krainaksiazek the woman who stole my life 20088423
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Rackham's Fairy Tale Illustrations Dover Publications Inc.
Książki / Literatura obcojęzyczna
List of PlatesLITTLE BROTHER AND LITTLE SISTER AND OTHER TALES BY THE BROTHERS GRIMM1 "She took off her golden garter and put it round the roe-buck's neck ("Little Brother and Little Sister")"2 "The end of his beard was caught in a crack in the tree ("Snow-White and Rose-Red)"3 "The third time she wore the star-dress which sparkled at every step ("The True Sweetheart")"4 "Suddenly the branches twined round her and turned into two arms ("The Old Woman in the Wood")"5 "He played until the room was entirely full of gnomes ("The Gnomes")"6 "What did she find there but real ripe strawberries ("The Three Little Men in the Wood")"7 "The waiting maid sprang down first and Maid Maleen followed ("Maid Maleen")"8 "She begged quite prettily to be allowed to spend the night there ("The Hut in the Forest")"SNOWDROP AND OTHER TALES BY THE BROTHERS GRIMM9 "The Dwarfs, when they came in the evening, found Snowdrop lying on the ground ("Snowdrop")"10 "The King could not contain himslef for joy ("Briar Rose")"11 "The young Prince said, "I am not afraid; I am determined to go and look upon the lovely Briar Rose" ("Briar Rose")"12 "Ashenputtel goes to the ball ("Ashenputtel")"13 "The fishes, in their joy, stretched up their head above the water, and promised to reward him ("The White Snake")"14 "So the four brothers took their sticks in their hands, bade their father good-bye, and passed out of the town gate ("The Four Clever Brothers")"15 "The King's only daughter had been carried off by a dragon ("The Four Clever Brothers")"16 "She went away accompanied by the lions ("The Lady and the Lion")"17 "Alas! Dear Falada, there thou hangest ("The Goosegirl")"18 "Bow, blow, little breeze, And Conrad's hat seize ("The Goosegirl")"19 "Good Dwarf, can you not tell me where my brothers are? ("The Water of Life")"20 "The son made a circle, and his father and he took their places within it, and the little black Manniken appeared ("The King of the Golden Mountain")"21 "But they said one after another: "Halloa! Who has been eating off my plate? Who has been drinking out of my cup?" ("The Seven Ravens")"22 "The beggar took her by the hand and led her away ("King Thrushbeard")"HANSEL AND GRETHEL AND OTHER TALES BY THE BROTHERS GRIMM23 "All at once the door opened and an old, old woman, supporting herself on a crutch, came hobbling out ("Hansel and Grethel")"24 "Hansel put out a knuckle-bone, and the old woman, whose eyes were dim, could not see it, and thought it was his finger, and she was much astonished that he did not get fat ("Hansel and Grethel")"25 "Once there was a poor old woman who lived in a village ("The Straw, the Coal, and the Bean") "26 "So she seized him with two fingers, and carried him upstairs ("The Frog Prince")"27 "The cat stole away behind the city walls to the church ("The Cat and Mouse in Partnership")"28 "The witch climbed up ("Rapunzel")"29 "When she got to the wood, she met a wolf ("Red Riding Hood")"30 "O Grandmother, what big ears you have got" she said ("Red Riding Hood")"31 "The old man had to sit by himself, and ate his food from a wooden bowl ("The Old Man and His Grandson")"THE ALLIES' FAIRY BOOK32 "In a twinkling the giant put each garden, and orchard, and castle in the bundle as they were before ("The Battle of the Birds")"33 "If thou wilt give me this pretty little one," says the king's son. "I will take thee at they word" ('"The Battle of the Birds")"34 "Now, Guleesh, what good will she be to you when she'll be dumb? It's time for us to go-but you'll remember us, Guleesh")"35 "The sleeping Princess ("The Sleeping Beauty")"36 "So valiantly did they grapple with him that they bore him to the ground and slew him ("Cesarino and the Dragon")"37 "The birds showed the young man the white dove's nest ("What Came of Picking Flowers")"38 "Art thou warm, maiden? Art thou warm, pretty one? Art thou warm, my darling?" ("Frost")"39 "Nine peahens flew towards the tree, and eight of them settled on its branches, but the ninth alighted near him and turned instantly into a beautiful girl ("The Golden Apple-Tree and the Nine Peahens")"40 "The dragon flew out and caught the queen on the road and carried her away ("The Golden Apple Tree and the Nine Peahens")"ENGLISH FAIRY TALES41 "Mr. And Mrs. Vinegar at home ("Mr. And Mrs. Vinegar")"42 "Somebody has been at my porriedge, and has eaten it all up!" ("The Story of the Three Bears")"43 "The giant Cormoran was the terror of all the country-side ("Jack the Giant-Killer")"44 "Tree of mine! O tree of mine! Have you seen my naughty little maid?" ("The Two Sisters")"45 "Fee-fi-fo-fum, I smell the blood of an Englishman" ("Jack and the Beanstalk")"46 "She went along, and went