival of Gorbachev in 1985 ushered in the Glasnost period. With this, hope for more liberty of action in Eastern Europe grew in satellite states such as Poland and Hungary. In 1989, the Communists in Hungary decided to hold free elections. In the summer of that year, the same happened in Poland. That same summer, the Hungarians began to remove the barbed wire at the Hungarian-Austrian border. Through this gap, East Germans fled en masse from Hungarian campsites to the West. It was the prelude to the dramatic decision of the GDP to open the border on November 9th 1989.

      • The Chagall Atlas

        by NIENKE DENEKAMP

        The Chagall Atlas follows Jewish artist Marc Chagall, whose personal and artistic life collided with world history more than once. Born in the 19th Century in anti-Semitist Czarist Russia, Chagall travelled to 20th Century Paris, where Cubism and Fauvism were about to change art forever. During World War I, he was ‘stuck’ in his hometown Vitebsk, right at the Eastern Front of a war that seamlessly merged into the Russian Revolution. Chagall could literally see the Revolution unfold from the window of his office in St. Petersburg. Chagall spent the twenties and thirties in Berlin and Paris, trying not to think about World War II that loomed over Europe. His spectacular escape from Vichy France to the US, where Chagall and his family spent the war along with other exiled artists, is a fantastic story in its own right. After the War, Chagall settled in the South of France, where he lived next door to Picasso and Matisse. But it wasn’t until later in life, against the backdrop of the Cold War and the foundation of the State of Israel, that he fully came into his own as an artist.

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