Junte-se a nós em uma viagem ao mundo dos livros!
Adicionar este livro à prateleira
Grey
Deixe um novo comentário Default profile 50px
Grey
Assine para ler o livro completo ou leia as primeiras páginas de graça!
All characters reduced
The Love-a-Duck and Other Stories - cover
LER

The Love-a-Duck and Other Stories

Stacy Aumonier

Editora: Al-Mashreq eBookstore

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Sinopse

The Love-a-Duck and Other Stories showcases Aumonier's versatility in storytelling, presenting a collection that ranges from the whimsical to the profound. Each tale offers a unique perspective on life's absurdities and the enduring human spirit, making for an engaging and thought-provoking read.
Disponível desde: 14/06/2025.
Comprimento de impressão: 200 páginas.

Outros livros que poderiam interessá-lo

  • A foreign country is the past - cover

    A foreign country is the past

    Fernando Sdrigotti

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The fifteen stories in A Foreign Country is the Past aren't glimpses into worlds, but worlds themselves. Entire lives are spun in each few pages as time reveals itself a strange fiction, everything ever present, leaking from the past into the future and back again. Sdrigotti's prose is immaculate, incisive and evocative with only the most minimal of gestures. The cumulative effect of reading these stories, which may all be in the same country, or same place, is disorienting, dazzling, and – crucially – re-orienting, as we rethink our own pasts, presents, and potential futures.
    – C.D. Rose
    
    
    At a secluded weekend home, a girl becomes entranced by the sound of the cicadas, as she grapples with the stifling summer heat, and her mother's recent death. Overwhelmed by a sense of foreboding, a young man seeks solace in a privatised cathedral, comically navigating religious bureaucracy, economic crisis, and existential angst. A journey to scatter his grandparents' ashes turns into a tragicomedy, as an unnamed man explores the changes in the city he left behind. A Foreign Country is the Past is the sensorial new collection from the acclaimed author of Jolts. Centering on identity and memory, viewed through a distinctive Argentine lens, these fifteen tales are a profound exploration of the spaces between places and the echoes of time.
    Ver livro
  • Young Goodman Brown - cover

    Young Goodman Brown

    Nathaniel Hawthorne

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Delve into the dark and mysterious world of "Young Goodman Brown" by Nathaniel Hawthorne, now available as an enthralling audiobook. In this haunting tale, listeners will accompany the young Puritan Goodman Brown on a journey through the New England wilderness, where he encounters sinister forces and confronts the darkness lurking within his own soul. 
    As the story unfolds, listeners will be drawn into a web of suspense and intrigue, as Goodman Brown grapples with temptation, doubt, and the nature of sin. With its rich symbolism and atmospheric prose, "Young Goodman Brown" explores timeless themes of morality, hypocrisy, and the human capacity for both good and evil. 
    Perfect for fans of Gothic literature and psychological horror, this audiobook delivers a chilling performance that will keep listeners on the edge of their seats until the very end. Whether you're a longtime admirer of Hawthorne's work or new to the genre, "Young Goodman Brown" promises to captivate and unsettle. 
    So, if you're ready to experience a journey into the heart of darkness, start listening to "Young Goodman Brown" today and immerse yourself in the haunting beauty of Nathaniel Hawthorne's classic tale. Start Listening to "Young Goodman Brown" today!
    Ver livro
  • Araby - From their pens to your ears genius in every story - cover

    Araby - From their pens to your...

