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Showing 1 - 25 of
2679 matches in All Departments
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The Faerie Queene
Edmund Spenser; Contributions by Mint Editions
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R797
R512
Discovery Miles 5 120
Save R285 (36%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Hawaiian Legends
William Hyde Rice; Contributions by Mint Editions
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R349
R294
Discovery Miles 2 940
Save R55 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Sodom and Gomorrah
Marcel Proust; Contributions by Mint Editions
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R541
R367
Discovery Miles 3 670
Save R174 (32%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Early Autumn
Louis Bromfield; Contributions by Mint Editions
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R717
R601
Discovery Miles 6 010
Save R116 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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While trying to sleep, a young boy is startled by the North Wind,
who chooses to bring him along as she travels throughout the night.
The duo embark on eye-opening adventures that teach the child
valuable life lessons. Diamond is a young boy who comes from a poor
family. Despite his homelife, he maintains his innocence and
chooses to embrace joy. One night when he's struggling to sleep, he
encounters the sweeping presence of the North Wind. She enjoys the
child's company and allows him to join her on her travels. During
their journey, Diamond discovers the positive and negative effects
of her presence. He realizes she can be a source of support but
also do great harm. In At the Back of the North Wind, George
MacDonald explores spiritual and moral conflict. It's infused with
Christian themes including an allegory for Jesus Christ. The story
addresses a complex topic using a simple narrative and stunning
visuals. With an eye-catching new cover, and professionally typeset
manuscript, this edition of At the Back of the North Wind is both
modern and readable.
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Anna Karenina (Hardcover)
Leo Tolstoy; Contributions by Mint Editions
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R1,091
R912
Discovery Miles 9 120
Save R179 (16%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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"One of the greatest love stories in world literature."-Vladimir
Nabokov "Anna Karenina is a perfect work of art. This novel
contains a humane message that has not yet been heeded in Europe
and that is much needed by the people of the western world."-Fyodor
Dostoevsky "The truth is we are not to take Anna Karenina as a work
of art; we are to take it as a piece of life."-Matthew Arnold
Although love and infidelity are a major themes of Leo Tolstoy's
epic Russian novel Anna Karenina (1877), there is a startling scope
of philosophical and theological insight within the pages of this
monumental work. The pinnacle of the realist novel, the commonplace
lives and frustrations of the characters within Anna Karenina are
woven together in parallel subtexts that ask difficult questions.
The story of the extramarital affair between Anna Karenina and the
young bachelor Count Vronsky is at the center of this complex work
of literature. When Anna's husband discovers the infidelity of his
wife, his primary concern is not the well-being of his marriage,
but his own self-image. The downward spiral of Anna's illicit
behavior is paralleled with the story of Kitty and Konstantin
Levin, who is a wealthy agriculturalist but somewhat socially
clumsy figure. Levin and Kitty's love is unblemished, yet his
struggles with faith and his unrelenting philosophical questioning
paint a profound portrait of internal anguish. This classic novel
examines the depth of the human soul against the backdrop of
19th-century Russia as no other work of literature has done. With
an eye-catching new cover, and professionally typeset manuscript,
this edition of Anna Karenina is both modern and readable.
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Utopia (Hardcover)
Thomas More; Contributions by Mint Editions
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R217
Discovery Miles 2 170
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Utopia (1516) is a work of political satire by Thomas More.
Published in Latin while More was serving as Privy Counsellor under
King Henry VIII, the text is stylized as a true account of a new
civilization discovered in the New World by traveler Raphael
Hythlodaeus. While there have been varying interpretations of
Utopia over the centuries, it is most consistently regarded as a
work of political philosophy in the tradition of Plato's Republic
that satirizes European society by contrast with the laws and
traditions of the Utopian people. "The island of Utopia is in the
middle two hundred miles broad, and holds almost at the same
breadth over a great part of it, but it grows narrower towards both
ends. Its figure is not unlike a crescent." For centuries, Utopia
has been seen as an essential work of Renaissance humanism for its
vision of a just and highly organized political system
characterized by the abolition of private property, communal
values, full employment, and free accessible healthcare. While
scholars have long debated whether More envisioned his Utopia as a
positive representation of society or as merely an unattainable
vision of life on earth, his work remains an essential contribution
to political discourse that continues to inform readers today. With
a beautifully designed cover and professionally typeset manuscript,
this edition of Thomas More's Utopia is a classic work of English
literature reimagined for modern readers.
