Your Search Results

      • Teaching, Language & Reference

        Hieroglyphics

        Handbook to read ancient Egyptian writing

        by Luca Peis

        With their writing E g yptians realistically represented the world around them. They called hieroglyphics “words of god”: these words would come back to life if read and pronounced, making their meaning real. But how do we read hieroglyphics? Forgotten for centuries and considered only as symbols, these signs had been decoded by J.-F. Champollion in 1822 and today hieroglyphics doesn’t seem so cryptic and inaccessible. In this simple grammar, with illustrative examples and a dictionary, the author reveals the secrets of this fascinating language and some keynotes to visits with satisfaction an Egyptian museum or collection.

      • Thriller / suspense

        The Ludlum Prediction

        by Quentin Cope

        The Ludlum Prediction It’s the year 2018.  North Platte, Lincoln County is a place noted for declining employment prospects at the once famous railroad depot ... and little else. For Ed Ludlum, he could reside anywhere and still earn a good living as a ‘Data Miner’ ... someone who cannot only tell you what you’ll shop for next Wednesday at three o’clock, but which shop you’ll use ... and what shelf you’ll find it on. However, a powerful, wealthy and well connected US based secretive religious sect, the Messianic Tribes of Yashoa, known by many simply as the MTY, wish to avail themselves of Ed Ludlum’s unique services ... and they are willing to pay well for it. They want to extract a date and a place from hundreds of terabytes of data, collected over many years from the darkest depths of some ancient sciences and leftover mysterious hieroglyphs, abandoned by long lost civilisations. But what is all this high tech computer based research for? The work of  Ed Ludlum soon comes to the attention of some of the most powerful Intelligence Agencies in the world, such as the CIA, the British SIS and the much feared Israeli Mossad, becoming known as ‘The Ludlum Prediction’ ... a prophesy that if fulfilled, could possibly change the world as we know it ... forever! Sitting on the sidelines, surrounded by Vatican based Cardinals whose common survival plan is based on ignorance and self serving edicts, is one man with the power and determination to thwart the best laid plans of highly professional State Intelligence Agents. He knows that if ‘The Ludlum Prediction’ is in any way linked to the expected appearance of a new prophet, or religious deity, then the Catholic Church could be led to the edge of a credibility precipice. Has Ed Ludlum got it right? With the surprise discovery of 3000 year old tablets linking two great civilisations and key religious beliefs together ... half a world apart ... he thinks he has. However, the very best of carefully executed plans can fail, as they did, so horrifically in the chilling final hours of what was to be the end game adventure, played out on a remote Tibetan plateau ... only miles from the militarily sensitive Chinese border. Will this bring an end to all the speculation and questions of legitimacy surrounding ‘The Ludlum Prediction’, or trigger a new series of events that could inevitably lead to the beginning of a new world crisis? Perhaps there is something even more sinister afoot, urging Ludlum down a path ... to a place ... from which there will be no possible return! Could The Ludlum Prediction in fact be reality? Is it about to happen ... or, more concerning ... could it have happened already? You decide..!

      • Travel writing
        June 2017

        Among the Summer Snow

        A Highlands Walk

        by Christopher Nicholson

        Among the Summer Snow celebrates and reflects upon the summer snow patches of the Scottish Highlands. These snow patches are remarkable things, idiosyncratic and distinctive in appearance. Towards the end of an average summer some thirty or forty survive in the mountains, and the sheer fact of they’re still there is part of their magic. But they fascinate for a host of other reasons. They are all different. They are transient phenomena, in a state of slow decomposition. At close range their surfaces are often like hieroglyphs on tablets of ice. They are imposing, thought-provoking and beautiful. This is an enchanting, unique seven-day journey in search of summer snow patches in the Scottish Highlands, but also becomes a meditation on the lure of the mountains themselves.

      • Parallel Worlds

        Genre, Discourse, and Poetics in Contemporary, Colonial, and Classic Maya Literature

        by Kerry M Hull (Editor) , Michael D Carrasco (Editor)

        Despite recent developments in epigraphy, ethnopoetics, and the literary investigation of colonial and modern materials, few studies have compared glyphic texts and historic Maya literatures.Parallel Worlds examines Maya writing and literary traditions from the Classic period until today, revealing remarkable continuities across time. In this volume, contributions from leading scholars in Maya literary studies examine Maya discourse from Classic period hieroglyphic inscriptions to contemporary spoken narratives, focusing on parallelism to unite the literature historically. Contributors take an ethnopoetic approach, examining literary and verbal arts from a historical perspective, acknowledging that poetic form is as important as narrative content in deciphering what these writings reveal about ancient and contemporary worldviews. Encompassing a variety of literary motifs, including humor, folklore, incantation, mythology, and more specific forms of parallelism such as couplets, chiasms, kennings, and hyperbatons, Parallel Worlds is a rich journey through Maya culture and pre-Columbian literature that will be of interest to students and scholars of anthropology, ethnography, Latin American history, epigraphy, comparative literature, language studies, indigenous studies, and mythology.

