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      • Cataplum Libros

        Good books are like meek animals that stretch when we caress their backs, and that show us their bellies so we go and play with them; but they also do not hesitate to give us a good bite to free us from the claws of routine. To create these noble creatures, in Cataplum we dig like moles through the collective memory and explore the roots that connect us as Latin-Americans; thus, we recover our oral tradition, our playful language and its diverse and endless possibilities. As truffle-seeking pigs, we have developed an acute nose to find texts of authors from past and actual times. As rabbits we jump here and there tracking down illustrators with new proposals. And as eagles we strive to see, from a distance, how image and texts can coexist in harmony. In sum, our catalogue has been conceived as a living creature; one that begun as something very little, like bear cubs, but capable of becoming a fabulous living being; one that combines the best qualities of noble animals and have the power to captivate us.

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      • Cataplum Libros

        Cataplum Libros was founded in 2016 in Bogotá and focuses on children’s books - from 2 to 12 years. It seeks to investigate through collective memory recovering the oral tradition, playful language and its diverse and endless possibilities.

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      • Trusted Partner
        May 2016

        La mujer de la guarda

        by Sara Bertrand, Alejandra Algorta

        Jacinta wants to know how her mother is able to breathe inside the coffin, but her aunts tell her it’s better if she concentrates in taking care of her brothers. Jacinta remembers some things about her mum, like the sound of the spoon in the cup when she stirred the milk until it was smooth. When her father arrives early, Jacinta and her brothers eat together and laugh at dessert time when he draws milk toffees and chewing gum from behind their ears. Jacinta is a weirdo in a world where other children have a mother. Jacinta has no guardian angel, but a woman traveling on a blue horse watches over her.

      • September 2021

        Where are you going, Iryna?

        by Rosa Maria Pascual, Simon Berrill

        I was a young journalist in the UK when the nuclear accidentat Chernobyl happened. At first it seemed like another of themany terrible things that happen in far-off countries andmake only brief headlines in our media before quickly disappearingfrom the front pages. Soon, though, a radioactivecloud began spreading across Europe and, perhaps for thefirst time, we were all forced to realise what a small, fragileworld we live in.Three decades on, Rosa Maria Pascual’s splendid noveltells the stories that weren’t heard at the time: what happened– and is still happening – to the people living aroundthe nuclear power station in what was then the Soviet Unionand is now Ukraine. From the first page it is a compellingread: a multi-stranded road movie of a book interweavingfirst-hand accounts of the explosion itself and its horrificconsequences; the journey of a woman from far-away Cataloniato discover the truth of the disaster as she helps childrenaffected by its consequences; and the odyssey of oneof those Chernobyl children who goes on the run with heryoung daughter to escape an unpleasant fate in her owncountry.There’s a lot more too. This is a book about nationalismand politics, about human nature, about little-known culturesand, most of all, about women and their defiant love forparents, children, husbands and lovers, set against a backgroundof disaster and tragedy. Because even in the darkestsituations, love offers a glimmer of hope for us all.Simon BerrillTranslator of the English edition   “Someone once said that what makes a literarywork is what we might call “excellent use oflanguage”. Well, the novel “Where are you going,Iryna?” is undoubtedly a perfect example of this,packed with rare quality and sensitivity. Combininggreat narrative style and extreme delicacy,the author shows us the grim reality for thepeople of Ukraine of the tragedy that happenedat Chernobyl on 26 April 1986 during and afterthe accident at the nuclear power station.The story focuses on the character of Iryna,the people around her, and the experiences sheand her brother Vasyl have in Catalonia with ahost family when they are children. Flashingbackwards and forwards in time without everlosing clarity, the novel places us at differentperiods in Iryna’s exciting life as, despite theserious difficulties she often faces, she managesto maintain her enthusiasm and desire to get on.Iryna’s story is inspiring but also reminds us ofjust how far human beings can go wrong when wefail to calibrate certain technological applicationscorrectly. The Chernobyl disaster should certainlynot be forgotten considering that the price wenormally pay when we lose our collectivememory is repeating the same mistakes.All this makes Rosa Maria Pascual’s novel anexcellent, must-read book for remembering whatit means to contaminate land for centuries– something that should never, ever happen again. Ana Galisteo (English & Drama teacher)and Juan Méndez (Philosopher)

