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'Papa, why do you dance when you walk?' When Aden's 8-year-old
daughter asks him this one morning in Paris, he is taken aback. The
question is innocent, but the answer is not so simple. Unable to
resist Bea's inquisitive spirit, he moves silkily between memories
of his childhood: from his silent, mysterious mother and the shanty
roofs of his neighbourhood to the malicious attack that changed his
life forever and the ensuing struggle that made him a man.
Anchoring his memories is a Djibouti on the cusp of independence; a
land of shifting deserts and immense heat, French-from-France
ex-pats, and one lonely and sick boy finding solace in books. Why
Do You Dance When You Walk is a poignant and timeless story of the
complexity of family, the value of poetry and freedom, and the
ripple effect of the traumas that stalk our movement.
This volume gathers the latest advances, innovations and
applications in the field of condition monitoring, plant
maintenance and reliability, as presented by leading international
researchers and engineers at the 5th International Conference on
Maintenance Engineering and the 2020 Annual Conference of the
Centre for Efficiency and Performance Engineering Network (IncoME-V
& CEPE Net-2020), held in Zhuhai, China on October 23-25, 2020.
Topics include vibro-acoustics monitoring, condition-based
maintenance, sensing and instrumentation, machine health
monitoring, maintenance auditing and organization, non-destructive
testing, reliability, asset management, condition monitoring,
life-cycle cost optimisation, prognostics and health management,
maintenance performance measurement, manufacturing process
monitoring, and robot-based monitoring and diagnostics. The
contributions, which were selected through a rigorous international
peer-review process, share exciting ideas that will spur novel
research directions and foster new multidisciplinary
collaborations.
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The Master (Hardcover)
Nicole Ball, David Ball, Patrick Rambaud
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R575
R475
Discovery Miles 4 750
Save R100 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The extraordinary life of Zhuang Zhou sits halfway between fable
and philosophy. “It was twenty-five centuries ago in the land of
Song, between the Yellow River and the River Huai: Zhuang Zhou was
born without a cry with his eyes wide open.† Welcome to
China in the fifth century BCE, a colorful, violent, unstable world
into which Zhuang is born. Here royals raise huge armies,
constantly waging wars against one another. They have slaves,
concubines. Gold is everywhere. And so is hunger. Born rich and
entitled, Zhuang learns to refuse any official function. His
travels bring him closer to ordinary people, from whom he learns
how to live a simple and useful life. This is how he will become
one of the greatest Chinese philosophers who gave his name to his
legendary book, the Zhuangzi, one of the two foundational texts of
Taoism—a magnificent procession of lively stories in which we
meet dwarfs, virtuous bandits, butchers, powerful lords in their
castles, turtles, charming concubines, and false sages. In this
remarkable bildungsroman, award-winning French novelist Patrick
Rambaud spins out the extraordinary life of Zhuang Zhou—a poetic,
cruel, and often humorous tale, halfway between fable and
philosophy.
Global experts, in conjunction with the International Association
for the Study of Lung Cancer, bring you up to date with today's
best approaches to lung cancer diagnosis, treatment, and follow-up.
IASLC Thoracic Oncology, 2nd Edition, keeps you abreast of the
entire scope of this fast-changing field, from epidemiology to
diagnosis to treatment to advocacy. Written in a straightforward,
practical style for the busy clinician, this comprehensive,
multidisciplinary title is a must-have for anyone involved in the
care of patients with lung cancer and other thoracic malignancies.
Offers practical, relevant coverage of basic science, epidemiology,
pulmonology, medical and radiation oncology, surgery, pathology,
palliative care, nursing, and advocacy. Provides authoritative
guidance from the IASLC - the only global organization dedicated to
the study of lung cancer. Includes new content on molecular
testing, immunotherapy, early detection, staging and the IASLC
staging system, surgical resection for stage I and stage II lung
cancer, and stem cells in lung cancer. Features a new full-color
design throughout, as well as updated diagnostic algorithms. Expert
ConsultT eBook version included with purchase. This enhanced eBook
experience allows you to search all of the text, figures, Q&As,
and references from the book on a variety of devices.