      • Fiction in translation
        September 2020

        Alindarka's Children

        by Alhierd Bacharevič, Translated by Jim Dingley and Petra Reid

        Alindarka's Children (Dzieci Alindarkiis, 2014) is a contemporary novel about a brother and a sister interned in a camp. Here children are taught to forget their own language and speak the language of the colonizer, aided by the use of drugs as well as surgery on the larynx to cure the 'illness' of using the Belarusian language.   The children escape but are pursued by the camp leaders and left to thrive for themselves in this adventure, which bears a likeness to an adult, literary 'Hansel and Gretel'.   The dialogue translates well to the guttural differences between English Received Pronunciations and Scots. The Russian, translated by Jim Dingley, will become RP and the Belarusian, translated by Macsonnetries author Petra Reid, Scots. This novel has been translated and will be published in September 2020 thanks to the Pen Translates Award, won by Scotland Street Press in May 2019

      • Fortune-telling & divination
        September 2021

        The Power of Symbols, Sacred Images for Meditation and Divination

        Immagini Sacre per Meditare e Divinare

        by Stefano Fusi

        THE POWER OF SYMBOLS Sacred Images for Meditation and Divination by Stefano Fusi Artwork by Stefano Fusi Product Details 41 cards + 68-page guidebook+gold extra thin point marker Guide book size: 85 x 130 mm Card size: 85 x 130 mm ISBN: 978-1-955680-03-5 Imprint: Edizioni LAlbero All our oracles are designed and printed in Italy using only 100% ecofriendly material and non toxic inks and varnishes. Symbols are the signs that reveal and perpetuate the unlimited universe in our world and in our common life. They reveal meanings beyond those obvious to the senses and to our rational sphere. They exist before we can imagine or think about them: like genes and DNA on the physical plane, symbols pre-exist us, they carry with them the original instructions of life. They exist in nature and we have then encoded them to express in perceptible and comprehensible forms the essential forces that structure existence since the beginning. They are a synthetic map of the motions of what we call energy.The Power of Symbols is a deck of 41 Oracles with guide book.

      • Animal stories (Children's/YA)
        May 2012

        Let's Visit Cairo!

        Adventures of Bella & Harry

        by Lisa Manzione (author), Kristine Lucco (illustrator)

        Join sibling Chihuahuas Bella and Harry as they travel to Cairo with their family and learn about the Valley of the Kings, the Pyramids of Giza, King Tut and other captivating landmarks. Along the way, local cuisine is sampled and basic Arabic (as well as Hieroglyphics) is introduced to the curious reader.

      • So it is written

        by Vitali Konstantinov

        Carve patterns on stones, shells and bones, drawings in the sand and messages on birch barks:  Our ancestors already had the desire  to use simple or even complicated characters to communicate with each other . An we imitate them until today! In an entertaining comic style, this book follows the development of over 100 writings from around the world, from the very beginning up to the digital age: from Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics to the Greek alphabet all the way to today's emoji's and invented languages like Klingon. From the table of contents: Speaking – Drawing – Writing Writing   Coding   Script systems   The origins of writing   The world's first writings Cuneiform   Ancient Egyptian scripts Central American scripts Danube script (Vinča symbols). European Bronze Age Origin of the alphabet Greek, Coptic, Nubian Latin alphabet   Runes and Székely-Hungarian Rovás German script Arabic script   3. Script inventors Mongolian alphabet Korean script African scripts Cherokee, Osage     Invented languages and scripts Scripts from Middle Earth Scripts from outer space   ­­­­­­­­­­­­­­

      • Rural planning
        September 2019

        Communication Technologies in Agriculture

        by P, Jaisridhar & Surudhi

        This textbook Communication Technologies in Agriculture will be a comprehensive book with 24 chapters which covers the old wisdom and also the new horizons in innovations and trends in Agricultural Extension for all those who are associated with Agricultural Extension as a student, scholar, researcher and practitioner. This book would serve to the information needs of all the stake holders in the change process. More fittingly, the Under Graduate students of Agriculture and Horticulture and Post Graduate students of Agricultural Extension, Mass Communication and Rural Development who would use it for enriching their theoretical requirements.