      • 2019

        SELK'NAM

        GENOCIDIO Y RESISTENCIA

        by JOSÉ LUIS ALONSO MERCHAN

        On a trip to Argentina, the author learned the fascinating but violent history of Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego. Among all the legendary Selk'nam people emerge, whose history sinks in the dawn of time. in the late 19th century the Selk'nam suffered the violent impact of colonization. In this specific case, it took on the characteristics of a terrible genocide suffered by men, women and children, when the large cattle ranchers invaded their lands with thousands and thousands of sheep. Now, at present, the Selk'nam people are carrying out a historical process of social and cultural mobilization, which corresponds to a growing role of indigenous communities, both in Chilean and Argentine society. We must banish once and for all the words extinction, extermination or disappearance from our language and instead demand that the authorities respect the rights of native peoples, their territories, their customs and their language. The Selk'nam exist and are alive.

      • La nostalgia del limonero

        by Mari Pau Domínguez

        The Nostalgia of the Lemon Tree. Concha is Andalusian and emigrated to Catalonia in the 1960s. Her daughter, Paz, has just divorced and is in financial and emotional ruin, which is why she decides to return to the old family house in Barcelona, ​​a place and a city which she had left never to return. Since adolescence, Paz's obsession has been to leave behind her past as a daughter of immigrants, tired of being "the Catalan" during summers in the village near Seville where they come from and "the Andalusian" the rest of the year in the middle-class neighborhood of her parents. Paz returns to Barcelona with many open issues and a bitter sense of failure and stagnation that coincides with the social and political crisis of the moment. Paz has never known the details of her mother’s story, Concha, a woman full of energy and passion who has managed to deal with life’s setbacks: the disappointment of her marriage after a whirlwind courtship, the terrible floods of Catalonia in 1962 of which she was a victim, the harshness of the first years of immigration, the impossibility of personal fulfilment through a love story later in life, and the growing distance away from her only daughter, through which she projects all her illusions.

      • Fiction

        The Fourth Girl On The Left

        by Andreu Martín

        Sinopsis World War I. While the main European cities are bleeding into conflict, Barcelona is one of the great pearls of the Mediterranean. Despite its status as a neutral territory, no one ignores the fact that on the coast there are ports where they can illegally stock up on fuel and groceries, with the approval of the local authorities, and that German submarines arrive at Cape Ixent where all kinds of interests and conflicts with secret services, double agents and spies from here and there are cooked. n the heart of this Barcelona in the midst of an urban boom, with the noise of the streets, the bustle of bars, casino games and evening shows, comes Amadeu, a peasant boy fresh out of the seminar, who is looking for a dancer with whom his father had lived a strange adventure. She has only one clue: she is the fourth girl to the left of a photograph she keeps in her jacket pocket. She immediately discovers that her name is Amanda Rogent and that she is on display at Barcelona's Moulin Rouge: a whole vedet who loves to scandalize. Amadeus needs to find answers, but discovering the truth is not always the best thing that can happen to you… After titles such as Death Story, Tibidabo's Harem, Everyone Will Remember You, Harem's Favorite, You’re Going To Say I’m Crazy and Cops (the latter, signed with Joan Miquel Capell), Andreu Martín returns to "Crims.cat" with a very retrospective novel, set in the exciting Barcelona of the first decades of the twentieth century.

      • August 2019

        PROCÉS STORIES

        L'humor també decideix. Humor Also Rules. El humor también decide

        by Miquel Bota, Marina López Planella, David Roas, Christopher J. Castañeda, Jordi Gràcia, Juan Manuel Chávez, Paula Naudi, Carlos A. Colla, Fermina Ponce, Fidel Masreal

        In these short stories, we would like to make you blush, whether it’s pink or red as a beetroot. Allow yourself to be beguiled, for a little while, by some voices that perhaps do not sing your own tune. We dare you!