This volume gathers the latest advances, innovations and
applications in the field of condition monitoring, plant
maintenance and reliability, as presented by leading international
researchers and engineers at the 5th International Conference on
Maintenance Engineering and the 2020 Annual Conference of the
Centre for Efficiency and Performance Engineering Network (IncoME-V
& CEPE Net-2020), held in Zhuhai, China on October 23-25, 2020.
Topics include vibro-acoustics monitoring, condition-based
maintenance, sensing and instrumentation, machine health
monitoring, maintenance auditing and organization, non-destructive
testing, reliability, asset management, condition monitoring,
life-cycle cost optimisation, prognostics and health management,
maintenance performance measurement, manufacturing process
monitoring, and robot-based monitoring and diagnostics. The
contributions, which were selected through a rigorous international
peer-review process, share exciting ideas that will spur novel
research directions and foster new multidisciplinary
collaborations.
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The Red Sofa (Hardcover)
Michele Lesbre; Translated by David Ball, Nicole Ball
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R480
Discovery Miles 4 800
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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In The Red Sofa, we meet Anne, a young woman setting off on the
Trans-Siberian Railway in order to find her former lover, Gyl, who
left twenty years before. As the train moves across post-Soviet
Russia and its devastated landscapes, Anne reflects on her past
with Gyl and their patriotic struggles, as well as on the neighbor
she has just left behind, Clemence Barrot. Rocked by the train's
movements Anne is moved by her memory of Clemence, who is old and
whose memory is failing, but who has not lost her taste for life
and adventure. Ensconced on her red sofa at home, Clemence loves to
tell Anne her life story, mourning lost loved ones and celebrating
the lives of brave, rebellious women who went before her.
Eventually, Anne's train trip returns her home having not found
Gyl, but having found something much more meaningful herself. "A
luminous novel about desire, a clear text about the joy of living."
Prix Pierre Mac Orlan 2007
"Everything starts with a song and everything ends with another
song," says the narrator of The Divine Song. Paris is an old Sufi
cat who keeps watch over his brilliant yet pathetic master, Sammy
Kamau-Williams, the Enchanter. In Sammy, we recognize the African
American singer-composer, poet, and novelist Gil Scott-Heron who is
best known for his song "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised." The
Divine Song takes us from the shores of Africa to Sammy's
ancestors' arrival in the Americas in the hold of the slave ships.
From there, Abdourahman A. Waberi takes the characters from
Tennessee--under the tutelage of Lili Williams, Sammy's beloved
African-born grandmother--to New York and the concert halls of
Paris and Berlin, wherever blues and jazz find an enchanted
audience. African tales, religious practices, segregation, the
civil rights movement, addiction, and jail--Sammy's life comes to
encompass the whole of the African American experience. At a time
when social and racial divisions have yet again come into sharp
relief, this lyrical novel by one of African literature's rising
stars is necessary reading for anyone who celebrates the resilience
of art.
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Passage of Tears (Paperback)
Abdourahman A Waberi; Translated by David Ball, Nicole Ball
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R436
Discovery Miles 4 360
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Passage of Tears cleverly mixes many genres and forms of
writing--spy novel, political thriller, diary (replete with
childhood memories), travel notebook, legends, parables,
incantations, and prayers. Djibril's reminiscences provide a sense
of Djibouti's past and its people, while a satire of Muslim
fundamentalism is unwittingly delivered through the other
Djiboutian voice. Waberi's inventive parody is a lesson in
tolerance, while his poetic observations reveal his love and
concern for his homeland.
Winner of the French-American Foundation Translation Prize for
Nonfiction Jean Guehenno's Diary of the Dark Years, 1940-1945 is
the most oft-quoted piece of testimony on life in occupied France.
