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Chance, like politics, can make strange bedfellows.<
The Crescent Empire teeters on the edge of a revolution, and the Five Daughters of the Moon are the ones to determine its future.
Alina, six, fears Gagargi Prataslav and his Great Thinking Machine. The gagargi claims that the machine can predict the future, but at a cost that no one seems to want to know.
Merile, eleven, cares only for her dogs, but she smells that something is afoul with the gagargi. By chance, she learns that the machine devours human souls for fuel, and yet no one believes her claim.
Sibilia, fifteen, has fallen in love for the first time in her life. She couldn’t care less about the unrests spreading through the countryside. Or the rumors about the gagargi and his machine.
Elise, sixteen, follows the captain of her heart to orphanages and workhouses. But soon she realizes that the unhappiness amongst her people runs much deeper that anyone could have ever predicted.
And Celestia, twenty-two, who will be the empress one day. Lately, she’s been drawn to the gagargi. But which one of them was the first to mention the idea of a coup?
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Here for the first time is the complete suite of five linked stories from Ursula K. Le Guin’s acclaimed Hainish series, which tells the history of the Ekumen, the galactic confederation of human colonies founded by the planet Hain. First published in 1995 as , and now joined by a fifth story, focuses on the twin planets Werel and Yeowe, two worlds whose peoples, long known as “owners” and “assets,” together face an uncertain future after civil war and revolution.
In “Betrayals” a retired science teacher must make peace with her new neighbor, a disgraced revolutionary leader. In “Forgiveness Day,” a female official from the Ekumen arrives to survey the situation on Werel and struggles against its rigidly patriarchal culture. Embedded within “A Man of the People,” which describes the coming of age of Havzhiva, an Ekumen ambassador to Yeowe, is Le Guin’s most sustained description of the Ur-planet Hain. “A Woman’s Liberation” is the remarkable narrative of Rakam, born an asset on Werel, who must twice escape from slavery to freedom. Joined to them is “Old Music and the Slave Women,” in which the charismatic Hainish embassy worker, who appears in two of the four original stories, returns for a tale of his own. Of this capstone tale Le Guin has written, “the character called Old Music began to tell me a fifth tale about the latter days of the civil war… I’m glad to see it joined to the others at last.”
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«Ever read ? I knew it! You look like a reader, you have that kind of face. Remember they had a race in there — the Ents? Tree people, all of them male, who had lost their women. Oh, yes, you know what I’m talking about.
…It was, like, a challenge from nature. Just like the Ents, we had our wives taken away, and we just got left here to fend for ourselves.»
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A new tour de force from the bestselling author of Free Food for Millionaires, for readers of A Fine Balance and Cutting for Stone.
Profoundly moving and gracefully told, PACHINKO follows one Korean family through the generations, beginning in early 1900s Korea with Sunja, the prized daughter of a poor yet proud family, whose unplanned pregnancy threatens to shame them. Betrayed by her wealthy lover, Sunja finds unexpected salvation when a young tubercular minister offers to marry her and bring her to Japan to start a new life.
So begins a sweeping saga of exceptional people in exile from a homeland they never knew and caught in the indifferent arc of history. In Japan, Sunja's family members endure harsh discrimination, catastrophes, and poverty, yet they also encounter great joy as they pursue their passions and rise to meet the challenges this new home presents. Through desperate struggles and hard-won triumphs, they are bound together by deep roots as their family faces enduring questions of faith, family, and identity.
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Trois femmes, trois âges, trois amies que les hasards de l’existence et les épreuves ont rapprochées dans un lieu comme aucun autre.
Trois façons d’aimer. Aucune ne semble conduire au bonheur.
Séparément, elles sont perdues. Ensemble, elles ont une chance.
Accrochées à leurs espoirs face aux tempêtes que leur réserve le destin, avec l’énergie et l’imagination propres à celles qui veulent s’en sortir, elles vont tenter le tout pour le tout. Personne ne dit que ça ne fera pas de dégâts…
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As humanity lives out the remainder of its existence at the top of an isolated apartment tower, young Jackie dares to question Tower Authority and their ban on traveling into the tower's depths. Intelligent and unyielding, Jackie ventures into the shadows of the floors below. But will her strong will and refusal to be quiet—in a society whose greatest pride is hiding the past—bring understanding of how humanity became trapped in the tower she has always called home, or will it simply be her undoing?<
The Sisters of the Crescent Empress is the second book in Leena Likitalo’s Waning Moon Duology, a fabulous historical fantasy based on the lives of the Romanov sisters.
We all think we know how the story ends…
With the Crescent Empress dead, a civil war has torn the empire asunder. No one seems able to stop the ruthless Gagargi Prataslav. The five Daughters of the Moon are where he wants them to be, held captive in an isolated house in the far north.