along, and went along ("Catskin")"47 "They thanked her and said good-bye, and she went on her journey ("The Three Heads of the Well")"48 "Many's the beating he had from the broomstick or the ladle ("Dick Whittington and his Cat")"49 "When Puss saw the rats and mice she didn't want to be told ("Dick Whittington and his Cat")"50 "She sat down and plaited herself an overall of rushes and a cap to match ("Caporushes")"IRISH FAIRY TALES51 "In a forked glen into which he slipped at night-fall he was surrounded by giant toads ("Becuma of the White Skin")"52 "My life became a ceaseless scurry and wound and escape, a burden and anguish of watchfullness" ("The Story of Tuan Mac Cairill")"53 "She looked angry woe at the straining and snarling horde below ("The Wooing of Becfola")"Headpiece [on title page] By day she made herself into a cat . . .Tailpiece [following Plate 53] . . . or a screech owl
Sklep: Libristo.pl
Pochodne instrumenty kredytowe - Izabela Pruchnicka-Grabias
Książki & Multimedia > Książki
Opis - Książka, posiadająca istotne walory praktyczne, jest pierwszą pozycją polskiej autorki w tak kompleksowy sposób analizującą nie tylko istotę funkcjonowania kredytowych instrumentów pochodnych, ale również modele ich wyceny, doskonalenie których autorka słusznie uznaje za kluczowe dla rozwoju tego rynku. Niewątpliwą zaletą opracowania jest mnogość przykładów, przeprowadzających Czytelnika przez kolejne etapy szacowania wartości omawianych struktur i tworzących idealną bazę dla zrozumienia konstrukcji tych złożonych produktów. Prof. zw. dr hab. Janusz Soboń Publikacja stanowi cenne kompendium wiedzy zarówno dla praktyków rynku finansowego, jak i studentów oraz słuchaczy studiów podyplomowych i doktoranckich, jak również dla pracowników nauki zainteresowanych wdrażaniem metod kwantyfikacji ryzyka kredytowego w praktykę. Prof. nadzw. SGH dr hab. Paweł Niedziółka Nazwa - Pochodne instrumenty kredytowe Autor - Izabela Pruchnicka-Grabias Oprawa - Miękka Wydawca - CeDeWu Kod ISBN - 9788375563733 Kod EAN - 9788375563733 Wydanie - 1 Rok wydania - 2011 Język - polski Format - 16.5x23.0cm Ilość stron - 280 Podatek VAT - 5%
Sklep: InBook.pl
Biblioteczka przedszkolaka. Wiersze dla chłopców - Praca zbiorowa
Książki & Multimedia > Książki
Opis - Wspólne głośne czytanie buduje szczególną więź emocjonalną między rodzicami a dziećmi oraz rozbudza w najmłodszych ciekawość świata. Nazwa - Biblioteczka przedszkolaka. Wiersze dla chłopców Autor - Praca zbiorowa Oprawa - Twarda Wydawca - Olesiejuk Kod ISBN - 9788327429148 Kod EAN - 9788327429148 Rok wydania - 2015 Język - polski Seria wydawnicza - Biblioteczka przedszkolaka Format - 19.0x23.0cm Ilość stron - 24 Podatek VAT - 5% Premiera - 2015-04-24
Sklep: InBook.pl
Kobieta, która ukradła moje życie - Marian Keyes
Książki & Multimedia > Książki
Opis - Pewnego dnia mieszkanka Dublina Stella Sweendey, mężatka i matka, stojąc w korku, wyświadcza komuś uprzejmość. Niestety, jej dobry uczynek powoduje potężną kraksę, która zmienia życie Stelli. Spotyka bowiem mężczyznę, który natychmiast prosi ją o numer telefonu (co prawda ze względu na ubezpieczenie). No i dobrze. I tak nie wzbudza on w niej wielkiej sympatii (jej samochód nie miał szansy w starciu z jego range roverem). To spotkanie diametralnie zmieni życie Stelli, da początek wydarzeniom, które ze zwyczajnej kobiety zmienią ją w wielką gwiazdę, a do tego rozerwą na kawałki jej życie rodzinne Nazwa - Kobieta, która ukradła moje życie Oryginalny tytuł - Woman Who Stole My Life Autor - Marian Keyes Oprawa - Miękka Wydawca - Sonia Draga Kod ISBN - 9788379997893 Kod EAN - 9788379997893 Wydanie - 1 Rok wydania - 2016 Język - polski Tłumacz - Penksyk-Kluczkowska Ewa Format - 12.0x19.5cm Ilość stron - 544 Podatek VAT - 5% Premiera - 2016-10-19
Sklep: InBook.pl
Jane Austen at Home - Lucy Worsley
Książki & Multimedia > Książki
Opis - Historian Lucy Worsley visits Jane Austen at home, exploring the author's life through the places which meant the most to her. 'This is my kind of history: carefully researched but so vivid that you are convinced Lucy Worsley was actually there at the party - or the parsonage.' Antonia Fraser 'A refreshingly unique perspective on Austen and her work and a beautifully nuanced exploration of gender, creativity, and domesticity.' Amanda Foreman 'Brilliant and very moving, this book is a fascinating and original exploration of Jane Austen with lots of new material - Worsley brings Austen to life superbly, through her pages she is a flesh and blood woman, intelligent, powerful, contradictory, loving, loved. A magnificent book.' Kate Williams On the 200th anniversary of Jane Austen's death, historian Lucy Worsley leads us into the rooms from which our best-loved novelist quietly changed the world. This new telling of the story of Jane's life shows us how and why she lived as she did, examining the places and spaces that mattered to her. It wasn't all country houses and ballrooms, but a life that was often a painful struggle. Jane famously lived a 'life without incident', but with new research and insights Lucy Worsley reveals a passionate woman who fought for her freedom. A woman who far from being a lonely spinster in fact had at least five marriage prospects, but who in the end refused to settle for anything less than Mr Darcy. Nazwa - Jane Austen at Home Autor - Lucy Worsley Oprawa - Miękka Wydawca - Hodder And Stoughton Kod ISBN - 9781473632240 Kod EAN - 9781473632240 Rok wydania - 2017 Język - angielski Format - 15.0x23.0cm Ilość stron - 390 Podatek VAT - 5%
