Your Search Results

      • Sounds True

        Sounds True was founded in 1985 by Tami Simon with a clear mission: to disseminate spiritual wisdom. Since starting out as a project with one woman and her tape recorder, we have grown into a multimedia publishing company with more than 110 employees, a library of more than 3000 titles featuring some of the leading teachers and visionaries of our time, and an ever-expanding family of customers from across the world. From bestselling authors to new voices in spiritual wisdom, our products represent a variety of popular topics, including meditation, mindfulness, yoga, shamanism, psychology, health and healing, along with a line of children’s books.

        View Rights Portal
      • Royal Collection Trust

        The publishing programme at Royal Collection Trust aims to create the highest-quality books, exhibition catalogues, guides and children's books to celebrate the royal residences and the works of art found within them. Our list includes beautifully produced printed books, apps and online catalogues and symposia. We also publish scholarly catalogues raisonnés, which demonstrate the highest standards of academic research.

        View Rights Portal
      • Fiction
        April 2018

        My House Is Not My House Anymore

        by Eva Guimarães

        What happens when a woman is deprived of her belongings? She left her land for love. Far away, she realizes that all she had dreamed with becomes slowly into a nightmare. Meanwhile, she is unbelievably forced to self-isolation in her own house. Baruch, the dog, was her only and loyal friend. What if she was deprived even from that friend? Fear, harassment, violence.A true story disguised as pure literature that tells the story of a woman that never lost her dignity, despite all the abuse and humiliation. She never stopped fighting for her freedom.

      • September 2020

        Tarore's Book

        by Author.Barbara Lambie. Illustrator.Editor. P.G.Rob

        Tarore's Book was a labour of love for author Barbara Lambie who heard this true story from the Maori Queen when she , Barbara was the first Infant Mistress at Rakaumanga School in New Zealand many years ago.Barbara passed away some years ago but P.G.Rob and Trinity Publishing recently produced a second edition ,as the themes of forgiveness and reconciliation between tribes and peoples are relevant today. Tarore was a Maori Chief's daughter in 1833 and learnt to read from a small copy of Luke's  Gospel , at a mission school in the Bay of Plenty in the North Island of New Zealand. Educating girls was unusual in those times.Tarore shared the message of peace with her father chief Ngakuku and after she was later killed by a raiding party, Ngakuku forgave that tribe . This was a turning point. Others learnt also to read from this Book and another warrior ,Tamehana ,averted a massacre of the fledgling Wellington community.The ongoing ramifications of Tarore's story still reveberate around New Zealand and have a message of Peace for all in these turbulent times.Barbara only wrote one book-this was it ,but also produced a Study Guide for New Zealand schools. This book 'began' our company Trnity Publishing NZ Ltd in 1997 .

      • Tablet Tobi

        by Yeşim Özen Açıl

        How would you like to read the story of Susi and Tablet Tobi before playing with your tablet? In our age when one third of children learn to use a tablet before they learn to walk or talk, this story book, written to raise awareness about using tablets, will be a bedside book for your children.

      • Biography & True Stories
        February 2020

        In Siberia's Prisons

        by Yoann Barbereau

        Midnight Express in Siberia. A gripping contemporary story of escape. “The scene unfolds not far from Lake Baikal, where I live and love and am lucky enough to be loved, in Irkutsk, the capital of eastern Siberia. It’s morning, men in balaclavas appear out of nowhere. My daughter screams. She’s five years old. I’m arrested right in front of her, then beaten – expertly – and interrogated. Worst of all I’m branded with that ignominious word I struggle to commit to paper: paedophile. These men hidden behind balaclavas and shadows want my skin. They have set in motion an implacable and brutish process of destruction that has a name, a name I know, invented by the KGB: Kompromat.” Inside Siberia’s prisons, I try to understand. In the psychiatric hospital where I’m later interned, I try to understand. I’m guaranteed fifteen years of a gruelling camp. The story of my escapes can begin.

      Subscribe to our

      newsletter