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Lenin Ossendowskiego to książka-legenda. Została przetłumaczona na wiele języków. W latach trzydziestych zrobiła karierę na obu półkulach i odegrała znaczącą rolę w ukazaniu, kto i jak robił Rewolucję Październikową. Niezwykle sugestywny obraz ty…
O Leninie napisano setki tomów. Z czasem dopiero na drugi plan zepchnęli go Józef Stalin i Adolf Hitler. Wśród wielu prób zgłębienia leninowskiego fenomenu największe bodaj powodzenie miały przed II wojną światową pisane niemal na gorąco dwie książki: znakomitego włoskiego dziennikarza i publicysty Curzia Malapartego i właśnie Antoniego Ossendowskiego. Ta ostatnia w modnym wówczas gatunku powieści biograficznej, szeroko i szczerze, bez lukru i niezdrowej fascynacji, właściwej wielu europejskim liberałom, przedstawia piekło rosyjskiej rewolucji i wojny domowej. Ossendowski miał tę przewagę nad innymi, że czasy te przeżył w Rosji, co prawda z szeregach białych. Dlatego jego książka tchnęła autentyzmem i prawdą nawet tam, gdzie opisywał najbardziej wynaturzone praktyki złowrogiej tajnej policji – Czeki. Czytelnik otrzyma w Leninie, obok zarysu postaci Ilicza, bogaty fresk epoki.
Światowy bestseller lat trzydziestych XX wieku, książka demaskatorska, zdzierająca maskę rewolucji październikowej i odsłaniająca prawdziwe oblicza jej przywódców oraz mechanizmy ich postępowania, a jednocześnie dogłębna analiza i surowa ocena systemu komunistycznego. Uznano ją za antyradziecki paszkwil. Obraz rewolucji "od kuchni" zapada w pamięć tym bardziej, że jest to zapis wnikliwych oberwacji naocznego świadka wydarzeń.
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Panic began as so many things do in Carp, a dead-end town of 12,000 people in the middle of nowhere: because it was summer, and there was nothing else to do.
Heather never thought she would compete in Panic, a legendary game played by graduating seniors, where the stakes are high and the payoff is even higher. She’d never thought of herself as fearless, the kind of person who would fight to stand out. But when she finds something, and someone, to fight for, she will discover that she is braver than she ever thought.
Dodge has never been afraid of Panic. His secret will fuel him, and get him all the way through the game, he’s sure of it. But what he doesn't know is that he’s not the only one with a secret. Everyone has something to play for.
For Heather and Dodge, the game will bring new alliances, unexpected revelations, and the possibility of first love for each of them—and the knowledge that sometimes the very things we fear are those we need the most.
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Tells the story of one of the pivotal events of the WWII – the struggle between British and German air forces in the late summer and autumn of 1940. This book answers such questions as: how close did Britain really come to invasion; what were Hitler and Churchill’s motives; and, what was the battle’s real effect on the outcome of the war.
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Beyond the star range: infinite sex and ultimate horror.<
There are two things people like to do with a new phenomenon; understand it and use it. Sometimes it’s not wise to be too particular about the order….<
Written during Olsen's five-month stay at the American Academy in Berlin, . is part critifictional meditation and part trash diary exploring what happens at the confluence of curiosity, travel, and innovative writing practices. A collage of observations, facts, quotations, recollections, and theoretical reflections, it touches on a wide range of authors, genres, and places, from Beckett and Ben Marcus to David Bowie and Wayne Koestenbaum, film and architecture to avant-garde music and hypermedia, the Venezuelan jungle and Bhutanese mountains to New Jersey mall culture and the restlessness known as Berlin. is an always-already bracketed performance about how, by inhabiting unstable spaces, we continually unlearn and therefore relearn what thought, experience, and imagination feel like.<
The first novel in "Solar Queen" series, followed by , and others.
The novel follows Dane Thorson, a newbie apprentice cargo master on board of a Free Trader spaceship Solar Queen, and his adventures on a recently discovered planet.
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The nineteenth-century founding of “free settlements” in the Americas serves as a starting point for the new novel by popular Czech author Patrik Ouředník. Simultaneously satiric and philosophical, , opens with an Italian anarchist’s missive to his noble former mistress, an impassioned rejection of all of Europe’s latest and greatest advancements, from the Enlightenment to social reform to communist revolution. We then leap back in time half a century to the alternately somber and hilarious shipboard diary of a common Italian everyman sailing to Brazil with a motley, multinational band of idealists, to build a new society. A pitiless portrait of the often unbridgeable gap between theory and practice, is another uproarious and unsettling attack on convention by one of literature’s great provocateurs.<
"From between the two shuffling dancers padded something on four feet. The canine-feline creature was more than just a head; it was a loose-limbed, graceful body fully eight feet in length, and the red eyes in the prick-eared head were those of a killer.... Words issued from between those curved fangs, words which Dane might not understand....
"Dane slid his blade out surreptitiously, setting its point against the palm of his hand and jabbing painfully; but the terrible creature continued to advance.... There was no blurring of its lines...."
Dane Thorson of the space-ship knew there was only one way to win out over this hideous thing — a battle to the end between his rational mind and the hypnotic witchcraft of Lumbrilo, the mental wizard of the planet Khatka.
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"From between the two shuffling dancers padded something on four feet. The canine-feline creature was more than just a head; it was a loose-limbed, graceful body fully eight feet in length, and the red eyes in the prick-eared head were those of a killer.... Words issued from between those curved fangs, words which Dane might not understand....
"Dane slid his blade out surreptitiously, setting its point against the palm of his hand and jabbing painfully; but the terrible creature continued to advance.... There was no blurring of its lines...."
Dane Thorson of the space-ship knew there was only one way to win out over this hideous thing — a battle to the end between his rational mind and the hypnotic witchcraft of Lumbrilo, the mental wizard of the planet Khatka.
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Delancy Sullivan has always known there’s more to reality than what people see. Every time someone makes a choice, a new, parallel world branches off from the existing one. Eating breakfast or skipping it, turning left instead of right, sneaking out instead of staying in bed ~ all of these choices create an alternate universe in which an echo self takes the road not travelled and makes the opposite decision. As a Walker, someone who can navigate between these worlds, Del’s job is to keep all of the dimensions in harmony.
Normally, Del can hear the dissonant frequency that each world emits as clear as a bell. But when a training session in an off-key world goes horribly wrong, she is forbidden from Walking by the Council. But Del’s not big on following the rules and she secretly starts to investigate these other worlds. Something strange is connecting them and it’s not just her random encounters with echo versions of the guy she likes, Simon Lane.
But Del’s decisions have unimaginable consequences and, as she begins to fall for the Echo Simons in each world, she draws closer to a truth that the Council of Walkers is trying to hide ~ a secret that threatens the fate of the entire multiverse.
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