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      • Trusted Partner
      • Elif and Emre Learning Our Religion - Performing Salah

        by Elif Arslan

        Elif and Emre want to perform salah with their parents. They make wudu and lay their prayer rugs on the floor. They feel more peaceful while they perform salah and thank Allah for the blessings he has bestowed upon them.

      • Children's & YA

        A Twiggy Harmful Thingy

        by Elif Yonat Togay, Gamze Seret

        This story clearly captures how a tiny trash thrown into the nature can affect the life of another animal. Mr. Lupa was turning ninety-three on that day, so on his birthday party they used plastic straws one of which drifts into the river. On the very same morning Mrs. Caretta laid her eggs in sand and set out into the ocean. When she gets hungry, she gulps down that same plastic straw and starts to struggle desperately. Thankfully there is one animal who comes to her rescue. This picture book is about twiggy harmful thingies called plastic straws that are used for about 20 minutes but they stay in the environment for 200 years.

      • Mavi and Mud

        by Ayse Bakirci Yucer / Elif Demir

        Mavi is a child who gets so bored and dreams of somebody else's toys and clothes even though she has a room full of toys and stuff. Her mother discovers this situation and opens the gateway to a brand new game world to Mavi. She takes her to the park on a rainy holiday and introduces her to mud. She plays the games, which she used to play in the rain during her childhood, with Mavi. Mavi, who realizes that she could have fun without toys and other stuff, finds a way to eliminate the illness of infamous "childhood boredom." She starts to look at everything around her with a completely different eye. Ayşe Bakırcı Yücer, who is an experienced kindergartner, brings an essential and pleasant solution proposal with her first children's story to the biggest problem of today's children.

      • Ouchieee

        by Author: Elif Seyrekbasan Illustrator: Nesibe Çelebi

        The author draws attention to the effect of empowering the child when coping with difficult issues, and doing this by getting support from the child’s own life and “successes.”   Cansu is in the emergency service at the hospital with her family. As the nurse approaches with a needle in her hand to take blood from her, Cansu starts shouting: “Ouchieee”. The other children in the hospital are nervous: “What are they doing to make this child shout so fiercely?” However, the tip of the needle has not even touched Cansu, but she screams out of breath: Ouchieee! And at the end of these shouts—maybe we should say calls—a girl appears at the speed of a jet and says, “Here I am with your call.” Cansu is confused. She is sure that she did not call anyone. Where did this girl come from? That moment is the meeting of Ouchie and Cansu. Ouchie is there to help her get through this “difficult” process in the hospital. Meet our pratogonists, who will add color to children’s rich imaginations and encourage them to deal with their fears.

      • Fiction

        Twin Flame

        by Nish Amarnath

        TWIN FLAME is an inter-racial love story with literary overtones, multicultural stripes and strands of magical realism.   A South Asian Math prodigy’s wish for a boy in a painting to come alive materializes in the form of an Austrian-Jewish writer. But a troubling secret wrenches them apart, forcing them to confront their worst fears, if life is to give them one final chance. Sherry Kasal, diagnosed with type-1 diabetes at the age of five, hopes to draw upon her passion for Math to discover a cure for conditions like her own. She stumbles upon a painting of a boy trapped in a snowstorm. She talks to the boy in this picture whenever she's sad, frustrated, angry and/or dejected. When writer Shaddy Haas enters her life, Sherry is motivated to resume work on a concentric model of electromagnetism that she had abandoned as a teen. Alas, circumstances wrench Sherry and Shaddy apart. Sherry, who reluctantly marries a lawyer, lands in Manhattan, where she scrambles to pick up the vestiges of her shelved research dream and realizes that she’s living a lie. Sherry must also unravel a flabbergasting secret that links Shaddy to the painting of the boy in the snowstorm as they try to find their way back to each other.   Twin Flame, whose narrative is embedded with the alternating voices of its protagonists in both first-person and third-person points of view, combines the mystical ethos of Elif Shafak's 'Forty Rules of Love' with the futuristic cadence of Erich Segal's 'Prizes' and the exotic romanticism of Jan-Philipp Sendker's 'The Art of Hearing Heartbeats.'

      • Children's & YA

        I LOVE YOGA

        by Ezgi Berk

        A great title showing the joy of yoga with practical tips!Can you roar like a lion? Stand tall like a mountain? Written by a certified children’s yoga instructor, this is wonderful illustrated guide to yoga, containing 14 great poses for kids. Starting with simple poses and building to more difficult ones, this book will allow young readers to develop a routine that they can practise daily – a great habit for the rest of their lives.

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