Bookbot

Will Berg

    De man van Montmartre
    Kitty in spanning
    Joodse wijsheid
    The Sign of the Beaver
    Kitty ontdekt een geheim
    Winnetou
    • The Sign of the Beaver

      • 135pages
      • 5 heures de lecture

      Left alone to guard the family's wilderness home in eighteenth-century Maine, a boy is hard-pressed to survive until local Indians teach him their skills. Until the day his father returns to their cabinnbsp in the Maine wilderness, twelve-year-old Matt must try to survive on his own. Although Matt is brave he's not prepared for an attack by swarming bees and he's astonished when he's rescued by an Indiann chief and his grandson, Attean. As the oys come to know each other Attean learns to speak English while Matt becomes a skilled hunter. Though many months have passed, there's no sign of Matt's family. Then Attean asks Matt to join the Beaver tribe and move north. Should Matt abandon his hopes of ever seeing his family again and move on to a new life?

      The Sign of the Beaver1984
      3,8
    • De man van Montmartre

      • 316pages
      • 12 heures de lecture

      Het leven van de Franse schilder Maurice Utrillo (1883-1955)

      De man van Montmartre1980
    • Kitty ontdekt een geheim

      • 117pages
      • 5 heures de lecture

      Kitty looses her watch and discovers a secret while trying to find the lost watch.

      Kitty ontdekt een geheim1976
      3,0
    • Winnetou

      • 749pages
      • 27 heures de lecture

      Karl May's most popular work originally published in 1892 and influenced by Harriet Beecher Stowe, Winnetou is the story of a young Apache chief told by his white friend and blood-brother Old Shatterhand. The action takes place in the U.S. Southwest, in the latter half of the 1800s, where the Indian way of life is threatened by the first transcontinental railroad. Winnetou, the only Native Indian chief who could have united the various rival tribes to reach a settlement with the whites, is murdered. His tragic death foreshadows the death of his people. May's central theme here, as in much of his work, is the relationship between aggression, racism, and religious intolerance.

      Winnetou1976
      4,6