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Sweet Sinner (Hardcover)
Hume Nisbet; Contributions by Mint Editions
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R401
Discovery Miles 4 010
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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One Brown Girl and ¼ (1909) is a novel by Thomas MacDermot.
Published under his pseudonym Tom Redcam by the All Jamaica
Library, One Brown Girl and ¼ is a tragic story of race and class
set in Jamaica. Understated and ironic, the novel critiques the
social conditions of Jamaica under British colonialism. Through the
character of Liberta Passley, a wealthy woman of mixed racial
heritage, MacDermot sheds light on the disparities between the
island’s black and white communities, crafting a story now
recognized as essential to modern Caribbean literature. “‘I?’
said Liberta Passley, ‘am the most unhappy woman in Kingston.’
She was not speaking aloud, but was silently building up with
unspoken words a tabernacle for her thoughts. She considered now
the very positive assertion in which she had housed this thought,
went again through its very brief and enigmatic terms, and then
deliberately added the further words: ‘and in Jamaica.’”
Despite her beauty, wealth, education, and social standing, Liberta
Passley is unable to feel satisfied. Raised as the only surviving
daughter of a wealthy Englishman and his formerly-enslaved wife,
Liberta feels she must ignore her mother’s side of the family as
a means of rejecting her African roots. Manipulating her father,
she arranges for her Aunt Henrietta, her mother’s only surviving
sister and their loyal housekeeper, to be fired and thrown out.
Thinking she is making a decision for her own good, she unwittingly
welcomes disaster into her life. With a beautifully designed cover
and professionally typeset manuscript, this edition of Thomas
MacDermot’s One Brown Girl and ¼ is a classic of English
literature reimagined for modern readers.
Ralph Waldo Emerson's essays and poems on the transcendental
movement in the United States became some of the most important
literary pieces in American History. In this culmination of essays,
Emerson takes the reader through different forms of philosophies
that attempt to explain the world and man's purpose within it.
Heavily vested in the philosophy of transcendentalism, though not
one to label himself a true follower of the movement, Emerson
believed that spirituality and wholeness were central to the ways
in which humans could place themselves within nature. Essays by
Ralph Waldo Emerson is a collection of integral works that paved
the way for much influential literature to come, including, Louisa
May Alcott, and Margaret Fuller. With an eye-catching new cover and
an informative note about the author, this edition of Essays by
Ralph Waldo Emerson is both modern and readable.
Eugenie Grandet (1833) is a novel by French author Honore de
Balzac. Written as Balzac began to formulate the grand scale of his
La Comedie humaine sequence, Eugenie Grandet was eventually tied
into the universe of his epic realist masterpiece, a holistic
vision of nineteenth-century French society which sought to observe
the consequences of the political, religious, and economic shifts
of the Revolution and in its aftermath. This novel looks to the
moral failings of a particular nouveau riche family, whose
accumulation of wealth has quickly erased any sense of their
working-class origins. After the Revolution, master cooper Felix
Grandet married the daughter of a successful merchant, ascended in
the political and social life of the town of Saumur, and quietly
amassed an immense wealth through industry and inheritances from
his wife's family. Now an old man, Felix possesses a fortune he
feels no inclination to use, not even to improve the daily lives of
his ailing wife and young adult daughter Eugenie, who faces
frequent incursions from local suitors intent on marrying her to
attain her father's wealth. When Felix's nephew Charles arrives
from Paris with a letter from the patriarch's estranged brother
Guillaume, tragic circumstances force him to choose between
habitual greed and the immense pressure of performing what for
anyone else would be a basic act of generosity. Eugenie Grandet is
a powerful story of fortune, power, and the ease with which these
lead to moral failure. Published at the dawning of Balzac's most
productive and critically-acclaimed period, this novel is not only
a good introduction to his lengthy La Comedie humaine sequence, but
an irreplaceable work of nineteenth-century realist literature.
With a beautifully designed cover and professionally typeset
manuscript, this edition of Honore de Balzac's Eugenie Grandet is a
classic of French literature reimagined for modern readers.
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