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  • av MD Firuz Mia
    249,-

    One little kid, Ayan, came from a poor family. He has grown up day by day. Poverty was their daily companion in the family. But Ayan was a proficient student. In his academic career, he was given a prize by the local minister, and he excelled in the 12th grade. He was romantically involved with the richest girl, Ananya. He wanted to be a doctor in life. After finishing the 12th grade, he was granted admission to Australia to pursue MBBS. He got admission there with the help of Ananya. In order for Ayan to become a doctor, his family was a huge support. After completing MBBS, Ayan and Ananya got married. This book is all about the inspiration, struggle, poverty, joy, love, and despair of a poor family, and above all, a parent's commitment to instill in their son a never-give-up attitude.

  • av Kaila Stanley
    159,-

  • av Rebecca Martin
    175,-

  • av Laura Kung
    159,-

    A collection of twenty-one original works.

  • av Mahalabelle S Gigous
    159,-

  • av Elizabet Ciochina
    159,-

    Heart to Heart Verses is about deep feelings, soul's search for meaning and motivation. Its purpose is to inspire, encourage, and empower people to believe in themselves, to have faith in their divine plan, and to cultivate unconditional selflove. The book enables us to understand our thoughts and emotions better, and to look at the world in a far more meaningful way. Essentially, each poem offers you a therapeutic, cathartic time, where a couple of verses bring into your existence an embracing sensation of being at home and healing.

  • av Lipsa Giri
    159,-

    Have you ever come across someone, who, without lifting a finger, without even knowing you, brings such love, such joy into your life, you cannot help but sing praises of everything in Creation only to surrender them all at their feet, along with your entire being (I say it even though it goes without saying)? These 21 poems, most of them, written within a span of 3 days, talk of one such someone - the one who makes everything make sense; the one who I see at the close of every fever dream.

  • av Rebekah Mowbray
    185,-

    ""After being sexually assaulted by a highly regarded member of the church, Rebekah's life changed instantly. Her sight went from light to dark. Her community went from close to far. Her speech once eloquent, stopped, stuttered. Her step once agile was strong no more.Night had come.Finding Light at Midnight is the poetic recount of the challenges she faced, the pain she bore and the fight she fought: for life, for hope, for love.She left seeking answers in a distant land. The wounds of this warrior would not see her end. The Seeker searches for truth and lightamidst a dark and dreary night.She searches for hope,searches for love.She has flown far abovedistant lands and foreign seas.She was brought to her kneesin surrender and a little morewhen challenge stormed through her door.She would not give up,nor would she give wayfor she held onto hopenight and day.""

  • av Celeste Price
    159,-

    Perception Mismanaged is a collection of poems written from two different places within the same heart, mind, body and soul.

  • av Erin Poppy
    159,-

    ""The Daisy Queen is a collection of poetry about nostalgia. It explores our connection to the inner child who still lives and breathes inside us, even as we grow older. The poems weave a tale about what it's like to never entirely leave girlhood behind. To always carry it in our pockets like a love letter. Read it over and over again. And look back on those daisy-picking days.""

  • av K. Hartsell
    159,-

    ""You know that box that holds all the random knick knacks, papers, and trinkets that don't otherwise have a home, the one you add to every time you panic clean before guests arrive, you don't know what all is in it, and you don't dare look, but you also don't throw anything away because you might need it in 10 years? Yeah me neither.""

  • av Ayn Rand
    149,-

    Ayn Rand, a Russian-American author, created the dystopian novella Anthem in 1937. It was initially released in the UK in 1938. The story is set in an undefined time in the future when mankind has gone through another Dark Age. Nowadays, technological development is meticulously planned, and the idea of individuality is gone. Equality 7-2521 is a young guy who rebels by conducting covert scientific research. He hides out in the forest with the girl he loves once his activities are revealed. They intend to create a new civilization based on rediscovering individualism together. The narrative was initially intended to be a play, but Rand later changed her mind and wrote it for a magazine. She sent it to book publishers on the advice of her agency. Cassell initially released the novella in England. Only after Rand's next book, The Fountainhead became a bestseller was it released in the US. For the 1946 US publication, Rand changed the text. Rand looked into possibilities for getting Anthem adapted to various media after its release in the US. She was in talks regarding possible ballet, opera, and film adaptations, but these plans were never carried out.

