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      • A Leaf's Lunch

        by Marina Debattista

        Humouros and tender children's verses that mingle science with pun words and silly tales. The freshness of the language and the visual playfulness of illustrations animate the book and recommend it to children and adults alike. Linocut & collage by the author. White Ravens 2021.

      • The Traveller's Tales

        by Brad Florescu

        A witty collection of tales from around the world, retold for nowadays children. The fabulous illustrations of Ștefan Georgescu add a magical touch to each and every tale. The second volume in the series Tales Around the World.

      • The Rainbow King

        by Amalia Banas, Diana Margareta Cepleanu

        A collection of classical tales from various cultural traditions, drawing on the theme of (un)patience. The book is masterly illustrated by the award-winning artist and illustrator Diana Margareta Cepleanu.

      • October 2021

        The Marquis's Tales

        by Brad Florescu

        The sausage died, the cat cried, the door squeaked, the tree waved and... just imagine what the marquis did! Humourous and absurd tales around the world, retold in modern language and delicate watercolor illustrations. First volume.

      • Tigrino and Tigrene

        The Story of Two Tiger Cubs

        by Nina Cassian

      • Children's & YA

        Future Atlas

        by Enrico Passoni

        How will our future look like? This volume recounts, through clear and funny illustrations, the life of a typical family of 2050. The main themes are represented with two large boards: an introductive scene to contextualize the subject, focusing on items and everyday situations, and the following spread zooming in with realistic examples of the various innovations which will characterize our daily life. Every item represented in the book is actually going to exist, based on scientific records and discove so that children of today will learn about the actual future they are going to live in.

      • Fiction

        Cabaret Biarritz

        by José C. Vales

        NADAL PRIZE 2015 -   In the summer of 1925, the residents of Biarritz were shocked by a tragic event. The body of a young girl appeared dangling with a foot caught in one of the iron rings used for securing boats in the port. In 1938, the young, passionate writer Georges Miet receives what would turn out to be the most important assignment of his career. His editor asks him to write a ‘serious’ novel about what had taken place in Biarritz almost fifteen years earlier. Miet does not hesitate to travel to the vibrant, coastal city to speak to everyone who could have been linked to the event and comes upon people from all rungs of the social ladder; ranging from domestic employees to distinguished, high-society ladies, as well as reporters, two gendarmes, a photographer, artists, performers, a judge and even a nun. Miet interviews each person he believes to be involved, as if preparing a press feature, in order to meticulously transcribe their statements. He sketches an accurate and detailed portrait of sophisticated, outrageous Biarritz, which turns into the model setting for those golden years of the 1920s during which society sought to break with the most long-established and outdated conventions.

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