Esta poderosa novela de Chris Mlalazi, que no es sentimental ni despiadada, escenifica la historia de Rudo, una niña de catorce años que observa los terribles eventos que tienen lugar en su aldea.
A remarkable first novel that centers around Serene, a young girl whose father has vanished from their small Hungarian village just before World War I, leaving his beleaguered Jewish family to fend for themselves.
Paris in the 1860s: a magnificent time of expression, where brilliant young artists rebel against the stodginess of the past to freely explore new styles of creatingand bold new ways of living.
In his follow-up book to Reluctant Warriors, author Jon Stafford traces the impact of World War II on regular American men and women swept up by events thousands of miles away from home, and ponders how the continent that gave birth to Renaissance Humanism could descend into murderous chaos.
The final offensives of the Second World War - Arnhem, the Rhine crossing and the invasion of Germany - provide war-shattered settings for John Prebble's novel, The Edge of Darkness.
June 1914: In London, a militant suffragette plants a bomb on the Coronation Chair in Westminster Abbey, while in Sarajevo, an idealistic young surgeon fights to save the life of the mortally wounded Archduke Franz Ferdinand.
A group of dramatists that commit what was a subversive act during the South Korean military dictatorships of the twentieth century - distributing copies of Karl Marx's only surviving play, The Specters of Algeria.
Combining elements of mystery, history, and romance, this compelling narrative explores the river frontier of West Virginia to the Midwest in the 1900s.
Best of the West 2019 - 1st Place in Mystery by True West Magazine2018 - CIPA EVVY Winner for Mystery/Crime/Detective2018 - CIPA EVVY 2nd Place for Historical FictionIn the next book in the Silver Rush mysteries, Inez Stannert struggles to solve the murder of a young musician.
A group of dramatists that commit what was a subversive act during the South Korean military dictatorships of the twentieth century - distributing copies of Karl Marx's only surviving play, The Specters of Algeria.
As Alice and Motton play out the ferocious Victorian tensions between social classes, men and women, science and art, faith and reason-tensions which continue to challenge us-we are drawn into the sensuous imagery and subtle humour of this sharply observed drama, eager to know where it will lead.