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Showing 1 - 25 of
27 matches in All Departments
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Blue Boy (Hardcover)
Jean Giono
bundle available
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R987
Discovery Miles 9 870
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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BLUE BOY by JEAN GIONO. CHAPTER I. Mof my age here remember the
time when he road to Sainte-Tulle was bordered by a erried row of
poplars. It is a Lombard cus om to plant poplars along the wayside.
This road came, with its procession of trees, from the very heart
of Piedmont. It straddled Mont Genevre, it flowed along the Alps,
it caine all the way with its burden of long creaking carts and its
knots of curly-haired countrymen who strode along with their songs
and their hussar pantaloons flutter ing in the breeze. It came this
far but no farther. It came with all its trees, its two-wheeled
carts, and its Pied monteses, as far as the little hill called
Toutes-Aures. Here, it looked back. From this point it saw in the
hazy distance the misty peak of the Vaucluse, hot and muddy,
steaming like cabbage soup. Here it was assailed by the odors of
coarse vegetables, fertile land, and the plain. From here, on fine
days, could be seen the still pallor of the whitewashed farmhouses
and the slow kneeling of the fat peasants in the rows of
vegetables. On windy days, the heavy odors of dung heaps surged in
waves along with the broken, bloody bodies of storms from the
Rhone. At this point the poplars stopped. The carts rolled noisily
into the jaws of the way side inns with their loads of corn flour
and black wine. The carters said, Porca wwdona They sneezed like
mules that have snuffed up pipe smoke, and they stayed on this side
of the hill with the poplars and the carts. The chief inn was
called Au Territoire de Piemont. In those days, our country was
made up of meadows and fair orchards that used to unfold in a
magnificent spring time as soon as the warm weather came up the
Durance Valley. They knewhow to recognize the approach of the long
days. By what means, no one knows. By some bird cry or by that
burst of green flame that lights up the hills on April evenings.
They would simply begin to flutter while the frost was still on the
grass, and, one fine morning, just when the bluish heat weighed
upon the rocky bed of the Durance, the gaily flowered orchards
would begin to sing in the warm breeze. That we have all seen from
the time we were mere urchins in our black school smocks. I
remember my father's workroom. I can never pass by a shoemaker's
shop without thinking that my father still exists, somewhere beyond
this world, sitting at a spirit table with his blue apron, his
shoemaker's knife, his wax-ends, his awls, making shoes of angel
leather for some thousand legged god. I was able to recognize
strange steps on the stairs. I could hear my mother saying below,
It is on the third floor. Go up, you will see the light. And the
voice would reply, Grazia, signora And then the sound of the feet.
They stumbled on that soapstone step near the top of the first
flight. The loose boards in the landing rattled be neath the heavy
boots. Their hands pressed against the two walls in the darkness.
Here comes one of them, said my father. Putamr That is a Romagnol,
said my father. And the man would enter. I remember that my father
always gave them the chair near the window, then he would lift his
spectacles. He would begin to speak in Italian to the man who sat
erect, hands on thighs, all perfumed with wine and new corduroy.
Sometimes it took a long time. At others, the smile came almost at
once. My father spoke without gestures, or with very slow ones,
because he held a shoe in one hand and theawl in the other. He
would talk until he saw the smile. It was useless for the other to
haul out papers, to tap on his papers with the back of his hand.
Porca di Dior Until the smile appeared my father talked on, and
some times the other would say in a hushed tone, Che bellezza! Then
the man would smile. Moreover, they did not come to my father at
once. I do not know by what miracle they came. ...
Twenty years ago Chelsea Green published the first trade edition
of The Man Who Planted Trees, a timeless eco-fable about what one
person can do to restore the earth. The hero of the story, Elzeard
Bouffier, spent his life planting one hundred acorns a day in a
desolate, barren section of Provence in the south of France. The
result was a total transformation of the landscape-from one devoid
of life, with miserable, contentious inhabitants, to one filled
with the scent of flowers, the songs of birds, and fresh, flowing
water.
Since our first publication, the book has sold over a quarter of
a million copies and inspired countless numbers of people around
the world to take action and plant trees. On National Arbor Day,
April 29, 2005, Chelsea Green released a special twentieth
anniversary edition with a new foreword by Wangari Maathai, winner
of the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize and founder of the African Green Belt
Movement.