A sharply observed record of day-to-day life under Nazi rule in
Paris and a bitter commentary on literary life in those years, it
has also been called "a remarkable essay on courage and cowardice"
(Caroline Moorehead, Wall Street Journal). Here, David Ball
provides not only the first English-translation of this important
historical document, but also the first ever annotated, corrected
edition. Guehenno was a well-known political and cultural critic,
left-wing but not communist, and uncompromisingly anti-fascist.
Unlike most French writers during the Occupation, he refused to pen
a word for a publishing industry under Nazi control. He expressed
his intellectual, moral, and emotional resistance in this diary:
his shame at the Vichy government's collaboration with Nazi
Germany, his contempt for its falsely patriotic reactionary
ideology, his outrage at its anti-Semitism and its vilification of
the Republic it had abolished, his horror at its increasingly
savage repression and his disgust with his fellow intellectuals who
kept on blithely writing about art and culture as if the Occupation
did not exist - not to mention those who praised their new masters
in prose and poetry. Also a teacher of French literature, he
constantly observed the young people he taught, sometimes saddened
by their conformism but always passionately trying to inspire them
with the values of the French cultural tradition he loved.
Guehenno's diary often includes his own reflections on the great
texts he is teaching, instilling them with special meaning in the
context of the Occupation. Complete with meticulous notes and a
biographical index, Ball's edition of Guehenno's epic diary offers
readers a deeper understanding not only of the diarist's cultural
allusions, but also of the dramatic, historic events through which
he lived.
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The Wound (Paperback)
Laurent Mauvignier; Translated by David Ball, Nicole Ball; Foreword by Nick Flynn
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R561
R469
Discovery Miles 4 690
Save R92 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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“Where is your wound?†asks Jean Genet in the lines Laurent
Mauvignier uses as an epigraph to The Wound. By the time we have
finished this four-part novel, we realize that for many the wound
lies four decades back in “the Events†that people have
tried to not talk about ever since: the Algerian War.
  Chronicling the lives of two cousins—Bernard and
Rabut—both in the present and at the time of the Algerian War of
Independence in the 1960s, we get a full picture of the lasting
effects this event had on the men who were involved. Through the
fragments of their stories we see the whole history of the war: its
atrocities, its horrors, and its hatreds. Mauvignier shows readers
how the Algerian War, always present yet always repressed, has
sickened the emotional and moral life of everyone it touched—and
France itself, perhaps. The epigraph, like the novel, suggests that
wounded men may even become the wound itself.  Â
Jean Guehenno's Diary of the Dark Years, 1940-1945 is the most
oft-quoted piece of testimony on life in occupied France. A sharply
observed record of day-to-day life under Nazi rule in Parisand a
bitter commentary on literary life in those years, it has also been
called "a remarkable essay on courage and cowardice" (Caroline
Moorehead, Wall Street Journal). Here, David Ball provides not only
the first English-translation of this important historical
document, but also the first ever annotated, corrected edition.
Guehenno was a well-known political and cultural critic, left-wing
but not communist, and uncompromisingly anti-fascist. Unlike most
French writers during the Occupation, he refused to pen a word for
a publishing industry under Nazi control. He expressed his
intellectual, moral, and emotional resistance in this diary: his
shame at the Vichy government's collaboration with Nazi Germany,
his contempt for its falsely patriotic reactionary ideology, his
outrage at its anti-Semitism and its vilification of the Republic
it had abolished, his horror at its increasingly savage repression
and his disgust with his fellow intellectuals who kept on blithely
writing about art and culture as if the Occupation did not exist -
not to mention those who praised their new masters in prose and
poetry. Also a teacher of French literature, he constantly observed
the young people he taught, sometimes saddened by their conformism
but always passionately trying to inspire them with the values of
the French cultural tradition he loved. Guehenno's diary often
includes his own reflections on the great texts he is teaching,
instilling them with special meaning in the context of the
Occupation. Complete with meticulous notes and a biographical
index, Ball's edition of Guehenno's epic diary offers readers a
deeper understanding not only of the diarist's cultural allusions,
but also of the dramatic, historic events through which he lived."
