¡Acompáñanos a viajar por el mundo de los libros!
Añadir este libro a la estantería
Grey
Escribe un nuevo comentario Default profile 50px
Grey
Suscríbete para leer el libro completo o lee las primeras páginas gratis.
All characters reduced
My Generation - cover

My Generation

Simone Malacrida

Editorial: BookRix

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Sinopsis

The stories of three generations, told following distinct themes, unfold against the backdrop of the events that characterized the twentieth century, focusing in particular on what happened in Russia, Germany, and the United States.
Three complementary visions alternate to provide the reader with a clear picture of the motivations and reflections that accompanied the personal decisions of the protagonists and the public choices of entire generations.
Mikhail, Hans and Frank pour all their expectations into the meanderings of History, experiencing firsthand the tragedies and greatness of their era, while giving a final reinterpretation of the events that occurred.
Disponible desde: 18/04/2023.
Longitud de impresión: 391 páginas.

Otros libros que te pueden interesar

  • Moremi’s Escape - cover

    Moremi’s Escape

    Tobi Shoyebo

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Moremi’s Escape” is a fictional tale inspired by the legendary Queen Moremi, who was taken from her homeland of Ile-Ife to Ugbo land—a secluded town hidden deep in the forest and encircled by towering rocks. This short story follows the harrowing night she dares to reclaim her freedom. (hope you enjoy it)
    Ver libro
  • D H Lawrence - A Short Story Collection - Volume 2 - A titan of English literature that challenged ideas of romance and sexuality - cover

    D H Lawrence - A Short Story...

    D H Lawrence

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    David Herbert Lawrence was born on the 11th September 1885 in Eastwood, Nottinghamshire, a coal mining town where the reality of a harsh life was only useful as experiences for future literary works. 
     
    He was educated at Beauvale Board School and became the first local boy to receive a scholarship to attend Nottingham High School. After 3 years he became a junior clerk in Haywood’s surgical appliances factory. He was also attempting a literary career which, in the short term, led to a teacher training position in Eastwood and later a teaching qualification from University College, Nottingham.  
     
    Lawrence’s first efforts were poems, short stories and a draft of ‘The White Peacock’. Moving to London and a teaching position in Croydon his writing attracted the attention of Ford Madox Ford, editor of The English Review, and he commissioned him to write ‘Odour of Chrysanthemums’.  
     
    Wanting to write full-time he now began work on what would become ‘Sons and Lovers.   
     
    In 1912 he met the older and married mother-of-three Frieda Weekley. They eloped to Germany and here Lawrence could see for himself the growing tensions with France.  So keen was his interest that he was arrested and accused of being a British spy.  
     
    In early 1914 Frieda obtained her divorce and they returned to Britain to be married just days before the outbreak of war. Owing to her German parentage, and his own public dislike of militarism and violence, the couple were treated with contempt and suspicion throughout the war years.  
     
    Despite this he continued to write but his reputation in England was so tarnished and, mirrored by his own disdain for the country, he and Frieda left England in November 1919, first for Europe and then America via Ceylon and Australia. 
     
    They bought a ranch in Taos, New Mexico and visited Mexico several times. The third visit in March 1925 caused a near fatal attack of malaria. To convalesce they moved to Florence. Here he continued work on ‘Lady Chatterley’s Lover’ which for many years would cause controversy. A renewed interest in oil painting resulted in an exhibition in 1929 which was raided by the police and several works were confiscated.  
     
    D H Lawrence died of complications arising from a bout of tuberculosis on the 2nd of March 1930 in Vence, France.  He was 44. 
     
    1 - D H Lawrence - A Short Story Collection - Volume 2 - An Introduction 
    2 - The Rocking Horse Winner by D H Lawrence 
    3 - The Border Line by D H Lawrence 
    4 - A Fragment of Stained Glass by D H Lawrence 
    5 - Odour of Chrysanthemums by D H Lawrence 
    6 - The Horse Dealer's Daughter by D H Lawrence
    Ver libro
  • Twenty Fathoms Down - cover

    Twenty Fathoms Down

    L. Ron Hubbard

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Daring and defiant, there's no stopping diver Hawk Ridley as he takes the plunge into an ocean of untold riches and danger. Fighting off ruthless rivals in search of gold is nothing new to Hawk... but fighting off a beautiful woman is a different story. Is she an innocent stowaway or a seductive saboteur? The answer comes Twenty Fathoms Down — as Hawk makes a discovery that will blow you out of the water. Dive deep into the action and intrigue, as the audio version of Twenty Fathoms Down plunges you into an adventure as stirring as the sea itself.
    Ver libro
  • Pendle Witches The - England 1600's - Book 3 of 7 - Elizabeth Device - cover

    Pendle Witches The - England...

