Book's

Martha Finley

Violet's Hidden Doubts

E£65.00

Originally published more than 125 years ago in the Elsie Dinsmore series, these newly-updated stories introduce another young girl whose strong faith is a powerful example for today's girls---Violet Travilla, the daughter of Elsie Dinsmore. Violet is a fourteen-year-old Christian girl growing up in the late 1800s. Today's readers will find it easy to identify with Violet's growing faith and struggle toward maturity. Book one begins in 1877, when creative, independent fourteen-year-old Violet learns that growing up brings new problems, feelings, and questions. As the entire Travilla family faces a tragic loss, Violet discovers that true faith defeats even hidden doubts.

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Farag ElAntare

Music's Critics and Taste

E£85.00 E£34.00

The time has finally come for us to join the Arab Library as a very important reference in music criticism as a science and not as an essay practice

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Hassan Yousof

Contemporary aesthetic studies

E£110.00

A person has needs in life, and the needs are arranged and gradual, some of them are basic and necessary, some of them touch his physical needs, and they are the ones that preserve his survival and presence in life, and some affect the mental and psychological side, and they help in his advancement, progress and creativity.

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    Martha Finley

    Violet's Turning Point

    E£65.00

    In Violet's Turning Point, Vi Travilla and her friends visit New York City. They expect a summer holiday filled with shopping, sightseeing, and social occasions in America's most exciting city, but things quickly become complicated.

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    Martha Finley

    Violet's Amazing Summer

    E£65.00

    What will this journey add to her life? Violet is courages and calm, likes the adventure and is fearful, she is showing the reader her special character.

    She is a sample for young girls in this time.

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    Andreas Wagner

    Paradoxical Life: Meaning, Matter, and the Power of Human Choice

    E£210.00

    What can a fingernail tell us about the mysteries of creation? In one sense, a nail is merely a hunk of mute matter, yet in another, it’s an information superhighway quite literally at our fingertips. Every moment, streams of molecular signals direct our cells to move, flatten, swell, shrink, divide, or die. Andreas Wagner’s ambitious new book explores this hidden web of unimaginably complex interactions in every living being. In the process, he unveils a host of paradoxes underpinning our understanding of modern biology, contradictions he considers gatekeepers at the frontiers of knowledge.

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      Susan Lukas

      Where to Start and What to Ask : An Assessment Handbook

      E£170.00

      As a life raft for beginners and their supervisors, Where to Start and What to Ask provides all the necessary tools for garnering information from clients. Lukas also offers a framework for thinking about that information and formulating a thorough assessment. This indispensable book helps therapeutic neophytes organize their approach to the initial phase of treatment and navigate even rough clinical waters with competence and assurance.

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        Adel Salem

        Our Captives Behind Bars

        E£85.00 E£34.00

        The detainees in the prisons of the Israeli occupation are not separated from the resistance or the Palestinian national movement. They are an intimate and organic part of the resistance and the movement alike, but are they prisoners, detainees, or prisoners?

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        Alice Miller

        The Body Never Lies: The Lingering Effects of Hurtful Parenting

        E£160.00

        An examination of childhood trauma and its surreptitious, debilitating effects by one of the world's leading psychoanalysts.

        Never before has world-renowned psychoanalyst Alice Miller examined so persuasively the long-range consequences of childhood abuse on the body. Using the experiences of her patients along with the biographical stories of literary giants such as Virginia Woolf and Marcel Proust, Miller shows how a child's humiliation, impotence, and bottled rage will manifest itself as adult illness―be it cancer, stroke, or other debilitating diseases. Miller urges society as a whole to jettison its belief in the Fourth Commandment and not to extend forgiveness to parents whose tyrannical childrearing methods have resulted in unhappy, and often ruined, adult lives.

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