Your Search Results
-
Galaxy Press, Inc.
Publisher of Mr. Hubbard’s fiction library, including perennial and New York Times bestsellers such as Battlefield Earth, Mission Earth, Fear, Final Blackout and To the Stars.
View Rights Portal
-
Promoted ContentChildren's & YA2017
My Name is Mariam
by Nadiyka Herbish (Author), Mariya Foya (Illustrator)
Mariam has lost her home in every sense: she ended up in a foreign country, faced hostility generated by stereotypes, experienced a bitter loss. All the same, she also got the two most valuable gifts, love and her life. When a war starts, those people who manage to escape its flames have nothing but memories, love, and burning desire to protect the people dear to them. Eventually, it is from these seeds that a whole new world can grow. All you need is a bit of “good soil” and support from the people around you. From 6 to 12 years, 6700 words. Rightsholders: info@vivat.factor.ua or miroshnik@vivat.factor.ua
-
Promoted ContentFebruary 2003
Der Mann aus Mesopotamien
Roman
by Amin Maalouf, Gerhard Meier
»Von heute ab wirst du keinen Wein mehr trinken, kein Fleisch mehr essen und dich keiner Frau mehr nähern, denn die Wahrheit ist eine anspruchsvolle Geliebte, Pattig, sie duldet keine Untreue, deine ganze Ergebenheit darf nur ihr gelten, und ihr, nur ihr gehört jeder Augenblick deines Lebens.« Pattig verläßt seine hochschwangere Frau Mariam, um sich einer Gemeinschaft von Gläubigen anzuschließen. Das Kind, das Mariam erwartete, ist Mani, nach christlicher Zeitrechnung geboren am 14. April 216 in Mesopotamien. Vier Jahre später wird er von seinem Vater in die Sekte der Weißgewandeten eingeführt. »Inmitten dieser Männer ging ich weise und listig meinen Weg«, erinnerte sich Mani, der Begründer des Manichäismus, der mit 24 Jahren die Sekte verläßt, um »durch die Welt einen Ruf ertönen zu lassen«. In Ägypten wird er »der Apostel Jesu«, in China »der Buddha des Lichts« und »seine Hoffnung erblühte an den drei Weltmeeren«. Seine Anhängerschaft wächst ständig, schließlich gerät der Verfechter einer liberalen Religion in die Schlingen der politisch Mächtigen, wird inhaftiert und stirbt am 2. März 274.»Dieses Buch ist Mani gewidmet. Es sollte sein Leben erzählen. Beziehungsweise das, was nach so vielen Jahrhunderten der Lüge und des Vergessens noch davon zu erahnen ist«, schreibt Amin Maalouf über seine abenteuerliche Biographie über den »Mann aus Mesopotamien«.
-
Trusted Partner
-
Trusted PartnerHumanities & Social SciencesDecember 2023
Transitional justice in process
Plans and politics in Tunisia
by Mariam Salehi
After the fall of the Ben Ali regime in 2011, Tunisia swiftly began dealing with its authoritarian past and initiated a comprehensive transitional justice process, with the Truth and Dignity Commission as its central institution. However, instead of bringing about peace and justice, transitional justice soon became an arena of contention. Through a process lens, the book explores why and how the process evolved, and explains how it relates to the country's political transition. Based on extensive field research in Tunisia and the US, and interviews with a broad range of international stakeholders and decision-makers, this is the first book to comprehensively study the Tunisian transitional justice process. It provides an in-depth analysis of a crucial period, examining the role of justice professionals in different stages, as well as the alliances and frictions between different actor groups that cut across the often-assumed local-international divide.
-
Trusted Partner
-
Trusted Partner
-
Trusted PartnerHumanities & Social SciencesJanuary 2024
Dog politics
Species stories and the animal sciences
by Mariam Motamedi Fraser
Do dogs belong with humans? Scientific accounts of dogs' 'species story,' in which contemporary dog-human relations are naturalised with reference to dogs' evolutionary becoming, suggest that they do. Dog politics dissects this story. This book offers a rich empirical analysis and critique of the development and consolidation of dogs' species story in science, asking what evidence exists to support it, and what practical consequences, for dogs, follow from it. It explores how this story is woven into broader scientific shifts in understandings of species, animals, and animal behaviours, and how such shifts were informed by and informed transformative political events, including slavery and colonialism, the Second World War and its aftermath, and the emergence of anti-racist movements in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. The book pays particular attention to how species-thinking bears on 'race,' racism, and individuals.