Sklep: InBook.pl
Shadow of the Sun Penguin
Literatura faktu
'Only with the greatest of simplifications, for the sake of convenience, can we say Africa. In reality, except as a geographical term, Africa doesn't exist'. Ryszard Kapuscinski has been writing about the people of Africa throughout his career. In a study that avoids the official routes, palaces and big politics, he sets out to create an account of post-colonial Africa seen at once as a whole and as a location that wholly defies generalised explanations. It is both a sustained meditation on the mosaic of peoples and practises we call 'Africa', and an impassioned attempt to come to terms with humanity itself as it struggles to escape from foreign domination, from the intoxications of freedom, from war and from politics as theft. The Beginning: Collision, Ghana 1958 More than anything, one is struck by the light. Light everywhere. Brightness everywhere. Everywhere, the sun. Just yesterday, an autumnal London was drenched in rain. The airplane drenched in rain. A cold, wind, darkness. But here, from the morning
Sklep: Albertus.pl
Walking With Spirits Native American Myths, Legends, And Folklore Light Of The Moon Publishing
Książki / Literatura obcojęzyczna
Before the time of books, computers, tablets and recording devices, the history of many cultures was passed down, from person to person, by word of mouth. The rich histories of so many people were told in songs, chants, poems and stories. This was the way of Native American tribes. Each in its own way enriching their stories with their own experiences. By reliving these stories and songs, we have the opportunity to bring life back to the ancient spirits that created them. We have a chance to walk with the spirits of the past.Being there were so many different tribes with countless beliefs and customs, the only way to understand their ways is through understanding their stories. In this book I have endeavored to show a wide landscape of different tribes and hopefully present a true look at their beliefs.With this book you will understand the Native American people a little better and understand where they have come from and what they can offer the world. By exploring these stories offered you will get a glimpse into an often forgotten past. These stories are given to you, to carry forward for younger generations to explore and learn. Included in Volume One are the stories: Origin of the Pleiades, The Woman Who Fell from the Sky, Grandmother Spider Steals the Fire, White Bead Woman, The Origin of Corn, The Hunter and Selu, Myth of the White Buffalo Woman, The Origin of Eternal Death, How Coyote Stole Fire, The Lame Warrior, The Story of Hungry Wolf, Origin of the Sweat Lodge, The Legend of the Cherokee Rose, Contents of the Medicine Bag, Raven's Medicine, The First Fire, Origin Of Disease And Medicine, The Daughter Of The Sun, The Journey To The Sunrise, Why The Mole Lives Underground, The Terrapin's Escape From The Wolves, Origin Of The Groundhog Dance, The Haunted Whirlpool, The Man In The Stump, The Mother Bear's Song and many, many more.You are invited to go Walking With Spirits.
Sklep: Libristo.pl
About Last Night ... - Catherine Alliott
Książki & Multimedia > Książki
Opis - The immensely funny and heartwarming number one bestseller, tells the story of a woman who gets a second chance in life - but will she have the courage to take it"Molly has traded London for a dream home in the country - except it was her husband"s dream, not hers. And David is, well, rather dead now.So when a distant relative leaves her a London townhouse, Molly is ready to quit "The Good Life" and return to her good life.But there"s a rather tall, handsome problem - a man who"s already living in Molly"s new house. And when a face from her past reappears, she"s no longer quite sure where she belongs.Do any of the men in Molly"s life have honourable intentions"Is she ready to ditch muddy wellies for high heels"Or is she saying goodbye to the delights of country life too soon"Praise for Catherine Alliott"Irresistible"Daily Mail"Compulsively readable" The Times"Possibly my favourite writer" Marian Keyes Nazwa - About Last Night ... Autor - Catherine Alliott Oprawa - Miękka Wydawca - Penguin Books Kod ISBN - 9781405924924 Kod EAN - 9781405924924 Rok wydania - 2017 Język - angielski Format - 13.4x19.8cm Ilość stron - 394 Podatek VAT - 5%
