Larry Niven

(Mundo Anillo 00) Protector

Phssthpok el Pak se había pasado viajando la mayor parte de sus 32.000 años de vida; su misión era salvar, desarrollar y proteger a un grupo de criadores enviados al espacio dos millones y medio de años atrás…

Brennan es un cinturonio, el producto de una sociedad ferozmente independiente y algo anárquica que vivía en, sobre y alrededor de un cinturón exterior de asteroides. Los cinturonios son rebeldes, y Brennan es además contrabandista. Los mundos del Cinturón habían estado rastreando la nave Pak durante días. Brennan se las arregló para ser el primero en encontrarse con ella…

Nunca volvieron a verlo… al menos no aquellos que vivían en su tiempo.

William Nicholson

(La Orden De Los Guerreros Místicos 03) Noman

La Orden de los guerreros místicos

Los Guerreros Místicos se han dispersado y el caos reina en el mundo.

Sin nadie que proteja la justicia y ningún dios que los ampare, ¿qué será de la gente?

Mientras Salvaje y sus vagabundos siguen sumando fuerzas a su ejército, Buscador en post del objetivo que le han marcado, acabar con los últimos eruditos, enemigos de los nomanos.

George Orwell

Why Socialists Don’t Believe in Fun

George Orwell’s payment book for 20 December 1943 records the sum of pounds 5.5.0 for a special article of 2,000 words for This has never been traced in under Orwell’s name but it now seems certain that an essay, entitled “Can Socialists Be Happy?” by “John Freeman” is what is referred to. The name Freeman would have appealed to Orwell as a pseudonym, and the article has many social, political and literary links with Orwell, such as the relation of Lenin to Dickens (the fact that Lenin read on his deathbed also appears in the second paragraph of Orwell’s 1939 essay, “Charles Dickens”). A “real” John Freeman, later editor of the New Statesman, has confirmed that he did not write the article. The reason why Orwell chose to write as “John Freeman” he never used this pseudonym again is not clear. It may be that did not want its literary editor to be seen to be associated with its political pages. Possibly it was a device that allowed Orwell to be paid a special fee. Or it may be that he simply wished to see how far would let him go with his opinions. In any case, the article appeared in the Christmas issue and provoked much debate in the issues that followed. The “lost essay” is included in the and printed here for the first time under Orwell’s name.

Sofi Oksanen

Purge

"A truly stunning novel, both heartbreaking and optimistic." – Lara Vapnyar

Soon to be published in twenty-five languages, Sofi Oksanen's award-winning novel Purge is a breathtakingly suspenseful tale of two women dogged by their own shameful pasts and the dark, unspoken history that binds them.

When Aliide Truu, an older woman living alone in the Estonian countryside, finds a disheveled girl huddled in her front yard, she suppresses her misgivings and offers her shelter. Zara is a young sex-trafficking victim on the run from her captors, but a photo she carries with her soon makes it clear that her arrival at Aliide's home is no coincidence. Survivors both, Aliide and Zara engage in a complex arithmetic of suspicion and revelation to distill each other's motives; gradually, their stories emerge, the culmination of a tragic family drama of rivalry, lust, and loss that played out during the worst years of Estonia's Soviet occupation.

Sofi Oksanen establishes herself as one the most important voices of her generation with this intricately woven tale, whose stakes are almost unbearably high from the first page to the last. Purge is a fiercely compelling and damning novel about the corrosive effects of shame, and of life in a time and place where to survive is to be implicated.

Sister Carol-Anne Omarie

A Novena for Murder

Sister Mary Helen, at seventy-five, had resisted retirement. She feared she'd find only prayer, peace, and little pinochle. But she'd no sooner arrive at Mount St. Francis College for Women in San Francisco when she was greeted by an earthquake, a hysterical secretary, and a fatally bludgeoned history professor.

Yôko Ogawa

The Gift of Numbers aka The Housekeeper and the Professor

"Highly original. Infinitely charming. And ever so touching." – Paul Auster

A publishing phenomenon in Japan and a heartwarming story that will change the way we all see math, baseball, memory, and each other She is a housekeeper by trade, a single mom by choice, shy, brilliant, and starting a new tour of duty in the home of an aging professor. He is the professor, a mathematical genius, capable of limitless kindness and intuitive affection, but the victim of a mysterious accident that has rendered him unable to remember anything for longer than eighty minutes. Root, the housekeepers ten-year-old son, combines his mothers sympathy with a sensitive curiosity all his own. Over the course of a few months in 1992, these three develop a profoundly affecting friendship, based on a shared love of mathematics and baseball, that will change each of their lives permanently. Chosen as the most popular book in Japan by readers and booksellers alike, The Gift of Numbers is Yoko Ogawas first novel to be published in English, and in the U.S.

George Orwell

Колгосп тварин

George Orwell, Animal Farm, 1945 Авторизований переклад з анґлійської мови.

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