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The Red Sofa (Paperback)
Michele Lesbre; Translated by David Ball, Nicole Ball
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R293
R187
Discovery Miles 1 870
Save R106 (36%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
|
Now in paperback, The Red Sofa is a quiet French novella exploring
love, memory, and the perspective that travel gives us on both. In
The Red Sofa, we meet Anne, a young woman setting off on the
Trans-Siberian Railway in order to find her former lover, Gyl, who
left twenty years before. As the train moves across post-Soviet
Russia and its devastated landscapes, Anne reflects on her past
with Gyl and their patriotic struggles, as well as on the neighbor
she has just left behind, Clemence Barrot. Rocked by the train's
movements Anne is moved by her memory of Clemence, who is old and
whose memory is failing, but who has not lost her taste for life
and adventure. Ensconced on her red sofa at home, Clemence loves to
tell Anne her life story, mourning lost loved ones and celebrating
the lives of brave, rebellious women who went before her.
Eventually, Anne's train trip returns her home having not found
Gyl, but having found something much more meaningful-herself.
Historians agree: the diary of Leon Werth (1878-1955) is one of the
most precious-and readable-pieces of testimony ever written about
life in France under Nazi occupation and the Vichy regime. Werth
was a free-spirited, unclassifiable writer, the author of eleven
novels, art and dance criticism, acerbic political reporting, and
memorable personal essays. He was Jewish, and left Paris in June
1940 to hide out in his wife's country house in Saint-Amour, a
small village in the Jura Mountains: his short memoir, 33 Days
recounts his struggle to get there. Deposition tells of daily life
in the village, on nearby farms and towns, and finally back in
Paris, where he draws the portrait of a Resistance network in his
apartment and writes an eyewitness report of the insurrection that
freed the city in August, 1944. From Saint-Amour, we see both the
Resistance in the countryside, derailing troop trains, punishing
notorious collaborators-and growing repression: arrests, torture,
deportation, and executions. Above all, we see how Vichy and the
Occupation affect the lives of farmers and villagers and how their
often contradictory attitudes evolve from 1940-1944. Werth's ear
for dialogue and novelist's gift for creating characters animate
the diary: in the markets and in town, we meet real French peasants
and shopkeepers, railroad men and the patronne of the cafe at the
station, schoolteachers and gendarmes. They come off the page
alive, and the countryside and villages come alive with them. With
biting irony, Werth records, almost daily, what Vichy-German
propaganda was saying on the radio and in the press. And we follow
the progress of the war as people did then, day by day. These
entries make interesting, often amusing reading, a stark contrast
with his gripping entries on the persecution and deportation of the
Jews. Deposition is a varied, complex, piece of living history, and
a pleasure to read.
Nico and Maria, Maltese brother and sister, are separated when
young Nico is abducted by Moorish slavers. Taken to Algiers to be
the personal slave of a wealthy merchant, he becomes a pawn in
household politics and sets out to escape. Extraordinary events
lead him to the court of Suleiman the Magnificent, Sultan of the
Ottomans. Stranded alone on Malta, Maria must learn to survive
helped only by a group of Jewish refugees. A sweeping historical
epic set against the backdrop of the desperate conflict between
Christian Europe and the Islamic Ottoman Empire, The Sword and the
Scimitar vividly portrays an irresistible and fast-moving world of
adventure, war, treachery and love.
The second edition of this title represents a compilation of work
completed by Jim Cooper and his colleagues in the Network for
Cooperative Learning in higher education over the last fifteen
years, including eight new chapters were written specifically for
this edition. It presents a look at the history of small group
instruction research, theory and practice and offers a glimpse at
the future of this powerful instructional strategy.
