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      • Knizhniki

        Knizhniki brings Jewish thought to Russian readers. Recent highlights include titles by André Aciman and Helena Janeczek, with Edmund De Waal and Francine Prose now in the works.

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      • Knigolove

        #knigolove is an independent Ukrainian publishing house established in 2016. We specialize in translations of contemporary literary fiction and non-fiction titles. Within the Ukrainian market, #knigolove is widely known as a publisher of quality books, both children’s and adult. Aside from translations, we actively work with prominent Ukrainian authors whose books quickly become Ukrainian bestsellers. #knigolove is also proud of its successful collaborations with international organizations such as UNICEF, the United Nations Population Fund, and the United Nations.   Our mission is to create books for people who want to change themselves and the world around them for the better.

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      • Trusted Partner
        Literature & Literary Studies
        June 2021

        Plain ugly

        by Naomi Baker

      • Trusted Partner
        Humanities & Social Sciences
        January 2025

        England’s military heartland

        Preparing for war on Salisbury Plain

        by Vron Ware, Antonia Lucia Dawes, Mitra Pariyar, Alice Cree

        What is it like to live next door to a British Army base? England's military heartland provides an eye-opening account of the sprawling military presence on Salisbury Plain, drawing on a wide range of voices from both sides of the divide. Targeted for expansion under government plans to reorganise the UK's global defence estate, the Salisbury 'super garrison' offers a unique opportunity to explore the impact of the military footprint in a particular place. But this is no ordinary environment: as well as being the world-famous site of Stonehenge, the grasslands of Salisbury Plain are home to rare plants and wildlife. How does the army take responsibility for conserving this unique landscape as it trains young men and women to use lethal weapons? Are its claims that its presence is a positive for the environment anything more than propaganda? This book investigates these questions against the backdrop of a historic landscape inscribed with the legacy of perpetual war.

      • Trusted Partner
        May 2020

        Metalmorphoses

        The Fantastic Mutations of Heavy Metal

        by Jörg Scheller

        How did heavy metal get started? What’s behind the fascination of many bands with the occult? Which women liven up the scene? What is the Heavy Metal Knitting World Championship in Finland about? Jörg Scheller invites you to find out more about the mainstream trends as well as less well-known bizarre facts. Heavy metal began in the 1970s in the subculture of British industrial centres and until today it is an unruly and agile art form. Wellknown warhorses like Iron Maiden or Metallica still pack stadiums, while new trends come from the strong Scandinavian scene. Scheller credits the genre with “exciting synchronism of freedom and order, rebellion and retreat, scepticism and enthusiasm, toughness and diversity”.

      • Trusted Partner
        March 2026

        Northanger Abbey

        English Edition | Jane Austen's brilliant satire on the Gothic novel | Dark family secrets and hopeless emotional turmoil behind the walls of Northanger Abbey

        by Jane Austen

        Catherine Morland has always longed for adventure. Plain, inexperienced, and with little fortune, she seems destined for an ordinary life in the quiet countryside. To escape her boredom, she immerses herself in thrilling Gothic novels – until fiction and reality begin to blur.When she meets the charming Henry Tilney and receives an invitation to his family’s mysterious estate, Northanger Abbey, Catherine’s imagination runs wild. Are there sinister secrets hidden within its ancient walls – or has her fancy led her astray?Romance, intrigue, and dark suspicions intertwine in this witty and captivating tale from the beloved queen of romance. »Jane Austen is one of my favourite authors.« Emma Thompson

      • Trusted Partner
        The Arts
        March 2026

        Abnormal peripheries

        Slovak and Czech performance art in the 1960s and 70s

        by Sam Cermak

        This book traces an early history of performance art from the former Czechoslovakia, which emerged in the 1960s and 1970s in the context of the Prague Spring and the subsequent policy of Normalization that brought on cultural censorship, prosecution, and state violence against artists. The book draws on Czech and Slovak scholarship as well as primary research in archives, interviews, and fieldwork to dispel misreadings of visual and cultural idioms in pre-existing Anglophone scholarship about the region. Although the former Soviet Bloc is often equated with repression and lack of experimental art in public spaces, performance artists within the former Socialist Czechoslovakia often used public, semi-public and clandestine spheres to create their performances. By analysing both works of established artists such as Aktual, Alex Mlynárcik, Petr Stembera, Jan Mlcoch, as well as under-theorised practitioners including Luba Lauffová, Karel Miler, Temporary Society of Intense Living, and Crusaders School of Pure Humour with no Joke, this book analyses how performance can survive and sometimes even thrive on the background of a politically oppressive regime. Cermak tells a unique story of localised resistance to a monolithic public sphere through artistic intervention, a closely knit community, artistic exchange, and agonistic reframing of socialism as a philosophy rather than state ideology.

      • The Arts
        January 1905

        The Elements of Drawing

        by John Ruskin

        Can drawing — sound, honest representation of the world as the eye sees it, not tricks with the pencil or a few "effects" — be learned from a book? One of the most gifted draftsmen, who is also one of the greatest art critics and theorists of all time, answers that question with a decided "Yes." He is John Ruskin, the author of this book, a classic in art education as well as a highly effective text for the student and amateur today. The work is in three parts, cast in the form of letters to a student, successively covering "First Practice," "Sketching from Nature," and "Colour and Composition." Starting with the bare fundamentals (what kind of drawing pen to buy; shading a square evenly), and using the extremely practical method of exercises which the student performs from the very first, Ruskin instructs, advises, guides, counsels, and anticipates problems with sensitivity. The exercises become more difficult, developing greater and greater skills until Ruskin feels his reader is ready for watercolors and finally composition, which he treats in detail as to the laws of principality, repetition, continuity, curvature, radiation, contrast, interchange, consistency, and harmony. All along the way, Ruskin explains, in plain, clear language, the artistic and craftsmanlike reasons behind his practical advice — underlying which, of course, is Ruskin's brilliant philosophy of honest, naturally observed art which has so much affected our aesthetic. Three full-page plates and 48 woodcuts and diagrams (the latter from drawings by the author) show the student what the text describes. An appendix devotes many pages to the art works which may be studied with profit.

