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Noe l. Barber

    9 septembre 1909 – 10 juillet 1988

    Noel Barber était un romancier et journaliste britannique dont les romances exotiques et les ouvrages d'histoire s'inspirent de ses expériences personnelles en tant que correspondant étranger de premier plan. Ses reportages depuis le Maroc, où il fut poignardé à cinq reprises, et depuis la Hongrie, où il survécut à une balle à la tête lors de la révolution, ont façonné son style littéraire unique. Barber mêlait magistralement des récits captivants à une profonde compréhension des situations géopolitiques complexes. Ses écrits offrent aux lecteurs un aperçu fascinant du monde à travers les yeux d'un homme qui avait personnellement vécu ses dangers et ses merveilles.

    Tanamera (Coronet Books)
    The fall of Shanghai
    The War of the Running Dogs
    La Femme du Caire
    Saline royale Arc-et-Senans
    Tanamera
    • Fortement inspiré par les philosophes du siècle des Lumières, Claude-Nicolas Ledoux a défendu l'idée que l'architecture était source de transformation pour la société. Son projet de cité idéale dont la Saline royale était l'une des composantes essentielles est le reflet de ses ambitions. La Saline Royale est bien la " Cité des Utopies ". Le présent ouvrage n'a qu'une seule ambition : vous offrir un reflet de ce lieu unique, trace ou promesse d'une rencontre singulière...

      Saline royale Arc-et-Senans
    • Sur fond politique (1919-1953) une idylle quasi victorienne dans l'Egypte de Farouk et du jeune Nasser.

      La Femme du Caire
    • The War of the Running Dogs

      How Malaya Defeated the Communist Guerrillas, 1948-60

      • 329pages
      • 12 heures de lecture

      Only three short years after the end of the Japanese occupation, war came again to Malaya. The Chinese-backed guerrillas called it the War of the Running Dogs - their contemptuous term for those in Malaya who remained loyal to the British. The British Government referred to this bloody and costly struggle as the 'Malayan Emergency'. Yet it was a war that lasted twelve years and cost thousands of lives. By the time it was over Malaya had obtained its independence - but on British, not on Chinese or Communist terms. Here is the war as it was. Here are the planters and their wives on their remote rubber estates, the policemen, the generals and the soldiers, the Malays, Chinese and Indians of a polyglot country, all fighting an astute, ruthless, and well organized enemy.

      The War of the Running Dogs
      4,5
    • The fall of Shanghai

      • 251pages
      • 9 heures de lecture

      The takeover, when it came, was quick, as expected. But the crushing strictness that followed was jolting. 'On May 24,' wrote one diarist, 'you could bribe everyone in Shanghai. On May 26 you could bribe no one - for perhaps the first time in a hundred years.

      The fall of Shanghai
      4,2
    • Tanamera (Coronet Books)

      • 736pages
      • 26 heures de lecture

      The story of two lovers and two great dynasties - one British, the other Chinese - of the society that separated them and the passion that bound them.

      Tanamera (Coronet Books)
      4,2
    • A woman of Cairo

      • 672pages
      • 24 heures de lecture

      Tracing the childhood friendship between Mark Holt, son of the British resident and Serena Sirry, daughter of a court advisor, that blossoms into a passionate love affair, A Woman of Cairo also paints a fascinating picture of two different societies in a time of violent change.

      A woman of Cairo
      4,0
    • The daughters of the prince.

      • 528pages
      • 19 heures de lecture

      The story of three Italian sisters; Raefella, Rosanna and Fiammetta, living under Mussolini in 1938 and the men who fell in love with them: Steve, an American playboy; Kurt, a German musician; Hamilton Johns, an English painter. Set in Florence at the beginning of the World War II, this is the last novel by Noel Barber, whose novels include TANAMERA, A FAREWELL TO FRANCE and A WOMAN OF CAIRO.

      The daughters of the prince.
      3,8
    • The Weeping and the Laughter

      • 512pages
      • 18 heures de lecture

      This story describes the dramatic lives of Prince Dmitri Korolev and his family caught up in the upheavals of European revolution and war. They flee Russia in 1919, escape to Switzerland and then Paris, but, with the Second World War, they come under further pressure from the Communist police. The author worked for many years in Paris as a foreign correspondent and wrote several novels including "Tanamera", "A Farewell to France", "A Woman of Cairo" and "The Other Side of Paradise".

      The Weeping and the Laughter
      3,9