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      • Fagervik forlag

        Fagervik forlag was founded in 2019 - with the sole purpose of publishing Lene Lauritsen Kjølners novels about the funny private detective Olivia Henriksen - and other projects that might pop up from this author. The latest addition beeing the first book in the feelgood-series about Petra Pettersen. "Petra Pettersens perfect plan - eight weeks till Christmas". Obviously a christmas novel, and not crime this time. Lene is currently working on Olivia 8 - due to be published in june 2021. The author are from - and lives - in the archipelago in southern Norway, and all her novels take place in beautiful, idyllic surroundings - but with a twist, lots of humour and only one litte murder in each book. Petra has not yet experienced anything bloody - just a complicated love life...

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      • Sirkel Forlag

        Sirkel Forlag was set up in 2016 as an author´s cooperative enterprise. As of today, we represent six authors and have a catalogue of eight books, including poetry, non-fiction, an illustrated children’s book, a screenplay and four novels. Two of our novels have been supported by the Norwegian Arts Council.   While our main mission is to promote innovative and independent authorship in Norway, we also hope to reach readers abroad through high-quality translations.

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      • Trusted Partner
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        January 2008

        Fabulae!

        Zehn lateinische Märchenparodien

        by Schlosser, Franz

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        January 1987

        Lector in fabula

        Die Mitarbeit der Interpretation in erzählenden Texten

        by Eco, Umberto / Übersetzt von Held, Heinz-Georg

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        Fiction

        WHY I CAN'T WRITE

        How to survive in a world where you can’t pay rent, can’t afford to focus, be healthy or to remain principled. Dijana Matković tells a powerful story of searching for a room of her own in the late stages of capitalism.

        by DIJANA MATKOVIĆ

        It is a coming-of-age story for Generation Z. How to grow up or even live in a world where no steady jobs are available, you can’t pay your rent and can’t afford medical or living expenses. Moreover, it touches on how to be a socially engaged artist in such a world, and more so, a woman in a post-me too world? Dijana, a daughter of working-class immigrants, tells the story of her difficult childhood and adolescence, how should became a journalist and later a writer in a society full of prejudices, glass ceilings and obstacles. How she gradually became a stereotypical ‘success story’, even though she still struggles with writing, because she can’t afford a ‘room of her own’.   Dijana is a daughter of working-class immigrants, who came to Slovenia in the eighties in search of a better future. The family is building a house but is made redundant from the local factory when Yugoslavia is in the midst of an economic crisis. When her parents get divorced, Dijana, her older sister and mother struggle with basic needs. She is ashamed of their poverty, her classmates bully her because of her immigrant status, but mostly because of her being ‘white trash’. In the local school she meets teachers with prejudices against immigrants, but is helped by a librarian who spots her talent. When Dijana goes to secondary school, she moves in with her older sister who lives in Ljubljana, the capital of Slovenia. Her sister is into rave culture and Dijana starts to explore experimenting with drugs, music and dance. At the secondary school, she is again considered ‘the weird kid’, as she isn’t enough of a foreigner for other immigrant kids because she is from the country, yet she isn’t Slovenian enough for other native kids. She falls even deeper into drug addiction, fails the first year of school and has to move back to live with her mother. She takes on odd jobs to make ends meet. Whilst working as a waitress she encounters sexism and sexual violence from customers and abuse from the boss. She finishes night school and graduates. She meets many ‘lost’ people of her generation along the way, who tell her their stories about precarious, minimum wage jobs, lack of opportunities, expensive rent, etc. Dijana writes for numerous newspapers but loses or quits her job, because she isn’t allowed to write the stories she wants or because of the bad working conditions or the blatant sexual harassment. Due to the high rent in the capital, Dijana has to move to the countryside to live with her mother. She feels lonely there, struggles with anxiety and cannot write a second book, because she is constantly under pressure to make a living. She realises that she must persevere regardless of the obstacles, she must follow her inner truth and by writing about it, try to create a community of like-minded people, a community of people who support each other – all literature/art is social.

      • Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945)
        September 2008

        The Scoundrel Days of Hobo Highbrow

        by Pål H. Christiansen

        The Scoundrel Days of Hobo Highbrow is about a down-on-his-luck 40ish writer obsessed about Paul Waaktaar-Savoy of the rock group a-ha. Hobo has published a few books and poems in the past and now works as a proof-reader for a newspaper. He aspires to write a Nobel Prize winning literary novel, but has a loose grip on reality. He selects Paul Waaktaar-Savoy as his idol, as someone like him who struggled from a little known country to break out on the world scene. Hobo has a penchant for words. His favorite book is the dictionary and, of course, he plays Scrabble with his girl friend Helle. He and his odd friends make for a humorous story laced with actual tidbits about a-ha.

      • The War against Bacteria

        A health disaster and how to fight it

        by Erik Martiniussen

        700,000 people die from antibiotic-resistant bacteria across the world every year. In the United States, resistant bacteria require three times as many human lives as HIV/AIDS. The World Health Organization warns: Without antibiotics, medical science is going to be set back 100 years in time. Not only will we be powerless against treating infections, without antibiotics, even simple surgery becomes impossible. By year 2050, 10 million people will be at risk every year. The biggest health disaster the world has seen is right at your doorstep. Still, it is almost not talked about. The War against Bacteria tells the story Directors of the pharmaceutical industry, hospitals and meat industry don’t want you to hear. It is a shocking tale of how the pursuit of profits has driven Big pharma to dispense antibiotics as if it were vitamins, and of how the meat industry systematically has undermined information. But it is also a really old story of how animals and bacteria have evolved in a delicate balance over the course of hundreds of thousands of years and how our unrestricted antibiotic consumption is now bringing this balance out of play. So, is there any hope? An old cure, preserved by some dedicated doctors and nurses in Georgia, is about to be rediscovered, and this can change the history of medicine – again.

      • Art & design styles: Conceptual art
        August 2021

        Sting in the Tale

        Art, Hoax, and Provocation

        by Antoinette LaFarge

        An illustrated survey of artist hoaxes, including impersonations, fabula, cryptoscience, and forgeries, researched and written by an expert “fictive-art” practitioner.   The shift from the early information age to our 'infocalypse' era of rampant misinformation has given rise to an art form that probes this confusion, foregrounding wild creativity as a way to reframe assumptions about both fiction and art in contemporary culture. At its center, this “fictive art” (LaFarge’s term) is secured as fact by employing the language and display methods of history and science. Using typically evidentiary objects such as documentary photographs and videos, presumptively historical artifacts and relics, didactics, lectures, events, and expert opinions in technical language, artists create a constellation of manufactured evidence attesting to the artwork’s central narrative. This dissimulation is temporary, with a clear “tell” often surprisingly revealed in a self-outing moment. With all its attendant consequences of mistrust, outrage, and rejection, this genre of art with a sting in its tale is a radical form whose time has come.

      • Education

        The More of Myth

        A Pedagogy of Diversion

        by Doll, M. A.

        This book uses a nine-year experience of teaching world mythology to art students in order to discuss why and how such ancient stories provide significance today. Myth’s weird images and metaphors recall Wyrd (Word), the goddess of the cauldron. Students can be guided into the cauldron of mythic language to feel the stirring of new awareness of what it really means to be human. Psychologically, myth offers insights into family relations, memory, imagination, and otherness. Ecological insights from myth teach the connection among human-animal-plant relations and the organicism of all life forms. Cosmological insights from myth surprisingly echo findings in new science, with its emphasis on quantum mechanics, force fields, black holes, subatomic particles, chaos, and the possibilities of time travel. Two areas often considered completely opposite -- myth and science—actually reflect one another, since both propose theories, albeit in different ways. Myth cannot be laughed away as “mere” fabula, since, like science and psychology, it has long explored adventures into unseen, unknown worlds that yield necessary knowledge about the place of humans in the scheme of things big and small. The “more” of myth will be of interest to teachers and students of curriculum studies, to those seeking to go beyond Oedipus and Gutenberg, and to readers who know that all forms of life (including fingernails and rocks) are wondrous, diverse, alive, capable, purposive, and necessary.