-
Trusted PartnerSeptember 2018
Pilates für Männer
"Alles, nur kein Pillepalle." Muskelaufbau, Stabilität, Prävention
by Opdenhövel, Matthias; Younossi, Mariam
-
Trusted PartnerHumanities & Social SciencesFebruary 2022
Transitional justice in process
by Mariam Salehi, Simon Mabon
-
Trusted PartnerChildren's & YA2009
House Without a Roof
by Alexander Asatiani
The House Without a Roof is an engaging story not just because of the plot but also because of its interactive narrative. Can you imagine an agitated beetle? There is a reason for his agitation. He has a problem and the narrator as well as the reader must take part in helping him solve it.
-
Trusted PartnerChildren's & YA2009
Flying Piglets
by Alexander Asatiani
Have you ever heard of piglets so clean that they’re as white as the clouds? Flying piglets are hard to imagine but the difficulty that the little piglet faces is easy to relate to for anybody who has tried to learn a new skill. The story is about finding a voice and direction as an exceptional figure. The little piglet learns how to fly not in the traditional ways but through his own observation of the unusual.
-
Trusted PartnerChildren's & YA2009
Tamaras Book
by Alexander Asatiani
Tamara’s book is something you can hold in your hands and read now but before it was just a dream. Tamara’s dream was kept in a beautiful box and when the box was opened up, it became possible for the dream to come true. This book is evidence that dreams can come true.
-
Trusted PartnerChildren's & YA2009
Old Camera
by Alexander Asatiani
When Tamta’s parents decide to have friends over at their house, Tamta decides to take their picture. Little Tamta has a little friend who lives in her camera and who pulls pranks on people. It annoys adults but Tamta has no care- she loves her little friend for his pranks. Old Camera describes the adult world through a child’s lens and fills it with fun, joy and insight.
-
Trusted PartnerChildren's & YA2009
An Ancient Telescope
by Alexander Asatiani
When the telescope accidentally changes his perspective one day, he finds a whole new wave of curiosity, forgetting about the old and the familiar.
-
Trusted PartnerChildren's & YA2009
Museum for Old Things
by Alexander Asatiani
The museum keeps not just objects and things but also their past and their memories of the past. That is how it keeps its inhabitants alive.
-
Trusted PartnerChildren's & YA2009
Broken Heart
by Alexander Asatiani
Cracked Heart tells the entire life story of a heart-shaped jewel box that becomes more and more precious for the reader, the older it gets. Even though it breaks and loses some of its external beauty, it gains a different kind of aesthetic when it’s put back together.
-
Trusted PartnerChildren's & YA2009
Strange book
by Alexander Asatiani
All books have either writing, pictures or both in it, but the book that Ellen got as a gift has neither. It does, however, have extraordinary recording powers. Like in so many of Sandro’s stories, in The Strange Book it is completely natural for dreams to merge with reality. Through the matter-of-fact occurrence of unlikely events, The Strange Book tells a story of growing up without abandoning the inner child.
-
Grandma Mariam and the Barley Soup
by Hala Abu Saad
Grandma Mariam loves it when Angie and her friends visit her. Even though she is old and and tired and can’t walk around a lot anymore, she shakes off her feelings of loneliness and sadness and truly enjoys every moment she spends with them. Angie and her friends see how Grandma Mariam wistfully remembers the past. When Grandma Mariam tells them stories, her face lights up and her eyes dance with energy. The girls are determined to make Grandma Mariam feel happy and useful at an upcoming party. They convince her to prepare her famous barley soup! Will cooking the soup lift Grandma Mariam’s spirit and make her heart full of happiness once again?
-
FictionAugust 2019
Between Beirut and You
by Roser Miquel
In a city and a country immersed in a permanent conflict, the Liban, Rita, Shawn, Ibraïm and some other characters as Mahmud, Mariam or old Suleiman will be involved and pulled into the heart of the conflict, gobbled down by the passional force that pulls strings in the history of this country.
-
Waiting for the Barbarians: A Tribute to Edward W. Said
by Müge G. Sökmen and Başak Ertür (Eds.)
In engaging with the richly varied and seminal scholarship of Edward W. Said, Waiting for the Barbarians aims to recover the notion of culture as a collective, hybrid and plural experience, in light of the political imperative that rules our present. Bringing together some of the figures most closely associated with Said and his scholarship, this comprehensive volume looks at Said the literary critic and public intellectual, Palestine, and Said's intellectual legacy: the future through the lens of his work. Contributors include Mariam Said, Timothy Brennan, Rashid Khalidi, Elias Khoury, Saree Makdisi, Mahmood Mamdani, Joseph Massad, Karma Nabulsi, Ilan Pappé, Jacqueline Rose, Raja Shehadeh, Fawwaz Traboulsi, and Gauri Viswanathan.