In a literary reversal as deadly serious as it is wickedly satiric,
this novel by the acclaimed French-speaking African writer
Abdourahman A. Waberi turns the fortunes of the world upside down.
On this reimagined globe a stream of sorry humanity flows from the
West, from the slums of America and the squalor of Europe, to
escape poverty and desperation in the prosperous United States of
Africa. It is in this world that an African doctor on a
humanitarian mission to France adopts a child. Now a young artist,
this girl, Malaika, travels to the troubled land of her birth in
hope of finding her mother--and perhaps something of her lost self.
Her search, at times funny and strange, is also deeply poignant,
reminding us at every moment of the turns of fate we call truth.
From the acclaimed author of "Empires of Sand" comes a mesmerizing
new adventure that Jean Auel cites as "crowded with events that
both forecast and mirror the conflicts of today." Sweeping from the
drawing rooms of Paris to the palace of Suleiman the Magnificent to
the dark hold of a slave ship racing across the sea, here is a
dazzling story of love and valor, innocence and identity, an epic
novel of the clash of civilizations on a barren island where the
future was forged.
The Mediterranean, the sixteenth century: Lying squarely in the
midst of the vital sea lanes between the Christian West and the
Ottoman Empire in the East, and ruled by the ancient Order of the
Knights of St. John, Malta will become the stage upon which the
fate of the world turns. For one of its sons, the hand of violence
strikes swiftly, when young Nicolo Borg is seized by Barbary
slavers and launched on a remarkable journey to the court of the
supreme ruler of the Muslim world. Renamed Asha, plotting his
escape even as he swears allegiance to the god of his masters and
is schooled in the arts of culture and war, the innocent boy will
be transformed into one of the Sultan's deadliest commanders.
For Nico's beloved sister, Maria, his loss fires her hatred for the
knights who did nothing to save him and her dreams of escape from
her stifling home. As the headstrong girl grows into a fierce
beauty, she will capture the attention of one man in particular,
Christien de Vries, a surgeon-knight torn between duty and desire,
caught up in Malta's frantic preparations against the coming
Ottoman storm. Around Nico and Maria are men and women who will
share their destinies: Dragut Rais, a brilliant corsair, arch-rival
of the knights...Giulio Salvago, a priest in full flight from his
carnal nature...Alisa, a young beauty hidden away in a harem...Jean
de La Valette, the master knight who is Malta's only hope for
survival.
As the mighty Ottoman fleet bears down on the tiny island, as Nico
Borg makes his way back to his homeland at the helm of a warship,
Ironfire moves inexorably to a shattering climax where all will
face ultimate justice in the murderous cauldron of siege warfare.
Brilliantly capturing the crosscurrents of a storied age, Ironfire
is historical fiction in the grand tradition, a stirring
realization of a pivotal moment in time that irrevocably shaped the
world we inhabit today.
"From the Hardcover edition."
Henri Michaux defies common critical definition. Critics have
compared his work to such diverse artists as Kafka, Goya, Swift,
Klee, and Beckett. Allen Ginsberg called Michaux "genius," and
Jorge Luis Borges wrote that Michaux's work "is without equal in
the literature of our time." This anthology contains substantial
selections from almost all of Michaux's major works, most never
before published in English, and allows readers to explore the
haunting verbal and pictorial landscape of a twentieth-century
visionary.
A text that truly embodies its name, CHEMISTRY: PRINCIPLES AND
PRACTICE connects the chemistry students learn in the classroom
(principles) with real-world uses of chemistry (practice). The
authors accomplish this by starting each chapter with an
application drawn from a chemical field of interest and revisiting
that application throughout the chapter. The Case Studies, Practice
of Chemistry essays, and Ethics in Chemistry questions reinforce
the connection of chemistry topics to areas such as forensics,
organic chemistry, biochemistry, and industry.
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