      • Short stories
        March 2015

        Neun Kurzgeschichten

        by Kafka, Franz

        „I think one should generally only read books that bite and sting.” –Franz Kafka. From the salesman who wakes up as a bug one day to the bridge waiting to be stepped on – this collection combines nine of Kafka’s most bizarre tales.

      • Classic fiction (pre c 1945)
        February 2015

        Erzählungen: Das öde Haus, Das Sanctus, Das steinerne Herz

        by Hoffmann, E.T.A.

        The confusion of his own senses, driving a person close to madness. A fatal combination of physical and psychological illnesses. And an old man who, in his bitterness, expels an innocent child and flees into scenes long past. This selection from E.T.A. Hoffmann’s famous night pieces (Nachtstücke) illuminates the dark sides of human existence and artfully weaves them into the tales.

      • Fiction

        Agent Lylyk

        by Yuriy Vynnychuk

        This is a sequel novel of the series telling about the adventures of Marco Krylovych, the night reporter. A few months have passed after the events described in 'The Dekker's Mansion'. Marco Krylovych is released from prison to help the secret police (NKVD) with catching the murderer of young women. Seems that the suspect is one of the USSR embassy or NKVD employees... So that to continue the investigation Krylovych gets his cover story as Agent Lylyk. Since the maniac chooses his victims for the first letters of their names to make the name Valentina with them, Marco asap needs to find out who Valentina is. It turned out that he was related to her death 20 years ago and someone was seeking revenge. Marco’s colleague was very close to the clue who the murderer is, but he got killed and now Marco is completely sure that it’s someone from the NKVD. Krylovych gets into the trap of the murderer but manages to survive. After all, the murderer is dead. But to render a murderer was not the only task of Krylovych. The Netherlands Embassy’s archives contain the crucial documents that are hunted for by both the USSR and Germany. The Night Reporter also tries to find these documents since the lives of many people depend on them.

      • September 2020

        My Life at the Bottom

        by Linda Bondestam

        An enchanting story about the ongoing climate change told by the voice of an axolotl, how the environment is affected and changed.   Each year, several species go extinct, disappearing from the surface of the earth forever. A perfect being, the result of millions of years of evolution, no longer exists.   An axolotl is a small smiling amphibian that lives its entire life at the larval stage, which means that it never really grows up. Nowadays, it is believed to exist in the wild only, in a lake in Mexico – but not even that is certain.   In this picture book of an astonishing axolotl, we possibly meet the last of its kind. He thrives in his own pool where he hangs out with tiger salamanders, collects treasures, and spies on what the peculiar two-legged beings on the beach come up with. But as it gets hotter and hotter, the pool gets cloudy, and everyone moves on. The poor axolotl is left all alone. Everything changes one day when a giant wave sweeps away everything, and the axolotl embarks on a journey to the unknown.    Linda Bonsestam’s happy, ecological, and existential book about life on earth – the fragile, but at the same time robust. A surprising and moving story about climate change and just how dull it is to play alone. A touching story combined with beautifully detailed illustrations of the wonders of the underworld.

      • This Should End with My Death

        by Hannele Mikaela Taivassalo

        This love needs to be amputated, executed, buried deep underground.   The author meets a man. He is married. First, it is about lust, then love. They keep meeting in secret, months turning to years, and making the impossible even worse.   This Should End with My Death is a brutally clear and heartbreaking short novel depicting an author who is cutting herself from forbidden love by writing. All the way to the point where there’s no lust to live, neither yet lust to die. Only the words remain, and it’s worth being honest, whatever the cost.   Reading This Should End with My Death hurts. But there is also dark humour in undoing clichés that suddenly turn into true experiences.

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

        What Makes Us Human

        by Victor Dias de Oliveira Santos, Anna Forlati

        What Makes Us Human is a unique picture book on a universal and timely topic: languages and language conservation. The book reads like a riddle, in which the actual theme of the book is not revealed until the very last page. Clues as to the theme are scattered on each page, making the reading experience a more engaging and interesting one for readers. Part of the profits from sales of licenced editions of this will be donated by the author (Ph.D. in Linguistics) to organizations working to support the revitalization and conversation of languages around the world.    Can you guess what I am?   I have been around for a very long time. Longer than toys, dogs, or anyone you know. I am everywhere.

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