Sklep: InBook.pl
THE PERFECT ELVIS PRESLEY SOUNDTRACK COLLECTION 20CD WYDAWCA
Muzyka > Płyty kompaktowe > Rock'n'roll
Elvis Presley: The Perfect Elvis Presley Soundtrack Collection [20CD] 1. Mean Woman Blues - Elvis Presley 2. (Let Me Be Your) Teddy Bear - Elvis Presley 3. Loving You - Elvis Presley 4. Got a Lot O' Livin' to Do! - Elvis Presley 5. Lonesome Cowboy - Elvis Presley 6. Hot Dog - Elvis Presley 7. Party - Elvis Presley 8. Blueberry Hill - Elvis Presley 9. True Love - Elvis Presley 10. Don't Leave Me Now - Elvis Presley 11. Have I Told You Lately That I Love You - Elvis Presley 12. I Need You So - Elvis Presley 13. Jailhouse Rock - Elvis Presley 14. Young and Beautiful - Elvis Presley 15. I Want to Be Free - Elvis Presley 16. Don't Leave Me Now - Elvis Presley 17. (You're So Square) Baby I Don't Care - Elvis Presley 18. Treat Me Nice - Elvis Presley 19. I Beg of You - Elvis Presley 20. Don't - Elvis Presley 21. Playing for Keeps - Elvis Presley 22. Shake, Rattle and Roll - Elvis Presley 23. Good Rockin' Tonight - Elvis Presley 24. I Don't Care If the Sun Don't Shine - Elvis Presley 25. King Creole - Elvis Presley 26. As Long As I Have You - Elvis Presley 27. Hard Headed Woman - Elvis Presley 28. Trouble - Elvis Presley 29. Dixieland Rock - Elvis Presley 30. Don't Ask Me Why - Elvis Presley 31. Lover Doll - Elvis Presley 32. Crawfish - Elvis Presley 33. Young Dreams - Elvis Presley 34. Steadfast, Loyal and True - Elvis Presley 35. New Orleans - Elvis Presley 36. Tonight Is So Right for Love - Elvis Presley 37. What's She Really Like - Elvis Presley 38. Frankfort Special - Elvis Presley 39. Wooden Heart - Elvis Presley 40. G.I. Blues - Elvis Presley 41. Pocketful of Rainbows - Elvis Presley 42. Shoppin' Around - Elvis Presley 43. Big Boots - Elvis Presley 44. Didja' Ever - Elvis Presley 45. Blue Suede Shoes - Elvis Presley 46. Doin' the Best I Can - Elvis Presley 47. Follow That Dream - Elvis Presley 48. What a Wonderful World - Elvis Presley 49. I'm Not the Marrying Kind - Elvis Presley 50. Sound Advice - Elvis Presley 51. Angel - Elvis Presley 52. King of the Whole Wide World - Elvis Presley 53. This Is Living - Elvis Presley 54. Riding the Rainbow - Elvis Presley 55. Home Is Where the Heart Is - Elvis Presley 56. I Got Lucky - Elvis Presley 57. A Whistling Tune - Elvis Presley 58. Flaming Star - Elvis Presley 59. Summer Kisses, Winter Tears - Elvis Presley 60. Blue Hawaii - Elvis Presley 61. Almost Always True - Elvis Presley 62. Aloha Oe - Elvis Presley 63. No More - Elvis Presley 64. Can't Help Falling in Love - Elvis Presley 65. Rock-a-hula Baby - Elvis Presley & Hula Baby 66. Moonlight Swim - Elvis Presley 67. Ku-u-i-po - Elvis Presley & Po 68. Ito Eats - Elvis Presley 69. Slicin' Sand - Elvis Presley 70. Hawaiian Sunset - Elvis Presley 71. Beach Boy Blues - Elvis Presley 72. Island of Love - Elvis Presley 73. Hawaiian Wedding Song - Elvis Presley 74. Girls! Girls! Girls! - Elvis Presley 75. I Don't Wanna Be Tied - Elvis Presley 76. Where Do You Come From - Elvis Presley 77. I Don't Want To - Elvis Presley 78. We'll Be Together - Elvis Presley 79. A Boy Like Me, a Girl Like You - Elvis Presley 80. Earth Boy - Elvis Presley 81. Return to Sender - Elvis Presley 82. Because of Love - Elvis Presley 83. Thanks to the Rolling Sea - Elvis Presley 84. Song of the Shrimp - Elvis Presley 85. The Walls Have Ears - Elvis Presley 86. We're Coming in Loaded - Elvis Presley 87. Beyond the Bend - Elvis Presley 88. Relax - Elvis Presley 89. Take Me to the Fair - Elvis Presley 90. They Remind Me Too Much of You - Elvis Presley 91. One Broken Heart for Sale - Elvis Presley 92. I'm Falling in Love Tonight - Elvis Presley 93. Cotton Candy Land - Elvis Presley 94. A World of Our Own - Elvis Presley 95. How Would You Like to Be - Elvis Presley 96. Happy Ending - Elvis Presley 97. Fun in Acapulco - Elvis Presley 98. Vino, Dinero Y Amor - Elvis Presley 99. Mexico - Elvis Presley 100. El Toro - Elvis Presley 101. Marguerita - Elvis Presley 102. The Bullfighter Was a Lady - Elvis Presley 103. (There's) No Room to Rhumba in a Sports Car - Elvis Presley 104. I Think I'm Gonna Like It Here - Elvis Presley 105. Bossa Nova Baby - Elvis Presley 106. You Can't Say No in Acapulco - Elvis Presley 107. Guadalajara - Elvis Presley 108. Love Me Tonight - Elvis Presley 109. Slowly But Surely - Elvis Presley 110. Kissin' Cousins (Number 2) - Elvis Presley 111. Smokey Mountain Boy - Elvis Presley 112. There's Gold in the Mountains - Elvis Presley 113. One Boy Two Little Girls - Elvis Presley 114. Catchin' On Fast - Elvis Presley 115. Tender Feeling - Elvis Presley 116. Anyone (Could Fall in Love With You) - Elvis Presley 117. Barefoot Ballad - Elvis Presley 118. Once Is Enough - Elvis Presley 119. Kissin' Cousins - Elvis Presley 120. Echoes of Love - Elvis Presley 121. (It's A) Long, Lonely Highway - Elvis Presley 122. Viva Las Vegas - Elvis Presley 123. I Need Somebody to Lean On - Elvis Presley 124. You're the Boss - Elvis Presley 125. If You Think I Don't Need You - Elvis Presley 126. What'd I Say - Elvis Presley 127. Today, Tomorrow and Forever - Elvis Presley 128. C'mon Everybody - Elvis Presley 129. Do the Vega - Elvis Presley 130. Night Life - Elvis Presley 131. The Lady Loves Me - Elvis Presley & Ann-Margret - Elvis Presley & Margret 132. The Yellow Rose of Texas/The Eyes of Texas - Elvis Presley 133. Santa Lucia - Elvis Presley 134. Roustabout - Elvis Presley 135. Little Egypt - Elvis Presley 136. Poison Ivy League - Elvis Presley 137. Hard Knocks - Elvis Presley 138. It's a Wonderful World - Elvis Presley 139. Big Love, Big Heartache - Elvis Presley 140. One Track Heart - Elvis Presley 141. It's Carnival Time - Elvis Presley 142. Carny Town - Elvis Presley 143. There's a Brand New Day On the Horizon - Elvis Presley 144. Wheels On My Heels - Elvis Presley 145. Girl Happy - Elvis Presley 146. Spring Fever - Elvis Presley 147. Fort Lauderdale Chamber of Commerce - Elvis Presley 148. Startin' Tonight - Elvis Presley 149. Wolf Call - Elvis Presley 150. Do Not Disturb - Elvis Presley 151. Cross My Heart and Hope to Die - Elvis Presley 152. The Meanest Girl in Town - Elvis Presley 153. Do the Clam - Elvis Presley 154. Puppet On a String - Elvis Presley 155. I've Got to Find My Baby - Elvis Presley 156. You'll Be Gone - Elvis Presley 157. Harem Holiday - Elvis Presley 158. My Desert Serenade - Elvis Presley 159. Go East Young Man - Elvis Presley 160. Mirage - Elvis Presley 161. Kismet - Elvis Presley 162. Shake That Tambourine - Elvis Presley 163. Hey Little Girl - Elvis Presley 164. Golden Coins - Elvis Presley 165. So Close, Yet So Far (From Paradise) - Elvis Presley 166. Animal Instinct - Elvis Presley 167. Wisdom of the Ages - Elvis Presley 168. Frankie and Johnny - Elvis Presley 169. Come Along - Elvis Presley 170. Petunia, the Gardener's Daughter - Elvis Presley 171. Chesay - Elvis Presley 172. What Every Woman Lives For - Elvis Presley 173. Look Out, Broadway - Elvis Presley 174. Beginner's Luck - Elvis Presley 175. Down By the Riverside/When the Saints Go Marching In - Elvis Presley 176. Shout It Out - Elvis Presley 177. Hard Luck - Elvis Presley 178. Please Don't Stop Loving Me - Elvis Presley 179. Everybody Come Aboard - Elvis Presley 180. Paradise, Hawaiian Style - Elvis Presley 181. Queenie Wahine's Papaya - Elvis Presley 182. Scratch My Back - Elvis Presley 183. Drums of the Islands - Elvis Presley 184. Datin' - Elvis Presley 185. A Dog's Life - Elvis Presley 186. House of Sand - Elvis Presley 187. Stop Where You Are - Elvis Presley 188. This Is My Heaven - Elvis Presley 189. Sand Castles - Elvis Presley 190. Stop, Look and Listen - Elvis Presley 191. Adam and Evil - Elvis Presley 192. All That I Am - Elvis Presley 193. Never Say Yes - Elvis Presley 194. Am I Ready - Elvis Presley 195. Beach Shack - Elvis Presley 196. Spinout - Elvis Presley 197. Smorgasbord - Elvis Presley 198. I'll Be Back - Elvis Presley 199. Tomorrow Is a Long Time - Elvis Presley 200. Down in the Alley - Elvis Presley 201. I'll Remember You - Elvis Presley 202. Double Trouble - Elvis Presley 203. Baby, If You'll Give Me All of Your Love - Elvis Presley 204. Could I Fall in Love - Elvis Presley 205. Long Legged Girl (With the Short Dress On) - Elvis Presley 206. City By Night - Elvis Presley 207. Old MacDonald - Elvis Presley 208. I Love Only One Girl - Elvis Presley 209. There Is So Much World to See - Elvis Presley 210. It Won't Be Long - Elvis Presley 211. Never Ending - Elvis Presley 212. Blue River - Elvis Presley 213. What Now, What Next, Where To - Elvis Presley 214. Guitar Man - Elvis Presley 215. Clambake - Elvis Presley 216. Who Needs Money? - Elvis Presley 217. A House That Has Everything - Elvis Presley 218. Confidence - Elvis Presley 219. Hey, Hey, Hey - Elvis Presley 220. You Don't Know Me - Elvis Presley 221. The Girl I Never Loved - Elvis Presley 222. How Can You Lose What You Never Had - Elvis Presley 223. Big Boss Man - Elvis Presley 224. Singing Tree - Elvis Presley 225. Just Call Me Lonesome - Elvis Presley 226. Speedway - Elvis Presley 227. There Ain't Nothing Like a Song - Elvis Presley 228. Your Time Hasn't Come Yet, Baby - Elvis Presley 229. Who Are You? (Who Am I?) - Elvis Presley 230. He's Your Uncle Not Your Dad - Elvis Presley 231. Let Yourself Go - Elvis Presley 232. Your Groovy Self - Elvis Presley 233. Five Sleepy Heads - Elvis Presley 234. Western Union - Elvis Presley 235. Mine - Elvis Presley 236. Goin' Home - Elvis Presley 237. Suppose - Elvis Presley
Sklep: ksiazkitanie.pl
Portret Ojca Pio - Schug John A.
