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      • Trusted Partner
        Children's & YA
        January 2020

        Let's Make Friends

        by Anastasia Merenkova (Author), Kateryna Razin’kova (Illustrator)

        This is the story of a little wolf. One day, the wolf's mother gave two candies to the little cub, one for him and one for a new friend, that he had yet to find. But he did not understand why he needed to find friends to share candies with. After all, he did not like to share, and he loved sweets very much! In the end, no one wants to be friends with a selfish animal, so how can our wolf cub even find one? Maybe he has to learn that happiness does not only mean candies?   From 3 to 5 years, 606 words. Rightsholders: hanna.bulhakova@ranok-school.com

      • Trusted Partner
        December 2018

        The Black Hole in the Classroom

        by Yang Peng

        Yang Peng's Award-winning Novels are a collection of the award-winning works of Yang Peng's many outstanding stories. Not only are the selected articles humorous, but also rich in imagination. They are also rich in profound educational philosophy that can enlighten the mind and help readers to reflect on themselves. There have been a lot of strange things happening in the classroom recently. Sometimes students' homeworks were lost. Other times some pencil sharpener or rubber may be missing. Is this because of someone who want to escape from writing homework or is there a thief in the classroom? When everyone talked about it, some people found out that there was actually a black hole in the classroom. The black hole sucked away all these things. Further, the more amazing thing is that not only can the black hole absorb substances, but also colors, viruses, selfish distractions and many other things. As a result, students would like to make a wish, asking the black hole to suck away what they didn't want ...

      • Nestorha

        by Zeynep Ünsal

        Nestorha not only narrates a story of a strong friendship but also shows how the greed and selfishness of a person may cause the destruction of both himself and the land called Nestorha.  When their dog went missing, five friends from a quiet lake town decided to enter the forbidden Black Forest to search for him. This mysterious forest, the subject of legends and incredible stories, was about to draw our heroes into the middle of a magical adventure. When they accidentally found themselves in a magical land, the legendary Nestorha, they were completely unaware of what was about to come. Together with the people of Nestorha and their guardians, they would have to fight an uphill battle to save Nestorha from danger and return home safely.

      • Individual artists, art monographs
        January 2019

        The Last Days of Mankind

        A Visual Guide to Karl Kraus’ Great War Epic

        by artwork by Deborah Sengl; contributions by Marjorie Perloff, Matthias Goldmann, Anna Souchuk and Paul Reitter

        "Eye-catching": Top 10 Anticipated Art Books Publishers Weekly   Garnering critical success over the past four years, Viennese artist Deborah Sengl has exhibited taxidermied rats, drawings and paintings to restage Karl Kraus’ infamous, nearly-unperformable play The Last Days of Mankind (Die Letzten Tage der Menschheit, 1915–22). Featuring Sengl’s entire installation, this edition includes essays that examine her ambitious dramaturgy, which condenses the 10-15 hour drama into an abridged reading of its themes: human barbarism, the role of journalism in war, the sway of popular opinion and the absurdities of nationalism. The Last Days of Mankind offers an agit-prop protest envisioning human folly through animal actors, who become more than human, while confronting a violence particular to humankind, laced with selfishness and greed.   The work is a hundred years old, but for me it is still current. We may not have war in the immediate vicinity, but the war within us is as strong, if not stronger, as it was then.– Deborah Sengl

      • Politics & government
        April 2021

        Against the Self-Righteous

        How we can do better for solidarity and the common good

        by Sahra Wagenknecht

        Solidarity, not selfishness   Urban, cosmopolitan, individualistic—for many people today, to be on the left has become a question of lifestyle. What is missing are political concepts for social solidarity that benefit low-earning women, poor migrant children, exploited temporary workers, and large sections of the middle class. In both Europe and the United States, an obsession with pronouns rather than equal opportunities and a dismissive attitude to culture and a sense of community risks alienating the left from large sections of the population while playing into the hands of the far right. In her new book, Sahra Wagenknecht outlines an alternative to a kind of left-liberalism that considers itself progressive, but in reality only deepens social divisions by being interested only in elite concerns and not taking social background seriously as a source of inequality. Here is a program to build a majority on the political left—for solidarity, not selfishness.   • A new book by the bestselling author • Develops Sahra Wagenknecht’s idea of a “left conservatism”

      • Children's & YA
        June 2019

        Memewald

        by Silvija Šesto, Tomislav Zlatić

        This is a story about a little boy named Marinko that became Memewald. Every time he would say the word “me”, he became smaller and smaller. In the end, he became so small that he could not fit into the world around him. Rejected and alone, sad and scared, he was lucky enough to meet other children just like him. They were all just as small as Marinko, but the trouble they went through together taught them to be bigger. They learned how to help, cooperate, comfort each other, and grow together.

      • Happy Stories - The Lost Birds

        by Mehmet Ali Özkan

        The blue dove, the black swallow and the white seagull get separated from their flocks because of their mistakes. Their selfishness and wanting to be like someone they are not keep them apart from their families. The three birds realize their mistakes and ask the wise owl what to do. What does the wise owl tell them? Will they get back together with their families. The answers are in this book.