'And so, with great care, he planted his hundred acorns' While
hiking through the wild lavender in a wind-swept, desolate valley
in Provence, a man comes across a solitary shepherd called Elzeard
Bouffier. Staying with him, he watches Elzeard sorting and then
planting hundreds of acorns as he walks through the wilderness. Ten
years later, after surviving the First World War, he visits the
shepherd again. A young forest is slowly spreading over the valley
- Elzeard has continued his work. Year after year the narrator
returns to see the miracle being created: a verdant, green
landscape that is testament to one man's creative instinct. miracle
he is gradually creating: a verdant, green landscape that is a
testament to one man's creative instinct. 'I love the humanity of
this story and how one man's efforts can change the future for so
many' Michael Morpurgo, Independent VINTAGE EARTH is a series of
books that reveals our ever-changing relationship with the
environment. These are stories old and young, set in worlds real or
imagined, that allow us to explore our connection to the natural
world. Transformative, wild, surprising and essential, these novels
take on the most urgent story of our times.
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The Man Who Planted Trees (Paperback, Revised)
Jean Giono; Illustrated by Harry Brockway; Translated by Barbara Bray; Introduction by Richard Mabey
2
bundle available
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R233
R188
Discovery Miles 1 880
Save R45 (19%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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The narrator of this allegorical tale, journeying by foot across the barren plains of the lower Alps, has his thirst assuaged by the well water drawn by the shepherd Elzéard Bouffier. Thus begins the subtle parable that Giono weaves of the life-giving shepherd who chooses to live alone and carry out the work of God. Over forty years the desolate hills and lifeless villages which so oppressed the traveller are transformed by the dedication of one man. All with the help of a few acorns. Written in the 1950s, Giono’s brief story, which he hoped would help set in motion a worldwide reforestation programme, had a message ahead of its time. It has inspired many readers over the years to rediscover the harmonies of the countryside and prevent its wilful destruction. This edition is enhanced by Harry Brockway’s delightful engravings and by an afterword by Alyne Giono.
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The Open Road (Paperback)
Jean Giono, Paul Eprile
bundle available
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R470
R381
Discovery Miles 3 810
Save R89 (19%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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A renowned writer and committed pacifist throughout the 1930s - a
conviction that resulted in his imprisonment before and after the
Occupation - Jean Giono spent the war in the village of Contadour
in Provence, where he wrote, corresponded with other writers, and
cared for his consumptive daughter. This journal records his
musings on art and literature, his observations of life, his
interactions with the machinery of the collaborationist Vichy
regime, as well as his forceful political convictions.
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Ennemonde (Paperback)
Jean Giono, Bill Johnston
bundle available
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R422
R324
Discovery Miles 3 240
Save R98 (23%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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A King Alone (Paperback, Main)
Alyson Waters, Jean Giono
1
bundle available
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R489
R393
Discovery Miles 3 930
Save R96 (20%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Perhaps no other of his novels better reveals Giono's perfect balance between lyricism and narrative, description and characterization, the epic and the particular, than The Horseman on the Roof. This novel, which Giono began writing in 1934 and which was published in 1951, expanded and solidified his reputation as one of Europe's most important writers.
This is a novel of adventure, a roman courtois, that tells the story of Angelo, a nobleman who has been forced to leave Italy because of a duel, and is returning to his homeland by way of Provence. But that region is in the grip of a cholera epidemic, travelers are being imprisoned behind barricades, and exposure to the disease is almost certain.
Angelo's escapades, adventures, and heroic self-sacrifice in this hot, hallucinatory landscape, among corpses, criminals and rioting townspeople, share this epic tale.