Książki & Multimedia > Książki
Opis - Książka ta powstała jako zapis serii wywiadów z ludźmi, którzy mieli szczęście osobiście spotkać Ojca Pio. Jej pomysłodawcą jest amerykański kapucyn o. John Schug. Zebrane przez niego świadectwa zapisane zostały językiem potocznym, pełnym barwnych opisów, żywych zwrotów i indywidualnych upodobań stylistycznych. Dzięki temu bardzo dobrze oddają one portret psychologiczny rozmówców zafascynowanych postacią Ojca Pio. Wielu z nich po raz pierwszy zgodziło się opowiedzieć o swoim spotkaniu ze Świętym. Nazwa - Portret Ojca Pio Autor - Schug John A. Oprawa - Miękka Wydawca - Serafin Kod ISBN - 9788363243050 Kod EAN - 9788363243050 Rok wydania - 2012 Język - polski Tłumacz - Winczyk-Sowa Bożenna Format - 13.5x20.5cm Ilość stron - 204 Podatek VAT - 5%
Sklep: InBook.pl
Jane Austen at Home Hodder And Stoughton
Biografie
Historian Lucy Worsley visits Jane Austen at home, exploring the author's life through the places which meant the most to her.'This is my kind of history: carefully researched but so vivid that you are convinced Lucy Worsley was actually there at the party - or the parsonage.' Antonia Fraser'A refreshingly unique perspective on Austen and her work and a beautifully nuanced exploration of gender, creativity, and domesticity.' Amanda Foreman'Brilliant and very moving, this book is a fascinating and original exploration of Jane Austen with lots of new material - Worsley brings Austen to life superbly, through her pages she is a flesh and blood woman, intelligent, powerful, contradictory, loving, loved. A magnificent book.' Kate WilliamsOn the 200th anniversary of Jane Austen's death, historian Lucy Worsley leads us into the rooms from which our best-loved novelist quietly changed the world.This new telling of the story of Jane's life shows us how and why she lived as she did, examining the places and spaces that mattered to her. It wasn't all country houses and ballrooms, but a life that was often a painful struggle. Jane famously lived a 'life without incident', but with new research and insights Lucy Worsley reveals a passionate woman who fought for her freedom. A woman who far from being a lonely spinster in fact had at least five marriage prospects, but who in the end refused to settle for anything less than Mr Darcy.
Sklep: Booknet.net.pl
Sondra Ray,Markus Ray - Babaji Page Publishing, Inc.
Książki / Literatura obcojęzyczna
In her usual provocative style, SONDRA RAY asks her readers - "What if you could know a Being who is not born of a woman and who could dematerialize and rematerialize his body? What if you could know a Being who is a major teacher of Jesus and who prepared him for his mission? What if you could know a Being who knows everything about your past, present and future? What if you could know a Being who can clear all of your karma? What if you could know a Being who is the sustainer of the universe, an ocean of knowledge? What if you could know a Being who is a never-failing spring of Bliss, the infinite essence of truth? What if you could know a Being who is the bestower of the highest Joy? What if you could know a Being who incarnated for the liberation of the world? What if you could know a Being who would fulfill all your desires? You can know Him. This book is about Him. He says to you, 'My Love is available. You can take it or not.' Why not take it?" Along with Steve Jobs, spiritual seekers worldwide have most likely read the famous "Autobiography of a Yogi" by Yogananda. BABAJI, the immortal "Yogi-Christ" of India, is mentioned in Chapters 33 & 34. Author SONDRA RAY brings flesh and blood to His legend in this account of her real-life meetings with BABAJI in the 1970's and 1980's, at the beginning of her mission of world service as the "Mother of Rebirthing." More than just an autobiographical sketch, SONDRA's miraculous meetings with this real Maha Avatar will help anyone who is on a spiritual journey of Self-awakening to move faster in their joyous ascension to enlightenment. SONDRA RAY is joined my her twin flame, MARKUS RAY, who contributes his insightful poetry to BABAJI as He manifests in the everyday encounters with His presence in such places as Starbuck's and Nordstrom's, Catalina Island, and in HIs sublime mountain ashram of Haidakhan in the foothills of the Himalayas of Northern India.