      • Trusted Partner
        Literature & Literary Studies
        March 2026

        The dreadful name of Henry Hills

        The lives and afterlives of a seventeenth-century printer

        by Michael Durrant

        1. Introducing the Career of Henry Hills, Printer - What is a printer? - Print output - Insignia - Roles - Partnerships - Cultural configurations of the early modern printer 2. 'Once upon a time': Biographical Encounters with Henry Hills - Henry Hills' Lives: From DNB to ODNB - Cultural biographies of printers - Hugh Dalton's Cave: Reading Henry Hills Part 2: Transformations 3. '[N]othing but the plain truth': The Prodigal Repackaged (1650-51, 1688, 1825) - Henry Hills: Particular Baptist printer / author - The Prodigal as shame management - Henry Hills and the tailor's wife: 'Pressing' at a biographical anecdote - The Prodigal Returned to his Father's House, by Henry Hills (1825): Reprinting a reprint 4. 'Licking himself whole again': Writing and Rewriting Henry Hills' Catholic Conversion (1685, 1686, 1733, 1826) - Henry Hills: Catholic Printer - A View (1685): From runaway apprentice to anti-Catholic book burner - Entering Book (1686): Roger Morrice and the Hills household - Revolution Politicks (1733): Print mediation and and public talk - Hills, last seen at Watten, near Sainte-Omer, 13 February 1689 Part 3: Afterlives 5. Henry Hills, Eikon Basilike, and his Posthumous Role in the Pamela Prayer Conspiracy - Taking the Pamela Prayer interpolation seriously: Eikon Basilike, authorship, and the work of conspiracy - '[T]he Roundhead printer!': Almack, Madan, and Hills' role in the publication of the Eikon - The 'leading witness': Writing and rewriting Hills in Milton scholarship - Finding Henry Hills in Dr Bernard's library 6. Pirates, Parents, and Print: Rewriting Henry Hills' Last Will and Testament - 'Suite Trouble': Contesting Hills' legacy - '[A]n expedient lineage': Henry Hills junior goes to Bombay - Working with what remains

      • Trusted Partner
        Biography & True Stories
        July 2026

        Q is for garden

        Tending the histories of queer cultivation

        by Jenny Chamarette

        A bold, tender exploration of how queerness and nature entwine - and what happens when we step beyond the binaries that fence us in. There is a Q in garden, but you can't always see it. When Jenny Chamarette faced a devastating health crisis, they found themselves unmoored from the rules of gender, sexuality and productivity. In a small South London garden, Jenny began to imagine another way of living: porous, unruly, rooted in the lessons of soil and plant life. Gardens, like identities, are usually bounded - but what if those limits can be re-drawn? Blending memoir and cultural criticism, this book asks whether the categories we inherit - colonial, patriarchal, conventions of sexuality and gender - still serve us, or whether they confine us. From illness and recovery to queer love and ecological wonder, Q is for garden invites readers to reimagine how we inhabit land, culture and each other. An eloquent work of nature writing and queer thought, Q is for garden digs into the rich history of queer gardeners, botanists, artists and agriculturalists. It offers a hopeful vision of belonging, if we are curious enough to unearth it.

      • Trusted Partner
        2025

        Among Neighbours

        The strangest relationship of our lives

        by Bernd Imgrund

        There are many things in life that we are (more or less) free to choose: our circle of friends, our workplace, our place of residence. However, we have to take some communities as they come: We cannot choose our family or our neighbours, for example. Why this does not only lead to the much-vaunted idyllic sense of belonging and what tensions forced social relationships can cause: This is the subject of this fascinating collection of essays by Bernd Imgrund. It sheds light on a piece of social history that we all know from our own experience: who hasn't had an argument with their immediate neighbour or made fun of the residents of the neighbouring district? But it is by no means only negative aspects that characterise neighbourly relations. Pride in one's neighbourhood, help within a village community: the many advantages of a social community, its importance and its representation in art and literature have also found their way into this book.

      • Trusted Partner
        May 2023

        How Philosophers Fail Themselves

        The somewhat different historyof philosophy

        by Otto A. Böhmer

        — Philosophy for beginners — For philosophy enthusiasts — A pleasant read This truly brilliant book tells of the sometimes sublime, sometimes exhilarating efforts of philosophers to maintain their attitude in everyday life without forgetting the meaning of their own words – and how they ultimately failed to do so. The minor, sometimes bizarre events in the lives of the great philosophers fit so aptly in the picture of the respective philosophy that one has to assume they could have been conceived to keep the associated intellectual giant in a strange and memorable mood. A book of cheerful science, full of wit, narrative and linguistic eloquence.

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        Last Paths to Freedom. French Girl Guides in resistance to Nazi Germany

        by Thomas Seiterich

        Summer 1940. Nazi Germany annexes Alsace, but not without resistance: in the Catholic parish of St. Jean, very close to the Great Synagogue, six French Girl Guides opened an underground border crossing for opponents of the regime, Jews, Communists and the military. They explored and found secret routes across the Vosges to the west, and south to Switzerland. By the time the Gestapo picked them up in 1942, they had brought around 500 people to safety. Freisler tried them in 1943 and sentenced six of them to death by guillotine. Pope Pius XII demanded that the women be spared. And Hitler did indeed pardon them – with the proviso that they were not allowed to know. They all survived.

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