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Terug naar het blauwe huis
0Al snel ontmoet ze Maarten, een wat wonderlijke, gesloten man. Ze schenken elkaar hun vertrouwen en beleven bijzondere dagen. Maar dan blijkt dat Maarten doelbewust het gezelschap van Cathelijne heeft gezocht, om een duistere reden. Onbedoeld wordt een groot geheim ontrafelt.
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Terugkeer van de Herder van Hermas
0De katholieke kerk beleeft door de snel toenemende ontkerstening een steeds groter wordende identiteitscrisis. Andere kerkgenootschappen doen het niet veel beter. Met dit boek wil de auteur een verloren gewaand geschrift uit de vroegste tijden weer onder de aandacht brengen, om aan te tonen waar het allemaal fout liep. Het brengt ons terug bij een zekere Hermas, een welgestelde zakenman van Griekse afkomst die leefde in de eerste helft van de tweede eeuw.
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Terugkeer van de Katharen
0In deze intrigerende roman raakt een groep mensen onder invloed van een allesoverheersende klank. Die is zo indringend dat zij het bewustzijn verliezen en later weer bijkomen in een land dat ze niet kennen.
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The Beautiful Wound
0Rens heeft alles wat zijn hart begeert: een gelukkig huwelijk met zijn grote jeugdliefde Madelief en hun eerste kindje op komst. Maar onverwacht slaat het noodlot toe en dreigt hij alles kwijt te raken. Dan ontmoet hij na een intense zoektocht naar zichzelf een mysterieuze vrouw, met wie hij meer gemeen heeft dan hij kan vermoeden.
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The Diary of a Chambermaid
0The Diary of a Chambermaid was written as a satire of Parisian society in the wake of the Dreyfus Affair. Octave Mirbeau brings a journalist’s analytical eye to Celestine’s adventures as she loses her innocence and becomes as corrupt and depraved as the men who exploited her. Since its publication in 1900 it has never ceased to shock and fascinate its readers and has been made into a film by Jean Renoir in 1946 and Luis Bunuel in 1964.
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The Last of the Legions and other Tales of long ago
0The Last of the Legions and other Tales of long ago is a volume collecting 13 short stories written by Artur Conan Doyle, first published in 1922 by John Murray. The stories covers various centuries from Antiquity to first millenary. Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle, DL (1859-1930) was a Scottish author. He is most no-ted for his stories about the detective Sherlock Holmes, which are generally considered a major innovation in the field of crime fiction, and for the adventures of Professor Challenger. He was a prolific writer whose other works include science fiction stories, historical novels, plays and romances, poetry, and non-fiction.
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The Promise
0The Promise, Orde fan de Swan, is meer dan een zoektocht naar archeologische geheimen die over de aarde verspreid liggen. The Promise is vooral ook een meeslepende roman over mensen die op subtiele wijze gemanipuleerd worden. Zelfs in de liefde. Een meesterlijk geschreven verhaal!
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The remarkable adventures of a loafer and Einsteins Error
0The famous physicist Olivier Loos compares his life with that of the loafer Tobias Vlek, he knows from his youth. As time goes by his appreciation for Tobias Vlek grows, realizing how he had failed in meeting his own expectations. His opposition against Albert Einstein met resistance with settled reputes and damaged his career. Therefore he chose for safer subjects due to sense of duty for his family.
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The remarkable adventures of a loafer and Einsteins Error
0The famous physicist Olivier Loos compares his life with that of the loafer Tobias Vlek, he knows from his youth. As time goes by his appreciation for Tobias Vlek grows, realizing how he had failed in meeting his own expectations. His opposition against Albert Einstein met resistance with settled reputes and damaged his career. Therefore he chose for safer subjects due to sense of duty for his family.
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The silent final
0Could the twin brothers be considered lucky, being the only concentration camp survivors from the Jewish community in Elburg. And what about the few dozen out of 660 men deported from Putten who returned after the war, were they lucky? In the Silent Final Henk Vaessen shows that for those who survived the war camps the suffering did not stop when they were liberated. For the spectator the war lasts from the beginning till the end… for the victim it lasts the rest of his life. And even then it is not over…
The story confronts the reader with controversial subjects like the ‘second and third generation syndrome’, the relationship Judaism-Christianity and anti-semitism. At the same time the author interweaves humour and gravity in the daily life of the main characters.
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The Valley of Fear
0In this gruesome Sherlock Holmes tale, Holmes and Watson are called upon to investigate the mysterious shooting of John Douglas, when he is mysteriously murdered with a sawn-off shotgun at his Manor home in Sussex. The House is surrounded by a moat so the two, are at first, left baffled as to how the murderer entered or existed … or did he? Fans of the fa-mous detective will love this book, as will anyone interested in a thrilling and exciting read.
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The Wanderings of a Spiritualist
0“This is an account of the wanderings of a spiritualist, geographical and speculative. Should the reader have no interest in psychic things if indeed any human being can be so foolish as not to be interested in his own nature and fate, then this is the place to put the book down. It were better also to end the matter now if you have no patience with a go-as-you-please style of narrative, which founds itself upon the conviction that thought may be as interesting as action, and which is bound by its very nature to be intensely personal. I write a record of what absorbs my mind which may be very different from that which appeals to yours. But if you are content to come with me upon these terms then let us start with my apologies in advance for the pages which may bore you, and with my hopes that some may compensate you by pleasure or by profit. I write these lines with a pad upon my knee, heaving upon the long roll of the In-dian Ocean, running large and grey under a grey streaked sky, with the rain swept hills of Ceylon, just one shade greyer, lining the Eastern skyline. So under many difficulties it will be carried on, which may explain if it does not excuse any slurring of a style, which is at its best but plain English.” – Sir Arthur Conan Doyle