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Letter from America Penguin
Powieści i opowiadania
When Alistair Cooke retired in March 2004 and then died a few weeks later, he was acclaimed by many as one of the greatest broadcasters of all time. His Letters from America, which began in 1946 and continued uninterrupted every week until early 2004, kept the world in touch with what was happening in Cooke's wry, liberal and humane style. This selection, made largely by Cooke himself and supplemented by his literary executor, gives us the very best of these legendary broadcasts. Over half have never appeared in print before. It is a remarkable portrait of a continent - and a man. Fred Astaire 26 June 1987 Movie stars don't make it. Nor statesmen. Not Prime Ministers, or dictators unless they die in office. Not even a world-famous rock star, unless he's assassinated. But last Monday, none of the three national television networks hesitated about the story that would lead the evening news. On millions of little screens in this country and I don't doubt in many other countries around the world, the first shots were of an imp, a graceful wraith, a firefly in impeccable white tie and tails. And for much longer than the lead story usually runs, for a full five minutes on NBC, we were given a loving retrospective of the dead man, ending with the firm declaration by Nureyev that 'He was not just the best ballroom dancer, or tap dancer, he was simply the greatest, most imaginative, dancer of our time.' And the newsmen were right to remind us of the immortal comment of the Hollywood mogul, who, with the no-nonsense directness of an expert, reported on Fred Astaire's first film test: 'Has enormous ears, can't act, can't sing, dances a little.' That Hollywood mogul, long gone, spent his life ducking round corners, to avoid being identified as the oaf who looked in the sky and never saw the brightest star. However, that expert opinion was, as the lawyers say, controlling at the time and in Astaire's first movies, there was no thought of allowing him to act or sing. But not for long. And thanks to the invention of television, and the need to fill vast stretches of the afternoon and night with old movies, it has been possible for my daughter, for instance, to claim Fred Astaire as her favourite film star from the evidence of all the movies he made fifteen, ten, five, three years before she was born. When I got the news on Monday evening here, and realized with immediate professional satisfaction that the BBC had smartly on hand a musical obituary tribute to him I put together eight years ago, I couldn't help recalling the casual, comic way this and similar radio obituaries came about. I was in London at the end of 1979, and Richard Rodgers - one of the two or three greatest of American songwriters - had just died, I believe on New Year's Eve or the night before. Britons, by then, were getting accustomed, without pain, to making what used to be a two-day Christmas holiday into a ten-day much-needed rest. For all laborious research purposes, the BBC was shut up. And there was no retrospective programme on the life and music of Richard Rodgers in the BBC's archives. Of course, in a gramophone library that looks like an annex to the Pentagon, there were hundreds, perhaps thousands, of recordings of his songs. The SOS went out to a writer, a producer, and - I presume - a man who had the key to the gramophone library. The silent place was unlocked, and the three of them laboured through the day to put together an hour's tribute to Richard Rodgers. It was done. It was competent enough, but rushed to an impossible deadline. This hasty improvisation happened just when my own music producer and I, who had enjoyed working together for six years or so on American popular music, were wondering what we could offer next. We'd done a sketch history of jazz, through individuals. We'd gone through all the popular music of the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s, and were stumped for a new series, at which point I asked if we mightn't go and talk to the head of the channel, network or whatever. We went in, and the genial boss asked me what we had in mind. 'A morgue,' I said. A what? 'Where', I asked, 'is your morgue?' He was not familiar with the word, a newspaper term. 'Well,' I said, 'all newspapers have them.' 'How d'you mean?' 'If, I explained, 'Mrs Thatcher died tonight and you woke up and read a two-sentence obituary, you'd be rightly outraged. But if you saw a two-page obituary, you'd take it for granted. When d'you suppose it was written?' 'That's right,' he said thoughtfully. What I was proposing was a morgue of the Americans eminent in popular music and jazz, so they'd not get caught short again. A splendid idea, the man said; pick your stars. We made a list and were commissioned to return to America and finish all of them. Naturally, we looked at a calendar, and birthdates of Hoagy Carmichael, Earl Hines, Harold Arlen, Ethel Merman, Stephane Grappelli, Ella Fitzgerald. But then, in a spasm of panic, we thought of two giants - if the word can be used about two comparative midgets: Irving Berlin and Fred Astaire. Berlin was then 91. And Fred Astaire was just crowding 80. The boss man, to whom the idea of a morgue had been, only a few minutes before, quaint if not morbid, wondered what we were waiting for. Better get busy, at once, on Berlin and then on Astaire. I remember doing the Astaire obit, then and there, while I was still in London. Meanwhile, we'd simply pray every night that the Lord would keep Irving Berlin breathing till I could get home and get busy. I remember being picked up in a car by a charming young girl to get to the BBC and record my Astaire narration - there wasn't a moment to lose. She asked me, in the car, what the script was that I was clutching. 'It's an obituary', I said, 'of Fred Astaire.' 'Fred Astaire,' she shrieked, 'dead?' and almost swerved into a bus. 