Plus d’un million de livres à portée de main !
Bookbot

Joseph Pearson

    Berlin
    My Grandfather's Knife
    Pearson's Political Dictionary: Containing Remarks, Definitions, Explanations, And Customs, Political And Parliamentary
    Cancer
    • Cancer

      • 216pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      Cancer is a powerful and moving novel that explores the impact of cancer on the lives of those affected by this devastating disease. Pearson portrays the emotional and physical challenges of living with cancer with sensitivity and compassion, while also exploring the themes of hope, love, and the resilience of the human spirit. This is a must-read for anyone touched by cancer, whether as a patient, caregiver, or loved one.

      Cancer
    • A book of everyday objects which unlock the secrets of the past

      My Grandfather's Knife
    • Berlin

      • 280pages
      • 10 heures de lecture

      "Berlin is a party in a graveyard. It is Europe's youth capital, and its guilty war conscience. It is a disputed construction site, built on the ruins of regimes. Today's diversity -- refugees, immigrants, arty expats, East and West -- emerges from a history of violence. Berlin is as cutting-edge and contemporary as it is wary of its extreme past. Berlin [the book] is a comprehensive short history and portrait of the German capital today. The story of Berlin's vagaries over nine centuries -- from a dry place in a bog to the control centre of modern Europe -- is expertly portrayed by historian Joseph Pearson. The dynamic present is a palimpsest of this unsettling past. A long-time flâneur of Berlin's streets, Pearson explores how the city's history is visible today in bombsites, museums and industrial club spaces (and a lake hosting a man-nibbling monster). In this book, we find that elements of the city that for some can be unnerving -- its emptiness, its provincialism, its ramshackle industrial eclecticism, its sexual freedoms, its confrontation with a murderous past -- are precisely what give the city its charge. Pearson poses provocative questions as he reveals the city's many layers and varied neighbourhoods. He argues, ultimately, that Berlin's centrality in European and cultural affairs is only just beginning to be felt"--Page 2 [flap] of cover

      Berlin