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  • av Fr Derike Geerdink
    236,-

  • av Brenda Ueland
    162 - 296,-

    Brenda Ueland was a journalist, editor, freelance writer, and teacher of writing. In If You Want to Write: A Book about Art, Independence and Spirit she shares her philosophies on writing and life in general.

  • av Luigi Pirandello & Kris Dyer
    193,-

  • av Swami Vivekananda
    131,-

  • av Neville Goddard
    252,-

  • av Dale Carnegie
    250 - 273,-

  • av Karl Marx
    165 - 184,-

    First published in 1848, "The Communist Manifesto" is a political pamphlet by German philosophers Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, which initiated in one of the greatest movements of political change that the world has ever seen. At the heart of the economic writings of Marx and Engels is the materialist conception of history, or that productive capacity is the primary organizing factor of society. This conception gives rise to the fundamental inequality that exists between the socioeconomic classes. By controlling the means of production, the wealthy, or "bourgeoisie", gain a power over the working class, or "proletariat". The writings of Marx and Engels would brilliantly expose the causes of the vast division between socioeconomic classes that had existed throughout history. From its initial publication "The Communist Manifesto" was intended to help unite the working class in a common goal of forming a political party based on the philosophies of communism. To that aim, it was very successful and helped to unleash a wave of sweeping political change across the globe. This edition is printed on premium acid-free paper.

  • av Adolf Hitler
    419 - 424,-

  • av Fidel Castro Ruz
    208,-

  • av Keira Miki
    170,-

    What is Ikigai? Ikigai is the art of living life in a way that a person is always inspired to remain focused on their goal. The meaning of Ikigai is to make your life meaningful. The people who use the principles of Ikigai always wake up in the morning with a sense of meaning. This is the reason why, despite having been destroyed in the second world war, Japan did not only develop, but also became a nation of longevity. How was all this possible? This was only possible by adopting the principles of Ikigai.This book will not only provide you with theoretical ideas, but also how to lead the Ikigai life with practical examples. It is then that you will know what this Japanese way of living actually is. How the people of that country achieve their goals. How they scale great heights in society and achieve a high social standing. What do they eat that they are able to live a long and fruitful life. This book will help you live a successful life, meaningful long life and achieve new heights of success every day, and you will enjoy it.

  • av Arnold Toynbee
    179,-

  • av Raktim Singh
    209,-

  • av Ign Cz K Nos Author
    261,-

  • av Ernest Dimnet
    222,-

    Anybody who does it need not be a genius. Genius has never been supposed to be a particularly good teacher of any art. It is better that the teacher of the Art of Thinking should not be a person who knows no difficulty in thinking, or produces such brilliant thoughts that they will be disheartening to the tyro. A delicate physician does not give the example of health-any woodsman can do that-he only gives the example of a small capital of health intelligently increased: yet, we know he can be more useful from his comprehension of indifferent health and from his appreciation of hygiene, and we often prefer him.

  • av James Hilton
    222,-

    Lost Horizon first published in 1933, this novel won Hilton the Hawthornden Prize in 1934. Hilton is said to have been inspired to write Lost Horizon, and to invent "Shangri-La" by reading the National Geographic Magazine articles of Joseph Rock, an Austrian-American botanist and ethnologist exploring the southwestern Chinese provinces and Tibetan borderlands. Still living in Britain at the time, Hilton was perhaps influenced by the Tibetan travel articles of early travelers in Tibet whose writings were found in the British Library.

  • av Jan Struther
    222,-

    Jan Struther was asked to contribute a series imagining the life of an "ordinary" woman, although her definition of "ordinary" was doubtless a reflection of her own background. Mrs Miniver has both a town and a country house, with servants in both. Her eldest boy is at Eton, and every August she motors up to Scotland for the grouse-shooting season (or should that be "grice-shooting"?) In other words, she lives a lifestyle that was representative of a tiny minority in 1930s Britain.

  • av Krishna Thorat Kullolli
    222,-

  • av Hervey Allen
    355,-

  • av Aldous Huxley
    236,-

    Aldous Huxley's book may have been written in 1931, but it still seems futuristic and disturbingly convincing. Some of the elements he portrays in his dystopia are coming true right now. From genetically modified citizens to a hierarchy based on intelligence, many of these predictions ring uncomfortably true.

  • av Rajeev Bhattacharyya
    264,-

  • av Janani Ramesh
    306,-

  • av Anand Raghav
    194,-

  • av R.Vijayalakshmy
    222,-

  • av A. Irudaya Raj
    222,-

  • av Pa Raghavan
    369,-

  • av Kalki R. Krishnamurthy
    306,-

  • av Savukku Shankar
    250,-

  • av Subrabharathimanian
    170,-

  • av Ayyanar Viswanath
    222,-

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