      • Agriculture & farming
        January 2010

        Underutilized and Underexploited Horticultural Crops: Vol 05

        by K.V. Peter

        "Globally there is concern for diminishing nutritional security. Land under agriculture is dwindling, water for irrigation becoming scarce and costly and availability of labour getting lesser, the need for future crops and alternate source of nutrition is getting attention. Under CGIAR, an all inclusive future crops international has been established to bring to light underexploited and underutilized crops. Horticultural crops especially vegetables, fruits, ornamentals, medicinal plants and aromatic plants are unique in presence of a large number of plants with possibility for edible uses and considerable nutritive value. Many are wild weeds in one part of the globe but edible and consumed in another part of the globe. A few such plants are used for phytosanitation and phytoremediation but are getting attention as raw materials for biofuel production. Energy and water are two natural resources getting threat due to climate change resulting global warming and ozone depletion."

      • Autobiography: sport
        April 2008

        Roberto: Kicking Every Ball

        My Story So Far

        by Martinez, Roberto

        Originally from Balaguer in Catalonia, Roberto Martinez played for his home town in the Spanish third division before moving to play for Real Zaragoza in La Liga. In 1995 he was spotted by Dave Whelan, the millionaire owner of Wigan Athletic, and brought

      • Fiction

        THE GREEN KNIGHT

        by Javier Lorenzo

        WINNER OF THE XIII LOGROÑO DE NARRATIVA AWARD 2019   Historical novel based on the life of Sancho Martín, a real Spanish knight of the 12th century, who traveled to Holy Land, at the other end of the Mediterranean to fight in the crusades, where he met Saladin and played an epic chess game with him. His name appears in both Christian and Muslim chronicles for his acts of courage and strategy. He was known as “The Green Knight”, always dressed in green with an antlers topped helm. He will take part in the third and fourth crusade, develop a scam trafficking with relics, suffer the rising power of Inquisition and even witness the birth of Catalonia. A cavalry novel that reads like a page turner.

      • Children's & YA

        A Lighthouse at the End of the World

        by Gerard Guix

        Winner of the most important children’s literature prize in Catalonia: Joaquim Ruyra 2022 Sinopsis They say that adolescence is the age of discoveries and anguish. Max knows this well. At the age of fourteen he has just seen how his life takes an unexpected turn: his father has been commissioned to renovate a lighthouse on a remote island and for a few months the whole family will settle there. Just now that Max was starting to have friends in high school—even though part of the class had been tasked with making him know a word that tortured him—just now that he had begun a special relationship with a girl—even though they hadn’t yet named what they felt for each other—, just now he has to leave everything and start a new life that no one has consulted him if he wanted to. But Max still doesn’t know that adolescence is also the age of first love, the most intense, which always marks more. And that, when necessary, love moves mountains, crosses continents, oceans if necessary, and finds who to find.

      • Fiction
        June 2020

        I will follow in your footsteps

        by Care Santos

        By the author of Half-Life (Nadal Prize 2017), a new novel about family relationships that reflects on the ways a secret from the past can make our future come tumbling down. Reina receives an unexpected call from the mayor of a small village in the Pyrenees. Renovation work on the cemetery has forced them to open up some of the more neglected tombs, among them her father’s. The mayor begs her to do something about his remains and invites her to a solemn ceremony.There is, in addition, a delicate matter he would like to speak to her about, one far from easy to discuss: the discover of another body next to her father’s. Surprised, Reina has no idea who it could be; she knows next to nothing about the man except that he killed himself forty-five years ago, and her mother tried her entire life to conceal it. Against her will, she goes to the village to put things in order.A journey that will take Reina to a tiny town in the heart of Catalonia, but also to a faraway past to the thirtys when her father was a young man in love.

      • Fiction
        October 2019

        Los otros son más felices

        by Laura Freixas

        Áurea starts her journey on a summer day in 1971, in Chamartin train station, with a feeling that her soon to begin stay in Catalonia will change her life. She just doesn’t know how. At only fourteen this will be the first time she’s away from her parents and from everything she knows: Madrid, the city where she was born and her mother’s hometown in La Mancha, where her family spends their summer holidays. Years later, in a conversation with someone who was witness to it all, Áurea rememorates that summer with all its protagonists. With this reedition of los otros son mas felices (2011) Laura Freixas consolidates her upward trajectory in the current Spanish literary scene. Áurea inicia su viaje un día de verano de 1971, en la estación de Chamartín, e intuye que su estancia en Cataluña, a punto de comenzar, le va a cambiar la vida, pero aún no sabe cómo.A sus catorce años, será la primera vez que se aleje de sus padres, y de los que hasta entonces han sido los escenarios de su vida: Madrid, la ciudad en la que ha nacido, y el pueblo de su madre en La Mancha, donde su familia pasa los veranos.Años después, en conversación con quien fue testigo de los hechos, Áurea rememora aquel verano con todos sus protagonistas.Con esta reedición de Los otros son más felices (2011), se confirma la trayectoria de Laura Freixas, que a lo largo de los años ha ido ganando público y reconocimiento como escritora.

