Begleiten Sie uns auf eine literarische Weltreise!
Buch zum Bücherregal hinzufügen
Grey
Einen neuen Kommentar schreiben Default profile 50px
Grey
Jetzt das ganze Buch im Abo oder die ersten Seiten gratis lesen!
All characters reduced
The New Revelation - A Pamphlet - cover

The New Revelation - A Pamphlet

Arthur Conan Doyle

Verlag: Al-Mashreq eBookstore

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Beschreibung

The New Revelation marks Arthur Conan Doyle's formal declaration of faith in spiritualism. Written as a pamphlet, it offers a passionate introduction to the philosophy and evidence he believed proved the existence of the afterlife. This work is not just a personal manifesto but a challenge to skeptics and an invitation to truth seekers. It became the cornerstone of Doyle's later spiritualist writings.
Verfügbar seit: 01.08.2025.
Drucklänge: 42 Seiten.

Weitere Bücher, die Sie mögen werden

  • Running Outside of the Box - How running 200 miles in a month changed my life and how it could change yours - cover

    Running Outside of the Box - How...

    Ash Hurry

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    How many times do we say we’re going to do something and then don’t? How much time do we waste and how much do we have to spare? 
    Lockdown opened the gates to the unknown. People started to bake, do daily quizzes, cook new recipes, learn languages; they set themselves new and exciting challenges. How about running 200 miles in a month? That’s 6.7 miles every day. That’s more than 10k a day. This book chronicles the struggles author Ash Hurry faced every day in achieving this goal and the life lessons he learnt on the way, whether deciding to embark upon this journey on a whim during lockdown to digging down deep day-to-day to reach his overall objective. 
    ‘Running Outside of the Box’, written during the pandemic, is a serious eye-opener to unlocking what many never get to explore - their real potential.
    Zum Buch
  • Stalin's Library - A Dictator and his Books - cover

    Stalin's Library - A Dictator...

    Geoffrey Roberts

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    A compelling intellectual biography of Stalin told through his personal library. 
     
     
     
    In this engaging life of the twentieth century's most self-consciously learned dictator, Geoffrey Roberts explores the books Stalin read, how he read them, and what they taught him. Stalin firmly believed in the transformative potential of words and his voracious appetite for reading guided him throughout his years. A biography as well as an intellectual portrait, this book explores all aspects of Stalin's tumultuous life and politics. 
     
     
      
    Stalin, an avid reader from an early age, amassed a surprisingly diverse personal collection of thousands of books, many of which he marked and annotated revealing his intimate thoughts, feelings, and beliefs. Based on his wide-ranging research in Russian archives, Roberts tells the story of the creation, fragmentation, and resurrection of Stalin's personal library. As a true believer in communist ideology, Stalin was a fanatical idealist who hated his enemies—the bourgeoisie, kulaks, capitalists, imperialists, reactionaries, counter-revolutionaries, traitors—but detested their ideas even more.
    Zum Buch
  • What Makes You Come Alive - A Spiritual Walk with Howard Thurman - cover

    What Makes You Come Alive - A...

    Lerita Coleman Brown

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Known as the godfather of the civil rights movement, Howard Thurman served as a spiritual adviser to Martin Luther King Jr. and other leaders and activists in the 1960s. Thurman championed silence, contemplation, common unity, and nonviolence as powerful dimensions of social change. But Dr. Lerita Coleman Brown didn't learn about him during her years of spiritual-direction training. Only when a friend heard of her longing to encounter the work of Black contemplatives did she finally learn about Thurman, his mystical spirituality, and his liberating ethic. 
     