    James Joyce

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    James Augustine Aloysius Joyce was born on the 2nd February 1882 in Dublin into a middle-class family, and the eldest of ten surviving siblings 
    Admired as a brilliant student he briefly attended the Christian Brothers-run O'Connell School before excelling at the Jesuit schools of Clongowes and Belvedere.  From there he went on to attend University College Dublin from 1898, studying English, French and Italian 
    In 1902, Joyce was now in his early twenties, and went to Paris to study Medicine but soon abandoned his teachings.  Back in Dublin to attend to his dying Mother he met Nora Barnacle. They bonded immediately into a life-long match. Together they decided to emigrate to Europe.  The couple lived in Trieste, Rome, Paris, and finally Zürich where Joyce pursued a variety of jobs and ventures to supplement his literary pursuits but none of these paid off.  
    After publishing a poetry volume, ‘Chamber Music’, in 1907, his short story collection ‘The Dubliners’, in 1914, helped establish his talent in the rapidly changing world.  
    Although far from home Joyce’s literary heart and works were set in his recollections of Dublin.  Characters are close resemblances of family and friends and indeed enemies.  His landmark work ‘Ulysses’, published in 1922, is set in the streets and alleyways of the city as it parallels Homer’s Odyssey in a variety of styles including its famed stream of consciousness. 
    His pen continued to produce classics of the order of ‘A Portrait of the Artist as A Young Man’ and ‘Finnegan’s Wake’ together with several volumes of poetry and a play ‘The Exiles, in 1918.   
    On the 11th January 1941, Joyce underwent surgery in Zürich for a perforated duodenal ulcer. The next day he fell into a coma. On the 13th after a brief period of lucidity in which he called for his wife and son he passed.  He was 58.
    Ver livro
  • Blood - From their pens to your ears genius in every story - cover

    Blood - From their pens to your...

    Hanns Heinz Ewers

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Hanns Heinz Ewers was born on 3rd November 1871 in Düsseldorf, Germany. 
    His first published poem was at 17 on the death, after a reign of only 99 days, of the German Emperor Frederick III. 
    A stint in the German military was cut short after only 44 days because of his myopia.  Writing was to be the way forward for him with a book of satiric verse published in 1901. At the same time he co-founded a literary vaudeville troupe that toured central and eastern Europe before censors and expenses forced its closure.  An inveterate traveller he was in South America when the Great War enveloped Europe and he relocated to New York. 
    From here his story darkens. Although by now a successful and admired author he was arrested in the U S in 1918 as a German Agent on the pretext of his travels and a falsified Swiss passport. Interned, he was released in 1921 and returned to Germany.  He claimed only to be raising money for the German Red Cross. 
    His literary fame is decidedly easier to clarify. His novels beginning with ‘The Sorcerer’s Apprentice’ in 1910 are dark, they bristle with evil intent and are littered with characters who have a dubious moral compass and yet, along with his short stories, are brazen, brilliant feats of literary narrative. 
    He also wrote and published plays, fairy tales, opera librettos, critical essays and lectured for many years on ‘The Religion of Satan’ and was one of the first to write scripts for the cinema, which he considered a legitimate art form. 
    As the Weimar republic began its chaotic death throes Ewers became attracted to the rising Nazi Party.  At first he was warmly received despite disagreeing with its anti-semitism (his most famed literary character had a Jewish mistress) and he was even commissioned by Hitler to write a biography of the Nazi martyr Horst Wessel.  This together with his own homosexuality culminated with his works being banned in 1934 and his assets and property seized.  It took him many years to have the ban lifted.  This association rightfully clouds his personal reputation but has meant his literary contributions are also overlooked and neglected. 
    Hanns Heinz Ewers died of tuberculosis on 12th June 1943 in his Berlin apartment.
    Ver livro
  • Goose Fair - cover

    Goose Fair

    D H Lawrence

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    'Goose Fair' was written by D H Lawrence in 1910. Lawrence sets his story against the backdrop of the industrial troubles caused by the Franco-Prussian war of 1870. A young woman is torn between her need for a lover and her contempt for what she perceives to be his dishonesty in the burning down of a mill. Is all love a compromise between the ideal and the reality of life?
    Ver livro
  • Use Me - cover

    Use Me

    Elissa Schappell

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The exquisitely artful fiction debut of Vanity Fair columnist Elissa Schappell is a novel told in ten stories that resonate with the most profound experiences in the life of a young woman -- friendship and rivalry, the love for a man, the birth of a child, and the death of a father.
    Ver livro