Little Alina senses that the rooms that have fallen in disrepair have a sad tale to tell. Indeed, she soon meets two elderly ladies, the ghosts of the house’s former inhabitants.
Merile finds the ghosts suspiciously friendly and too interested in her sisters. She resolves to uncover their agenda with the help of her two dogs.
Sibilia isn’t terribly interested in her younger sisters’ imaginary friends, for she has other concerns. If they don’t leave the house by spring, she’ll miss her debut. And while reading through the holy scriptures, she stumbles upon a mystery that reeks of power.
Elise struggles to come to terms with her relationship with Captain Janlav. Her former lover now serves the gagargi, and it’s his duty to keep the daughters confined in the house. But if the opportunity were to arise, she might be able sway him into helping them flee.
Celestia is perfectly aware of the gagargi coming to claim her rather sooner than later. She’s resolved to come up with a plan to keep her sisters safe at any cost. For she knows what tends to happen to the sisters of the Crescent Empress.<
The Weapons of the Gods were stolen from the countless tombs that Drake and his team uncovered; then sold on, coveted and killed for. Now, the new promise of their combined power has unleashed a formidable force who will stop at nothing to own them all.
Thrown into the new quest against their will, Team Spear face incredible odds — they are being hunted by their own government whilst trying to weed out highly placed traitors, and stop global mercenary and terrorist forces from causing worldwide mayhem.
The team battle from Texas to Greece, from deserted islands to London, from Syria to Washington DC, as they identify the traitors that disavowed them and join an incredible, once-in-a-lifetime battle where a force made up of hundreds of elite Special Forces soldiers takes on a vast army of terrorists in Syria.<
Within six months, all the human life on the rogue planet Way Station, meant as a second chance for a dying world, was wiped out, and nobody knows why. Doctors Eve Strauss and Isaac Federman are sent to the planet to investigate the deaths with no team, hardly any contact with home, and no idea what they’re getting into. What they are certain of is that they likely will not make it out alive.
These are the transcripts of Eve’s audio diary as they traverse a sunless world that they once thought was safe and calm, following strange storms, impossible noises in the dark, and a trail of bodies that spans the entire planet. Supposedly, they are the only living beings on the surface of Way Station, and they have to rely on each other to stay stable and on task when they’re otherwise surrounded by millions of years of death.<
Daniel McFarland has refined the life of a war correspondent down to an art. He knows how to get information out of officials who won't talk. He knows how to find the one man with a car who can get you out of town. He knows how to judge the gravity of a situation in a war-torn area (it's a bad sign when the dogs are gone). And he knows how to get to the heart of an explosive story and emerge unscathed. To Daniel, getting the story is everything.
When a trip to a warlord's camp in Uganda goes awry and Daniel's companions end up dead, he has his first serious moment of reckoning with his lack of faith, his steely approach to life, and his cool dispatch of the people around him. And as he falls in love with Julia Cadell, an idealistic doctor, he begins to see the world anew. The two run off together to a canal house in the middle of London, where they find a refuge from their perilous lives.
But they can't ignore the real world forever and are soon persuaded to travel to East Timor, where the entire nation has become a war zone. As the militia prepares to sacrifice the lives of hundreds of refugees, Daniel must decide whether to get the story of a lifetime or to see beyond the headlines to the people whose lives are in the balance.
THE CANAL HOUSE is a stunningly written novel about friends-and lovers-struggling to find meaning in a chaotic world.<
Lorsque Frida annonce son intention d'épouser Diego Rivera, son père a ce commentaire acide : « ce seront les noces d'un éléphant et d'une colombe ». Tout le monde reçoit avec scepticisme la nouvelle du mariage de cette fille turbulente mais de santé fragile avec le « génie » des muralistes mexicains, qui a le double de son âge, le triple de son poids, une réputation d'« ogre » et de séducteur, ce communiste athée qui ose peindre à la gloire des Indiens des fresques où il incite les ouvriers à prendre machettes et fusils pour jeter à bas la trinité démoniaque du Mexique — le prêtre, le bourgeois, l'homme de loi.
Diego et Frida raconte l'histoire d'un couple hors du commun. Histoire de leur rencontre, le passé chargé de Diego et l'expérience de la douleur et de la solitude pour Frida. Leur foi dans la révolution, leur rencontre avec Trotski et Breton, l'aventure américaine et la surprenante fascination exercée par Henry Ford. Leur rôle enfin dans le renouvellement du monde de l'art.