     
     
    In What Makes You Come Alive, Brown beckons listeners into their own apprenticeship with Thurman. Brown walks with us through Thurman's inimitable life and commitments as he summons us into centering down, encountering the natural world, paying attention to sacred synchronicity, unleashing inner authority, and recognizing the genius of the religion of Jesus. We learn from Thurman's resilience in the psychologically terrorizing climate of the Jim Crow South, his encounters with Quakers and with Mahatma Gandhi, and his sense of being guided by the Spirit. Each chapter illuminates an aspect of Thurman's work and includes reflection questions and spiritual practices.
    Zum Buch
  • Kings and Pawns - Jackie Robinson and Paul Robeson in America - cover

    Kings and Pawns - Jackie...

    Howard Bryant

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    “I loved this book.... I looked forward to [it] more than any other in a long time, and Howard Bryant exceeded my great expectations. Kings and Pawns is brilliantly conceived and powerfully written.” — David Maraniss, author of Path Lit by Lightning 
    A path-breaking work of biography of two American giants, Jackie Robinson and Paul Robeson, whose lives would forever be altered by the Cold War, and would explosively intersect before its most notorious weapon, the House Un-American Activities Committee — from one of the best sports and culture writers working today.  
    Kings and Pawns is the untold story of sports and fame, Black America and the promise of integration through the Cold War lens of two transformative events. The first occurred July 18, 1949 in Washington, D.C., when a reluctant Jackie Robinson, the Brooklyn Dodgers baseball star who integrated the game and at the time was the most famous Black man in America, appeared before the House Un-American Activities Committee to discredit Paul Robeson, the legendary athlete, baritone, and actor — himself once the most famous Black man in America. The testimony would be a defining moment in Robinson’s life and contribute heavily to the destruction of Robeson’s iconic reputation in the eyes of America. 
    The second occurred June 12, 1956, in the midst of the last, demagogic roar of McCarthyism, when a battered, defiant Robeson – prohibited from leaving the United States – faced off in a final showdown with HUAC in the same setting Robinson appeared in seven years earlier. These two moments would epitomize the ongoing Black American conflict between patriotism and protest. On the cusp of a nascent civil rights movement, Robinson and Robeson would represent two poles of a people pitted against itself by forces that demanded loyalty without equality in return – one man testifying in conflicted service to and the other in ferocious critique of a country that would ultimately and decisively wound both. 
    In a time of great division, with America in the midst of a new era of retrenchment and Black athletes again chilled into silence advocating for civil rights, the story of these two titans reverberates today within and beyond Black America. From the revival of government overreach to curb civil liberties to the Cold War-era rhetoric of “the enemy within” levied against fellow citizens, Kings and Pawns is a story of a moment that remains hauntingly present.
    Zum Buch
  • Pardon Power - How The Pardon System Works And Why - cover

    Pardon Power - How The Pardon...

    Kim Wehle

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    If you've ever wondered about the constitutional basis for presidential pardons, this book explains it, offering examples from the recent and distant past. Follow constitutional law professor and popular newsroom commentator Kim Wehle through a fascinating rundown of how this executive power has been—and might be—used by American presidents.
    Zum Buch
  • This Part Is Silent - A Life Between Cultures - cover

    This Part Is Silent - A Life...

    SJ Kim

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    A searing essay collection that explores displacement and loss, creativity and change, institutional power and progress. 
     
     
     
    Born in Korea, raised in the American South, and trying her best to survive British academia, SJ Kim probes her experiences as a writer, a scholar, and a daughter to confront the silences she finds in the world. With curiosity and sensitivity, she writes letters to the institutions that simultaneously support and fail her, intimate accounts of immigration, and interrogations of rising anti-Black and anti-Asian racism. She considers the silences between generations—especially within the Asian diaspora in the West—as she finds her way back to her own family during the pandemic lockdown. 
     
     
     
    Embracing the possibilities and impossibilities of language, Kim rejoices in the similes of Korean, her mother tongue, and draws inspiration from K-dramas and writers across cultures who sustain her. As borders close in and nations enter lockdown, the journey that Kim traces is fraught—and at once illuminates that the act of remaining present has its own power, allowing boundless hope.
    Zum Buch