    AI Voice Christopher Allen

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    This audiobook is narrated by an AI Voice.  The Pendle Witches England 1600's 
    Book 3 of 7  Elizabeth Device 
     
    The books are fictionally based on the true names and part facts of seven of the accused witches involved being sentenced to death mostly, although innocent, and is as follows: 
     
    Elizabeth Device, a struggling widow in 1600s Lancashire, fought to protect her family after her daughter Alizon was accused of cursing a peddler. As whispers of witchcraft grew, Elizabeth's world collapsed—her mother, Old Demdike, died in prison, and her son James spoke recklessly of spirits. A family gathering at Malkin Tower was twisted into tales of a witches' sabbath by fearful neighbors. The final blow came when Elizabeth's nine-year-old daughter Jennet, likely coerced, testified against her in court, describing imaginary familiars and curses. Despite a spectral dog's offer of freedom in exchange for Jennet's life, Elizabeth refused to betray her child, even as the noose tightened around her neck. On August 20, 1612, she was hanged at Lancaster Castle, her dying words a curse not on Jennet, but on the injustice that turned daughter against mother. Her story endures as a haunting reminder of the Pendle witch trials' cruellest betrayal.  
     
    This is the third book in a series of seven audiobooks and I do hope you "enjoy" ,might not be the appropriate word, this third instalment, and it's only $3 dollars. 
     
    I have worked very hard and meticulously to provide you with an enjoyable experience, the initial opening credit music which does run to approximately 2  minutes plus, called Haunting Elegy, uses flute and harp to set the scene of witches living life as they could. The closing music ends in a sad way, called Melancholy same instrumental at nearly 3 minutes as the fate that befalls these innocent people awaits them.!  
     
    The story itself runs to about 14 minutes, and and is narrated in my own voice. 
     
    I do hope you and enjoy this audiobook , there are a lot more to come! 
     
    Christopher Allen  at your service
    Ver libro
  • Shanty Gold - cover

    Shanty Gold

    Jeanne Charters

    • 0
    • 1
    • 0
    “Charters interweaves many important topics—immigration, civil rights, women’s rights—into her exciting novel . . . An evocative portrait of South Boston.” —Kirkus Reviews After the deaths of her mother and infant sister during Ireland’s Great Famine, thirteen-year-old Mary Boland makes her way to the Queenstown harbor and onto a coffin ship bound for America. But what happens during her transatlantic passage is enough to quash the strongest of dreams. After being assaulted by crewmembers, Mary thinks of ending her life—until a young Black slave named Kamua comes to her rescue . . . Forming a bond as strong as siblings, Mary and Kam reach Boston, determined to forge their own paths. No longer an innocent soul, Mary trusts no one, putting her faith in her own instincts. It is on the teeming streets of South Boston that she’ll find a new home and a new purpose as a midwife, helping poverty-stricken women survive their pregnancies. And it is in this city, full of possibility, where Mary’s heart will heal, and find the strength to survive the harsh choices she is forced to make, and grow into a woman true to herself . . . “The story of a young Irish girl’s struggles told with an authentic, historically accurate voice.” —Sallie Bissell, author of the Mary Crow series “To read Shanty Gold is to immerse oneself in a wild ride of discovery, romance, and the search for a new way of life. . . . A tale that will grab your heart and senses, with twists and turns along the way.” —Susan Blexrud, author of the Fang series
    Ver libro
  • Fascist as Author The - A Short Story Collection - Celebrated war era authors who had questionable political leanings… - cover

    Fascist as Author The - A Short...

    Knut Hamsun, Luigi Pirandello,...

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Authors are authors and we are drawn to their works because of their style, their narrative, and their characters and how each part is assembled into the arc of the whole. 
     
    But are we?  Do social conventions, or fashion or other influences decide what we read or what we listen to? 
     
    Its famously said that everyone has a story, everyone should be heard. 
     
    So, when we discover a particular author has a dark past, a difficult character, what do we do?   
     
    Europe was in the last century riven by two catastrophic world wars and a myriad of other local ones.  And like good citizens everywhere our thoughts are stilled by the word ‘Fascist’.  This word which originally meant many strands held together to make a stronger whole is now a one word response to evil and work done in its name. 
     
    In this volume our approach has been to take authors of then great renown, two of whom won the Nobel Prize, and compile a work from each which is seen in a literary context rather than in the heinous shadow of their political and social beliefs.   
     
    We are taught that authors write of their own experiences, but is that really true?  Can an author be separated from their nihilistic approach to politics and actually be a good writer who adds to our knowledge and experience rather than taint us with their reprehensible beliefs on their fellow man. 
     
    Its an ongoing argument.  Perhaps both sides are right.  Perhaps both sides are wrong.
    Ver libro