Étrange histoire d'amour, qui se construit et s'exprime par la peinture, tandis que Diego et Frida poursuivent une œuvre à la fois dissemblable et complémentaire. L'art et la révolution sont les seuls points communs de ces deux êtres qui ont exploré toutes les formes de la déraison. Frida est, pour Diego, cette femme douée de magie entrevue chez sa nourrice indienne et, pour Frida, Diego est l'enfant tout-puissant que son ventre n'a pas pu porter. Ils forment donc un couple indestructible, mythique, aussi parfait et contradictoire que la dualité mexicaine originelle, Ometecuhtli et Omecihuatl.
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« Jusqu'où irons-nous ? Jusqu'à quand serons-nous vivants ? Quelles raisons donnerons-nous à notre histoire ? Parce qu'il faudra bien un jour trouver une raison, donner une raison, nous ne pourrons pas accréditer notre innocence. Où que nous soyons, quelle que soit notre destination finale (si une telle chose existe), il nous faudra rendre compte, rendre des comptes.
J'ai été, j'ai fait, j'ai possédé. Et un jour je ne serai plus rien. Pareil à ce wagon lancé à une vitesse inimaginable, incalculable, sans doute voisine de l'absolu, entre deux mondes, entre deux états. Et pas question qu'aucun d'entre nous retourne jamais à ses états, je veux dire à son passé, à ce qu'il, à ce qu'elle a aimé. Pour cela les visages sont figés, immobiles, parfois terreux, on dirait des masques de carton bouilli ou de vieux cuir, avec deux fentes par où bouge le regard, une étoile de vie accrochée au noir des prunelles. »
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Onze « faits divers », d'une banalité tout apparente. Qu'il s'agisse d'un groupe d'ouvriers misérables passant en fraude la frontière italienne, de deux jeunes filles fugueuses, d'un enfant voleur, d'une femme accouchant seule sur la moquette d'un mobile home, surveillée par son chien-loup au regard de braise, qu'il s'agisse de la fillette broyée par un camion, ou de la fillette violée dans une cave de H.L.M., l'auteur impose aux faits une étrangeté bouleversante. L'incident s'annule au profit du dénominateur commun de toute souffrance humaine qu'articulent l'horreur de la solitude, la répression, l'injustice et, quoi qu'il arrive, le fol et vain espoir de rencontrer, dans l'amour et dans la liberté, une merveilleuse douceur.<
Cinq saisons, cinq nouvelles, cinq femmes ; Libbie-Saba, Zobéïde, la bohémienne aux roses, Gaby et Zinna. Une par nouvelle. Une par saison. Cinq femmes vues ou entrevues, rêvées, pour tenter de dire la fragilité, l'étrangeté et la recherche de l'amour, la recherche de soi-même, l'errance et l'appartenance, la mémoire ou l'oubli, le temps qui ne passe pas et les lieux anciens qui s'enfuient.<
En anglais, on appelle « novella » une longue nouvelle qui unit les lieux, l'action et le ton. Le modèle parfait serait Joseph Conrad. De ces deux novellas, l'une se déroule sur l'île d'Udo, dans la mer du Japon, que les Coréens nomment la mer de l'Est, la seconde à Paris, et dans quelques autres endroits. Elles sont contemporaines.<
J.M.G. Le Clézio a écrit une cinquantaine d’ouvrages. En 2008, il a reçu le prix Nobel de la littérature.
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Pendant l'été 1943, dans un petit village de l'arrière-pays niçois transformé en ghetto par les occupants italiens, Esther découvre ce que peut signifier être juif en temps de guerre : adolescente jusqu'alors sereine, elle va connaître la peur, l'humiliation, la fuite à travers les montagnes, la mort de son père.
Comme dans , avec lequel il forme un diptyque, on retrouve dans le récit d'un voyage vers la conscience de soi. Tant que le mal existera, tant que des enfants continueront d'être captifs de la guerre, tant que l'idée de la nécessité de la violence ne sera pas rejetée, Esther et Nejma resteront des étoiles errantes.
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Le narrateur Alexis a huit ans quand il assiste avec sa sœur Laure à la faillite de son père et à la folle édification d'un rêve : retrouver l'or du Corsaire, caché à Rodrigues. Adolescent, il quitte l'île Maurice à bord du schooner et part à la recherche du trésor. Quête chimérique, désespérée. Seul l'amour silencieux de la jeune « manaf » Ouma arrache Alexis à la solitude. Puis c'est la guerre, qu'il passe en France (dans l'armée anglaise). De retour en 1922 à l'île Maurice, il rejoint Laure et assiste à la mort de Mam. Il se replie à Mananava. Mais Ouma lui échappe, disparaît. Alexis aura mis trente ans à comprendre qu'il n'y a de trésor qu'au fond de soi, dans l'amour et l'amour de la vie, dans la beauté du monde.<
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