      • Nondurha

        by Zeynep Ünsal

        Nestorha’s adventure is to be completed with the second book, Nondurha! After returning from their adventure in Nestorha, five friends turned back to their ordinary lives in their town. For two years they cherish Nestorha in their dreams until one day something unexpected happens and urge them to consider going back to Nestorha. Because this time they know that Nestorha is not the only place in danger. Upon their inquiries on how to return to Nestorha, they realize that they can in fact only go to Nondurha.   In Nondurha, on the other hand, other problems and dangers await all of them. The troubles and hassles which started with the closure of gates many years ago, had given a rather hard time to the people and animals in Nondurha.

      • September 2019

        Chinese Folktales (Interpretation from famous teachers)

        by MO Guofu

        This series is compiled according to the recommended bibliography of "happy reading bar" in each grade of the unified textbook, implements the teaching idea of "whole book reading", and cooperates with famous teachers to guide reading. It is a set of necessary classic books for primary and secondary school students. The book can help teachers and parents to guide students to read, and it can also be used as an explanation and answer section for students to read independently. This book selects classic Chinese folk stories. From these stories, we can read such excellent qualities as diligence, kindness, bravery, unity, loyalty, filial piety, justice, honesty, courage to love and hate, courage to sacrifice, etc., as well as ugly qualities such as ugliness, selfishness, tyranny, greed, cruelty and tolerance. Good is rewarded with good, evil is rewarded with evil, and the ending of the story can always inspire small readers Teaching, encouragement and hope.

      • Fiction
        November 2017

        Imagine Ghosts Telling Tales in front of Smoky Mirrors

        by S. L. Masunda

        S.L. Masunda’s debut novel – Imagine Ghosts Telling Tales in front of Smoky Mirrors – is a fictional memoir exploring a writer’s quest for literary recognition. However, the atrocities he commits in the name of ambition become increasingly gruesome until he is charged with murder, and swiftly declared insane. The story is threaded together by the writer’s narration as he switches from past to current musings and back again. We are drawn back in time to three key moments in the writer’s life that are seemingly pivotal to his current predicament – always being challenged to seek out redemption for our hero turned killer.  A macabre and tragic fable, where greed and selfishness, masked as love in all its forms, take centre stage.

      • Children's & YA

        Just a Small Town

        by Paul Linggood

        A small town that could be anywhere: industry is in decline, streets are in decay, many have left, while those left behind take short-term joy in drugs. Four young people are among the left behind. Alex consumes heroin to escape his abusive father. Jim hides from guilt after the death of the friend he didn’t save. Chelsi’s brother killed a local boy, and ostracism pushes her towards a rival gang, prostitution and loneliness. Danny is a hustler but needs protection from the drug gang that supplies him. Can any of them survive the addiction, gang life, isolation and manipulation? Their small town could be anywhere.

      • The King Full of Eggs

        The King Picture Book Series

        by Teruo Teramura, Shizuko Wakayama

        The story of the popular Japanese long-selling "The King Series" is now available as a picture book. A selfish, greedy, childlike king causes lots of trouble. The gluttonous, egg-loving King sends out a proclamation to the kingdom that says, "From now on, no one may eat eggs besides the King." What is the fate of the selfish King, who tried to keep delicious food all to himself...

      • Early learning / early learning concepts
        2016

        I can share things with others

        by Gruca, Magdalena

        Thanks to this book, your child will: will understand the importance of sharing things with other people; will learn about the consequences of being selfish; will fix the word “sorry” in his/her mind and will understand its relevance.

      • Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945)
        April 2009

        Tender Graces

        by Kathryn Magendie

        Book one in The Graces saga, following the emotional journey of a woman attempting to resolve the damage of her childhood with a loving but alcoholic father and a beautiful, selfish, often heartbreakingly self-deluding mother. Gorgeous lyrical storytelling and poignant human insights. By acclaimed poet and short story author Kathryn Magendie.

      • Traditional stories (Children's/YA)

        Pinocchio

        by rene cloke

        A lonely carpenter makes a wooden puppet which comes to life. The carpenter is thrilled to have a son at last and names him Pinocchio. But can Pinocchio leave his foolish, selfish ways behind and grow to become a real boy? A classic fairy tale, beautifully illustrated in a traditional style by Rene Cloke from the collectable Timeless Fairy Tale series.

      • Fiction
        May 2022

        CHOCOLATE BURNOUT

        Chocolate 4 Life

        by Emunah La-Paz

        Chantel Reed is a successful human resources professional in Seattle who has a hard time with relationships. She has drifted from her friends Astrid and Serenity after the death of their friend Alison; her oldest sister, Daria, the family’s maternal figure, is prickly and controlling; and she finally breaks up with her slacker boyfriend, Cameron, after she finds him cooking dinner for another woman in her apartment. Astrid and Serenity have different ideas about how Chantel should move on after the breakup. Chantel, who has always dated black men, is initially hesitant when Brandon, a white guy, asks her out. She quickly falls for him, and they come close to marriage despite push back from her family and racism from his. But when Brandon and Daria ask an attractive black man to test Chantel’s loyalty, her trust in everyone is shattered. Chantel enters a self-destructive spiral that wreaks havoc on her professional and personal lives in search of the history behind broken relationships past and pressent, within her secrative family. Emunah La-Paz brings this cast of characters to life on the page, with each one somehow more memorable than the last. They bring to light a comment on interracial relationships that is just as enjoyable to read as it is poignant. An intro to the prequel.  Featuring Chocolate Recipe and upcoming chocolate website from the characters. Redvelvetseattle.com

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