  • av Eleanor Hodgman Porter
    255

    Eleanor H. Porter published the children's book Just David in 1916. Ten-year-old violinist David is unnamed and has no idea what his last name is. He and his father have a happy life in the highlands until his father develops a serious illness. The father gives David a substantial sum of gold money just before he passes away and instructs him to keep them hidden until they are required. Two former childhood sweethearts who had drifted apart were wed by David, whose purity and singing talent charmed the villagers and transformed the lives of numerous of them. He also makes a difference in the Holly family, helping Simeon to mend his broken heart and enable his son to visit with his new wife and child.They discover throughout the visit how expensive David's violins are. His father had a Stradivarius and an Amati, which he had lent to a blind acquaintance. When John reads David's father's old letter, he recognizes the signature and learns that the man was a well-known musician who had vanished with his son following the death of his wife. David is assigned to reconnect with his family and take violin lessons. He becomes well-known and affluent, but he still comes to the Hollys every year to perform for them.

  • av Rafael Sabatini
    199,-

    St. Martin's Summer is a fictional novel written by an Italian-British writer Rafael Sabatini. An heiress's life is in jeopardy, and her only chance of survival is to put her faith in the wits of a middle-aged swordsman who has no use for "women's troubles." The book is set in France and because Marie de Medici is the regent, it is considered to have taken place between 1610 and 1617. The story showcases insouciant banter, sword fights, disguises, leaps from castle windows, and the resurrection of the dead. Some of the other gems of Rafael Sabatini are The Lovers of Yvonne, The Tavern Knight, The Shame of Motley, The Lion's Skin, and many more such novels.

  • av L M Montgomery
    269,-

    A 1911 book by Canadian author L. M. Montgomery is titled ''The Story Girl''. The plot appears to have it all, including minor disputes, innocent mischief, and a heartwarming depiction of the complexity and simplicities of life as seen from a child's perspective. The Story Girl is a heartwarming tale that captures the innocence of childhood fantasies and is certain to jog some memories thanks to its evocative language and visuals. A group of young children is followed in The Story Girl as they go through a summer season of endearing but realistically awkward escapades and live in a rural community on Prince Edward Island, Canada. In addition to exploring themes of youthful innocence and its fleeting nature, the book also emphasizes the importance of intangibles, which turn out to be the very substance of life. As it has stories of funny and interesting collective childhood incidents that can take readers back to their childhood and forget their current problems!

  • av Booker T Washington
    295,-

    The 1901 autobiography of American Educator Booker T. Washington is titled Up from Slavery (1856-1915). Up from Slavery details Washington's life for more than forty years, from his time as a slave through his time as a schoolteacher and his role as the face of racial relations in the South. Through laborious, manual effort, a good education, and connections with admirable people, Washington advances in this text's social hierarchy. He emphasizes the value of education for the black community throughout the book as a practical strategy to improve racial relations in the South (particularly in the context of Reconstruction). Washington's conventional, non-confrontational message is essentially what the book is about, and it is backed by the example of his life. It is the story of Education, Industriousness, Humility, The people's capacity for change and Poverty among the black population.

  • av Teah Mackay
    159,-

    """The tricky part of illness is that, as you go through it, your values are constantly changing." -Paul Kalanithi'Seasons"""" was inspired by the life cycles of hundreds of people and patients neuroscientist Teah Mackay met on operating tables, patients rooms and morgues. Her poetry was curated on the backs of patient reports and in the margins of coffee stained university textbooks. The dynamic and lyrical language of 'Seasons' is broken down into four chapters; summer, autumn, winter and spring, with each chapter examining how the human spirit, like the seasons, changes in the best and worst ways. Mackay writes with a heart on her sleeve and a scalpel in her hand, cutting through a lifetime of regret and insecurity to expose universal truths of what it is to be vulnerable, what it is to fight and what it is to surrender.""

  • av Graeme Harrison
    159,-

    ""21 Haikus that mainly follow the translational and traditional 5,7,5 syllable structure.However, I've chosen to take liberties with some as it's sometimes a good thing to break away from convention.""

  • av Demitria Darby
    175,-

    This poetic compilation will give the reader an insight of a multitude of genres. It is intended to inspire and connect the reader with life's lessons from a personal, visionary perspective. It's written without standard English structure to allow each reader the opportunity to place his/her own emphasis to phrases or words.

  • av Forest Rose
    159,-

    As we make each other's acquaintance through these pages, may you feel less alone and more seen than you have been in ages.