      • August 2007

        Performing Dark Arts

        A Cultural History of Conjuring

        by Mangan, Michael

        Magic and conjuring inhabit the boundaries and the borderlands of performance. The conjuror’s act of demonstrating the apparently impossible, the uncanny, the marvellous, or the grotesque challenges the spectator’s sense of reality.

      • African history
        January 2013

        Black Egyptians

        The African Origins of Ancient Egypt

        by Segun Magbagbeola

      • Spinning & weaving

        Woven Together

        Weavers & Their Stories

        by Sandu Publishing

        Weaving, as a traditional technique of interlacing yarns or fiber, has a long history and has been given many forms over the years. This book will invite 25 craftsmen, designers, and artists to talk about their weaving stories. These projects are diverse, from traditional basket weaving in Eastern Asia, woven wall hangings structured in a modern way, to artistic pieces done by contemporary artists. Readers can look into the making process and detailed pattern of these projects.

      • Children's & YA

        A Trip Through Lost Cities

        by El Fisgón Histórico

        This book takes us to history's most incredible forgotten civilizations. How their people lived, their most popular legends, their historical figures... With the help of The History Gossip, we'll be able to sneak into the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, attend a ritual at Machu Picchu or see what it's like to have fun in Angkor. Famous cities from the five continents such as Pompeii or Troy, as well as more mysterious ones such as Birka or Tikal. Cities of great historical importance that haven't reached our days but can be experienced through archaeology... and now, through this book too.

      • Crime & mystery

        Wilderness Lodge

        DI Elizabeth Jewell book 2

        by Carole Pitt

        It is Christmas morning and Maggie Mercer finds something under a tree. This tree is no Norwegian spruce sheltering shiny parcels. Instead, beneath a towering pine, she discovers a man’s body roped to a fence post.    Detective Inspector Elizabeth Jewell leaves a family get together in Oxford to attend the scene at the Wilderness Bird Sanctuary. The victim is Harry Steele, a local stonemason.    As the investigation progresses, Jewell and Patterson uncover Steele’s unsavoury past and those people affected by his arrogance and greed. Behind the sanctuary's tranquil setting a sense of foreboding emerges.One clear fact emerges. Steele had more than his fair share of enemies. However, which one of them wanted him dead?    Still recovering from a previous case Jewell and Patterson must unravel their suspect’s lies and their complex motives.

      • Children's & young adult fiction & true stories

        Kamun vs. Leviathan

        by Segun Magbagbeola

        Kamun and the star children embark on a journey across time and space to learn how to defeat the great beast Leviathan and the reptilians from their ancestors the Neteru. Once trained they descend back to Earth and begin the battle of all ages to save the Earth from destruction!

      • Music
        January 2014

        If It Ain’t Baroque

        More Music History as it Ought to be Taught

        by David W. Barber

        Not content with having hilariously skewered the lives of great composers in Bach, Beethoven and the Boys, in If It Ain't Baroque musical humorist David W. Barber takes aim at their works as well. From symphonies to solo songs, from motets to madrigals to masses, Barber wittily yet informatively tells readers everything they need to know (and more!) about the various different genres of classical music. (And if you're not sure what a genre is, don't worry – Barber will explain that too.) As always, the facts are true and the information is accurate, it's just that Barber has a particularly wicked way of looking at things and a knack for finding out obscure facts and presenting them in a light-hearted way. So if you like to laugh while you learn, you've come to the right place. And again as always, Barber's clever prose is perfectly accompanied by the delightful illustrations of cartoonist Dave Donald.

      • The Arts
        October 2020

        RIDLEY SCOTT

        A Retrospective

        by Ian Nathan

        Illustrated with images as iconic as they are stunning and including the author’s first-hand experiences on set and interviews with Scott himself, this book charts the extraordinary journey of Britain’s greatest living director.Telling the stories behind Alien and Blade Runner, Gladiator and Black Hawk Down, and many more, it also goes in search of the themes and motifs that unite such different films, and the methods and madness of Scott’s approach to his medium.This is the account of a director who has never been less than stubbornly, brilliantly, unforgettably his own man. ​ Author Ian Nathan is one of the UK’s best-known film writers. He is the author of eight previous books, including Alien Vault, the bestselling history of Ridley Scott’s masterpiece, and Terminator Vault. He is the former editor and executive editor of Empire, where he remains a contributing editor.

      Subscribe to our

      newsletter