'Of course, he's not dead,' I said, 'but he's going to be one day.' She, too, was new to the institution of a morgue. I recalled that when I was a correspondent for a British paper in the United States, and when for example. Dean Acheson was appointed Secretary of State, the first cable I had from my editor said, 'Welcome Acheson obituary soonest.' How ghoulish, she said. I imagine that to two generations at least, it's assumed that Fred Astaire, this slim, pop-eyed newcomer to Hollywood who couldn't act, couldn't sing, danced a little, only made a fool of the mogul through the movies he made, with Ginger Rogers, in the mid- and late 1930s. But long before then, from the mid-1920s on, he was already an incomparable star - as a dancer - to theatre audiences both in New York and in London. Perhaps more in London than anywhere, certainly in the 1920s, with the early Gershwin hits, Funny Face and Lady Be Good, and lastly, in 1933, in Cole Porter's Gay Divorce (which was the title of the theatre show; Hollywood would not then allow so shocking a title and called the movie version, The Gay Divorcee). Of all the thousands of words that have been written this week, and will be written, there is a passage I went back to on Tuesday night which, I think, as well as anything I know, sums up Astaire's overall appeal - the appeal that takes in but transcends one's admiration for his dancing and for his inimitably intimate singing style. This was written in November 1933, by a theatre critic who had so little feel for dancing that he marvelled why London should go on about 'Mr Astaire's doing well enough what the Tiller Girls at Blackpool do superbly'. The critic, the writer, was James Agate, the irascible, dogmatic, opinionated but brilliant journalist, and I believe the best critic of acting we have had this century. He is writing his review of Gay Divorce, after declaring yet again his contempt for musical comedy as an entertainment for idiots, deploring the play's plot and the acting and hoping 'Micawberishly, for something to turn up'. 'Presently,' he wrote, 'Mr Fred Astaire obliged, and there is really no more to be said.' Except
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In Bed with Gore Vidal Riverdale Avenue Books
Książki / Literatura obcojęzyczna
"Gore Vidal was a good friend for over sixty years. If you want to know who Gore really was, read In Bed with Gore Vidal, which uncovers, and evokes, his complicated private life and how that influenced and shaped his wider life, politics, and work. Lost loves, sex with hustlers, a life with Howard Austen, his relationships with women and the truth about his sexuality: this is a juicy, intelligent and honest portrait of a dear friend and exceptional writer and man."-Scotty Bowers, author of Full Service: My Adventures in Hollywood and The Secret Sex Lives of the Stars Gore Vidal claimed there was no such thing as "gay," only gay sexual acts. But what was the truth about his sex life and sexuality-and how did it affect and influence his writing and public life? In In Bed With Gore Vidal: Hustlers, Hollywood, and the Private World of an American Master, Tim Teeman interviews many of Vidal's closest family and friends, including Claire Bloom and Susan Sarandon, as well as surveying Vidal's own rich personal archive, to build a rounded portrait of who this lion of American letters really was away from the page. Here, revealed for the first time, Teeman discovers the Hollywood stars Vidal slept with and the reality of his life with partner Howard Austen-and the hustlers they both enjoyed. Was Gore's true love really a boy from prep school? Was he really, as he said, bisexual, and if so how close did he really get to marrying women, including Claire Bloom and Joanne Woodward? And if Vidal really was gay, why did he not want to say so? Did his own sex secrets underpin a legal fight with adversary William F. Buckley, still being played out after his death? Much as he fought against being categorized, Vidal, Teeman shows, also proved himself to be a pugnacious advocate for gay sexual freedom. Teeman also, for the first time, vividly and movingly evokes the last painful and tragic years of Vidal's life and the bitter, contentious legacy he has left behind. "Tim Teeman's biography of Gore Vidal is the perfect combination of racy gossip-from steamy celebrity liaisons to hustlers in Rome-and penetrating analysis. It shows how a complicated attitude to sex and sexuality shaped an author's life and work. An original, intriguing, and necessary portrait of an American icon." - Edmund White, author of City Boy "Sex with hustlers and Hollywood stars-for all his insistence that sexuality did not define him, Gore Vidal sure got around. And while he didn't hit the streets with placards, he was still, in many ways, a gay rights revolutionary. Tim Teeman's biography, full of new material and interviews, reveals how Vidal's sexuality and sex life influenced his life and his work - and tells, for the first time, the moving story of his painful last years. With deftness, wit, intelligence, and a journalist's nose for a good story, Teeman pulls back the curtain on an American icon. It seems Gore Vidal can still surprise us. What a page-turner!" -William J. Mann, author of Kate: The Woman Who Was Hepburn and Hello, Gorgeous: Becoming Barbra Streisand About the Author: Tim Teeman is a journalist and broadcaster. For fourteen years he has worked as an editor, feature writer, and interviewer for The Times of London, most recently as their US Correspondent, in which he covered stories like Hurricane Sandy and profiled many celebrities and public figures including Woody Allen, George Clooney, and Liza Minnelli. He has also contributed to publications including Elle, The New Statesman, The Guardian, The Independent, Independent on Sunday, Attitude, and Time Out. In Bed With Gore Vidal is his first book. He lives in New York City.
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Jane Austen at Home HODDER AND STOUGHTON
Literatura obcojÄzyczna
Historian Lucy Worsley visits Jane Austen at home, exploring the author's life through the places which meant the most to her. 'This is my kind of history: carefully researched but so vivid that you are convinced Lucy Worsley was actually there at the party - or the parsonage.' Antonia Fraser 'A refreshingly unique perspective on Austen and her work and a beautifully nuanced exploration of gender, creativity, and domesticity.' Amanda Foreman 'Brilliant and very moving, this book is a fascinating and original exploration of Jane Austen with lots of new material - Worsley brings Austen to life superbly, through her pages she is a flesh and blood woman, intelligent, powerful, contradictory, loving, loved. A magnificent book.' Kate Williams On the 200th anniversary of Jane Austen's death, historian Lucy Worsley leads us into the rooms from which our best-loved novelist quietly changed the world. This new telling of the story of Jane's life shows us how and why she lived as she did, examining the places and spaces that mattered to her. It wasn't all country houses and ballrooms, but a life that was often a painful struggle. Jane famously lived a 'life without incident', but with new research and insights Lucy Worsley reveals a passionate woman who fought for her freedom. A woman who far from being a lonely spinster in fact had at least five marriage prospects, but who in the end refused to settle for anything less than Mr Darcy.
Sklep: Literacka.pl
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