  • av Robert Michael Ballantyne
    185,-

    The 1881 book My Doggie And I describes what happened to John Mellon after he encounters a particular small dog. John Mellon was almost a doctor in chapter one. One day when Mellon is out walking, a strange-looking animal comes sprinting toward him down the dirt path. As you must know by now, this dog finds a new home. The doctor and the puppy encounter several people whose lives are bound together by prior acquaintance with the same shaggy doggie through a series of remarkable coincidences. This book has a unique touch; it is a "feel-good" type of story that made me chuckle several times. Even though I was able to solve the small mystery without too much difficulty, it was still intriguing to see how everything turned out. The MacDougall family's hyperactive kids, Slider the street urchin, and the doggy himself are just a few of the wonderful characters in this story. The doggie also goes by three different names, depending on who is calling to him at the moment.

  • av Maurice Leblanc
    269,-

    Maurice Leblanc published a collection of short stories called The Eight Strokes of the Clock in 1922. In response to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes, Arsène Lupin first appeared in print in 1905. He was loosely based on the life of French anarchist Marius Jacob. Leblanc creates unique and enjoyable tales of adventure featuring one of the greatest literary characters of all time-Arsène Lupin, gentleman thief-by fusing criminal fiction, fantasy, and mystery. The world's best thief, Arsène Lupin is an unstoppable force for good whose escapades jeopardize the fortune and reputation of France's most depraved individuals. Lupin utilizes his amazing intelligence and chameleon-like ability to slip unnoticed through aristocratic society in this first book of Leblanc's adored series in order to steal, swindle, and cheat his way through life. Arsène Lupin, gentleman-thief, appears in eight short stories in this collection: At The Sign Of Mercury, Footprints In The Snow, The Lady With The Hatchet, Thérèse and Germaine, The Water-Bottle, On Top Of The Tower, The Case Of Jean Louis, and The Tell-Tale Film.

  • av H G Wells
    305,-

    In H. G. Wells' science fiction book In the Days of the Comet (1906), when a comet forces ""the nitrogen of the air, the ancient azote,"" to ""transform out of itself,"" mankind is ""exalted."" As a result, there is peace on earth and goodwill toward all people. Our atmosphere is one of happiness and beauty. The prologue and epilogue of ""The Man Who Wrote in the Tower"" are written by an unidentified narrator. In Book I, William (""Willie"") Leadford, who was ""third in the office staff of Rawdon's pot-bank [a facility where pottery is created] in Clayton,"" leaves his employment at the same moment that industrial Britain is devastated by a slump brought on by American dumping. Leadford, who was converted to socialism by his friend ""Parload,"" attributes his miserable living situation on racial injustice. The exact date of the incident is unknown. Leadford awakens at the beginning of Book II, when he is intensely aware of the beauty in the world and has a kind and giving attitude toward other people. Verrall, Leadford, and Nettie have a passionate conversation about their futures at the start of Book III. By her ""uncomfortable awareness of significant moral inequalities,"" the author is worried.

  • av Rene Descartes
    149,-

    René Descartes wrote a philosophical and autobiographical work titled Discourse on the Method of Rightly Conducting One's Reason and of Seeking Truth in the Sciences, which was published in 1637. The most well-known use of it is as the inspiration for the idiom "Je pense, donc Je Suis," which appears in Part IV of the work. Meditations on First Philosophy (1641) contains a similar argument but without this same language, and Principles of Philosophy contains a Latin translation of the identical claim, Cogito, ergo sum (1644). One of the most influential books in the history of contemporary philosophy, Discourse on the Method is crucial to the advancement of the natural sciences. Descartes addresses the issue of skepticism in this work, which was previously researched by other philosophers. Descartes adapted the methods of some of his predecessors and contemporaries while addressing a fact that he believed to be indisputable; in order to observe the world honestly and without any bias, he started out on his line of reasoning by doubting everything. The book's initial printing took place in Leiden, Netherlands. Dioptrique, Météores, and Géométrie were the three works that the book was meant to provide as an introduction.

  • av August Strindberg
    199,-

  • av Honoré de Balzac
    295,-

  • av E. M. Forster
    305,-

  • av Thomas A Kempis
    279

    The Imitation of Christ, by Thomas à Kempis, is a Christian devotional book composed between the periods of 1390 and 1440. The Imitation of Christ in Part One gives useful encouragement for spiritual living. Part II counsels man to be worried about the spiritual side of life as opposed to the materialistic, and part III certifies the comfort that results from being focused on Christ. In the last part, part IV shows how a person's faith must be strengthened through the Eucharist or Holy Communion. The clarity of the book's language and the direct appeal to the religious sensitivity of the person in a simple manner are maybe the primary reasons why this little book has been so largely received and deeply impacted people.

  • av Isabella Lucy Bird
    329,-

  • av Emma Goldman
    255

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