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Blue Boy (Paperback)
Jean Giono
bundle available
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R785
Discovery Miles 7 850
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Text extracted from opening pages of book: BLUE BOY BY JEAN GIONO
TRANSLATED FROM THE FRENCH BY KATHERINE A. CLARKE NEW YORK THE
VIKING PRESS MCMXLVI BLUE BOY CHAPTER I Mof my age here remember
the time when he road to Sainte-Tulle was bordered by a erried row
of poplars. It is a Lombard cus om to plant poplars along the
wayside. This road came, with its procession of trees, from the
very heart of Piedmont. It straddled Mont Genevre, it flowed along
the Alps, it caine all the way with its burden of long creaking
carts and its knots of curly-haired countrymen who strode along
with their songs and their hussar pantaloons flutter ing in the
breeze. It came this far but no farther. It came with all its
trees, its two-wheeled carts, and its Pied monteses, as far as the
little hill called Toutes-Aures. Here, it looked back. From this
point it saw in the hazy distance the misty peak of the Vaucluse,
hot and muddy, steaming like cabbage soup. Here it was assailed by
the odors of coarse vegetables, fertile land, and the plain. From
here, on fine days, could be seen the still pallor of the
whitewashed farmhouses and the slow kneeling of the fat peasants in
the rows of vegetables. On windy days, the heavy odors of dung
heaps surged in waves along with the broken, bloody 4 Blue Boy
bodies of storms from the Rhone. At this point the poplars stopped.
The carts rolled noisily into the jaws of the way side inns with
their loads of corn flour and black wine. The carters said, Porca
wwdona They sneezed like mules that have snuffed up pipe smoke, and
they stayed on this side of the hill with the poplars and the
carts. The chief inn was called Au Territoire de Piemont. In those
days, our country was madeup of meadows and fair orchards that used
to unfold in a magnificent spring time as soon as the warm weather
came up the Durance Valley. They knew how to recognize the approach
of the long days. By what means, no one knows. By some bird cry or
by that burst of green flame that lights up the hills on April
evenings. They would simply begin to flutter while the frost was
still on the grass, and, one fine morning, just when the bluish
heat weighed upon the rocky bed of the Durance, the gaily flowered
orchards would begin to sing in the warm breeze. That we have all
seen from the time we were mere urchins in our black school smocks.
I remember my father's workroom. I can never pass by a shoemaker's
shop without thinking that my father still exists, somewhere beyond
this world, sitting at a spirit table with his blue apron, his
shoemaker's knife, his wax-ends, his awls, making shoes of angel
leather for some thousand legged god. I was able to recognize
strange steps on the stairs. I could hear my mother saying below,
It is on the third floor. Go up, you will see the light. Blue Boy 5
And the voice would reply, Grazia, signora And then the sound of
the feet. They stumbled on that soapstone step near the top of the
first flight. The loose boards in the landing rattled be neath the
heavy boots. Their hands pressed against the two walls in the
darkness. Here comes one of them, said my father. Putamr That is a
Romagnol, said my father. And the man would enter. I remember that
my father always gave them the chair near the window, then he would
lift his spectacles. He would begin to speak in Italian to the man
who sat erect, hands on thighs, all perfumed with wine and new
corduroy. Sometimes ittook a long time. At others, the smile came
almost at once. My father spoke without gestures, or with very slow
ones, because he held a shoe in one hand and the awl in the other.
He would talk until he saw the smile. It was useless for the other
to haul out papers, to tap on his papers with the back of his hand.
Porca di Dior Until the smile appeared my father talked on, and
some times the other would say in a hushed tone, Che bellezza! Then
the man would smile. Moreover, they did not come to my father at
once. I do not know by what miracle they came. It must have bee
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Hill (Paperback)
Jean Giono; Translated by Paul Eprile; Introduction by David Abram
bundle available
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R337
R255
Discovery Miles 2 550
Save R82 (24%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Set in Trieves, France, during the winter of 1843, this novel tells
the story of Langlois, a dark and entrancing character. As a small
town remains buried under snow, a series of mysterious events
occurs: a girl disappears, a young man is attacked, and a pig is
maimed. The frightened villagers ask the police for help, and they
arrive in the village led by the enigmatic Langlois, a man who is
soon revealed as being capable of carrying out the most monstrous
and cruel acts--as well as the most compassionate. "Ambientada en
Trieves, Francia, durante el invierno de 1843, esta novela narra la
historia de Langlois, un personaje oscuro y fascinante. Mientras un
pequeno pueblo permanece sepultado bajo la nieve, se produce una
serie de eventos misteriosos: una muchacha desaparece, un joven es
atacado y un cerdo es mutilado. Los lugarenos atemorizados le piden
ayuda a la policia, y estos llegan al pueblo capitaneados por el
enigmatico Langlois, un hombre que pronto se revela capaz de llevar
a cabo los actos mas monstruosos y crueles--y tambien los mas
compasivos."
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