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Classic Wisdom Reprint

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  • Book : The Garland of Letters STUDIES IN THE MANTRA-?ASTRA.
    Precio:  $80,079.00
    Expira: 04/07/2022

    Book : The Garland of Letters STUDIES IN THE MANTRA-?ASTRA.

    -Titulo Original : The Garland Of Letters: STUDIES IN THE MANTRA- ASTRA-Fabricante : Classic Wisdom Reprint-Descripcion Original: Ancient text refer to Advait Vedanta, examined by prominent Sanskrit scholar Arthur Avalon...
  • Book : These Old Shades - Heyer, Georgette
    Precio:  $51,129.00

    Book : These Old Shades - Heyer, Georgette

    -Titulo Original : These Old Shades-Fabricante : Classic Wisdom Reprint-Descripcion Original: After the burning blaze of a failed relationship, she is often left alone to deal with the smoking aftermath. Best-selling author Pierre Alex Jeanty helps to bring clarity and understanding to the countless women who are faced with the reality of heartbreak. Ashes of Her Love exposes the fire for what it truly was, and encourages women to drown out the embers that threaten to reignite. With this book, women are inspired to free themselves from the weight of dead relationships, find freedom in walking away, and are empowered to stay away and avoid the reoccurring cycle of heartache. If you’re in a dying relationship, walking away from a terrible love story, learning to put what is no longer good in the past, Ashes of Her love is the fire you need to turn the pages and start writing a new love story. The ending is just the beginning&hellip...
  • Book : The Secret Of The Chimneys - Christie, Agatha
    Precio:  $78,929.00

    Book : The Secret Of The Chimneys - Christie, Agatha

    -Titulo Original : The Secret Of The Chimneys-Fabricante : Classic Wisdom Reprint-Descripcion Original: At the request of George Lomax, Lord Caterham reluctantly agrees to host a weekend party at his home, Chimneys. A murder occurs in the house, beginning a week of fast-paced events with police among the guests. The novel was well received at first publication, described as more than a murder mystery, as it is a treasure hunt. Later reviews found it a first-class romp and one of the authors best early thrillers. The most recent review says the novel requires a hefty suspension of disbelief. The later reviewers note that descriptions of characters use the terminology of the times in which it was written, and might be considered racist decades later. The novel was written in 1925. The characters in the story refer to events that occurred about 7 years earlier, that is, at the end of the Great War when the Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman Empires were broken up. The war is never mentioned directly. Instead, in Chapter 19, Superintendent Battle says: Just over seven years ago, there was a lot what they called reconstruction going on especially in the Near East. At the same time, many royal persons were in England, including the Queen of Herzoslovakia, and Count Stylptitch; all the Balkan states were interested parties in discussions taking place. It is at this time that the Koh-i-Noor diamond disappeared in the plot. Later, in an unspecified year, the Herzoslovakians rose up against the king and his commoner wife. About that time, Mrs. Virginia Revel and her husband Tim were part of the diplomatic mission from the UK to Herzoslovakia, so that Mrs. Revel had met Prince Michael; she was the only such person at the house party, to know Prince Michael, but not the only person in the house. The time immediately after the war was when the theft, solved in this novel, happened. Review The Times Literary Supplement reviewed the novel in its issue of 9 July 1925 and, after setting up the story, stated favorably that there is ... a thick fog of mystery, cross-purposes, and romance, which leads up to a most unexpected and highly satisfactory ending. The reviewer for The Observer wrote on 28 June 1925: Mrs. Christie plunges lightheartedly into a real welter of murders, innocently-implicated lookers-on, Balkan politics (of the lighter Ruritanian kind), impersonators, secret societies, ciphers, experts, secret hiding-places, detectives (real and pretended), and emerges triumphantly at the end before her readers are too hopelessly befogged. Nobody is killed who matters much. The right people marry, after it all, having first endeared themselves to us by their frivolous attitude to the singularly animated doings around them. The reviewer concluded that Christies ingenuity and clear-headedness are really remarkable. The review in The Scotsman of 16 July 1925 began, Despite Herzoslovakian politics and a background of oil and finance, this new novel by Agatha Christie gets a grip of the reader when it comes down to the business of disposing of a corpse, innocently come by but not to be repudiated without danger of grave scandal and went on to say, It is an exciting story with a bewildering array of potential murderers and a curious collection of detectives, amateur and professional, and with a crook of international importance and (alleged) consummate ability. The review concluded: There is more than murder in this story; there is a treasure hunt in it, not for gold but a diamond, and the story is suitably staged for the main part at Chimneys, that historic mansion whose secret will be found in Chapter XXIX, though the wise in these matters may have discovered it a little earlier. Robert Barnard said it is important to remember when this novel was written If you can take all of the racialist remarks, which are very much of their time, this is a first-class romp, all the better for not being of the plot to take over the world variety. It concerns the throne and crown jewels of Herzoslovakia, and com...
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