      • Children's & YA
        April 2020

        The Oviraptor

        by Leo Tang

        Watch out for the Oviraptor, the dinosaur that steals eggs and oval things! If it smells wee, it will sniff out the boy who wet the bed, and steal his balls. Didi hates wearing a nappy at night, and is determined not to let that happen.     Didi often wets his bed, but he doesn’t like going to the toilet at bed-time, and he hates the feel of a wet nappy. One day, reading a book with Mum, he sees a picture of an oviraptor, a dinosaur that steals eggs and oval things, runs faster than the wind, and never comes home empty-handed. Didi checks his balls, and grows more and more worried that the Oviraptor will sniff him out. What if it steals his balls? Didi is determined not to let the Oviraptor get its claws on them!    The story of the Oviraptor was inspired by the experience of the author’s son. This cute, reassuring story encourages very young children to overcome their fears. It shows them that it’s better to face difficult things than to turn away from them. And that when the problem is solved, they know they have learned something and can be proud of what they have achieved!

      • Thriller / suspense
        August 2020

        A World of Scars

        by Jorge Díaz Leza

        "During the dry and torrid winter of 2019, in a small town in Catalonia, the adolescent Berta Balaguer deeply admires the young Swedish ecologist Greta Thunberg, whose Fridays For Future Movement is followed with great intensity in other countries in Europe and the world. But the Spanish State still seems oblivious to these mobilizations.   Berta with Jordi, a young man activist of Ecologistas En Acción, will try to organize the movement in her locality and then try to extend it to the rest of the country. Soon, like the Swedish teenager, she will start giving talks and speeches and win many sympathies and followers. However, being a minor and under the tutelage of parents who do not understand her and only expect her academic success, will she finally be able to participate in the school strike for the climate?".   This story closes the book Un Mundo de Cicatrices, a volume of six stories where some of its characters, such as Berta Balaguer, will try to carry out an intense environmental activism by becoming aware that, paraphrasing Aldo Leopold, "they live alone in a world of scars ". Others will simply try to find themselves and their dreams in a context where things will never be easy at all. And on their way, one and the other, will suffer the joys and disappointments of friendship; They will try to find love or to love beyond death; they will be involved in stories of intrigue, disturbing thrillers in which there will be no shortage of nods to film noir; or they will be active participants in some of the most relevant events in our recent history. But all, eventually, will learn that "a world of scars" also opens in the soul of every human being.

      • Literary Fiction

        Burning Mist

        by Laura Baeza

        “We believed that nothing would to hurt more than the disappearance of Irene, but we were wrong; far from knowing the pain of true loss.”  For Esther, the memories of her childhood and youth are reduced to the mental illness of her sister, Irene, the special care she needed, and the always insufficient precautions that were set in order to protect her. Afterwards, Esther’s memories are all about her sister’s disappearance and murder. So, how is it possible that in Barcelona, years after these events, she sees her sister on the tv screen? How can that woman in the middle of disturbances in Hidalgo be her allegedly dead sister?  Esther crossed the Atlantic before to escape from the pain and loss, but above it all, from the guilt. Now, she will have to make the journey the other way around to search for the truth that was taken from her, alongside Irene. Is it true that, as many other women in Mexico, she was kidnapped and murdered?

      • Children's & YA

        Look and Find. Barcelona's Museums

        by Robert García

        1 city, 11 museums, and more than 150 objects to find! Hours of fun for all ages on an amazing visit to the most outstanding museums in Barcelona. From Museu Blau to CosmoCaixa, going through Museu del Disseny, Museu Egipci, La Casa dels Entremesos, MACBA, Museu Marítim, Fundació Joan Miró, Museu de la Música, Fundació Antoni Tàpies or Museu de la Xocolata. Illustrated by Robert Garcia, Gaur Estudio.

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