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1000 tulosta hakusanalla Sabine Krell
Das historische Konzept der literarischen Anthropologie am Beispiel von Karl Philipp Moritz' "Anton Reiser"
Sabine Krell
Grin Publishing
2012
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FiNALE Prüfungstraining Zentralabitur Nordrhein-Westfalen
Gerrit Keller; Peter Kock; Sabine Castelli
Westermann Lernwelten
2025
muu
RONDO 3/4 - Schülerbuch - Neuausgabe
Othmar Kist; Karl-Heinz Keller; Sabine Schaal
Mildenberger Verlag GmbH
2014
nidottu
Who is the real Sabine? Is she the young lawyer destined to follow in her father's footsteps or is she something more?And what about Max, the young barrister who has befriended her? Intelligent, good looking - really good looking - and keen to spend time with her. Is he too good to be true? What really motivates him? The sudden death of the Judge Sabine's father brings change. Sabine starts to question her career path. Is this really what she wants to do? Her mother Anna, who had given up her career as a ballerina for marriage to the Judge now wonders if it is too late to follow her dreams. Never one to refuse a challenge Sabine takes charge - to sort out her mother, her colleague and finally herself.
'You must ask the young if you want to know what love is. Only they are deep enough in it to describe. It is the pulsing heart you want to probe: the pulsing, beating, leaping, dipping, fluttering heart of a seventeen-year-old.' It is the late 1950s and it is Existentialist time in Paris. But Viola, a seventeen-year-old English girl, is languishing in a chaotic finishing school in the dull French countryside. Under the distrait tutelage of Tante Aimee, the pupils lounge about the crumbling grey chateau playing records and smoking Gitanes, awaiting the arrival of some suitably aristocratic young blood - and life. Then a new teacher arrives - Sabine. Sabine, with her long tanned legs, wide straight shoulders and mane of golden hair. Sabine, who arrives each morning in her old Deux Cheveaux, dragging on her Gauloises, truculent, difficult. And passion strikes. But there are dark forces at play in the chateau and a dangerous secret is about to be uncovered...Sensual, Gothic, with more than a hint of Colette, Sabine is a dark tale of schoolgirl love and compulsion.
Perdre quelqu'un, mazette ce n'est pas une petite affaire, si l'on veut le pleurer dans les rites convenus; on n'en est gu re quitte moins d'un combat d'o l'on revient presque toujours clop . Quand, amis et parents se sont disput le cercueil, en se l'arrachant avec des vocif rations, c'est qu'il ne s'agit plus d'en rester l , mille dieux peine le mari enterr , ses femmes sont tenues, chaque jour, la m me heure, de pousser des hurlements et d'assourdir les voisins. Quand la voix leur manque, elles frappent sur le tarabouk et tirent des coups de pistolet. - Au besoin, - je n'invente rien, - on appelle les bonnes amies la rescousse...
An astonishing tale of romance, resistance and bravery ‘A sad and beautiful book, shining a light on quiet heroism in dark times.’ Lucy Adlington, New York Times bestselling author of The Dressmakers of Auschwitz Sabine’s War is the previously untold story of a remarkable resistance fighter and her incredible story of survival against the odds. When Germany invaded Holland in May 1940, Sabine Zuur joined the resistance movement without a moment’s hesitation aged just 22. Helping to hide those avoiding the German authorities, she was soon betrayed and subjected to repeated violent interrogations. Many of her friends were executed but Sabine was instead sent to the Mauthausen concentration camp, via the Amersfoort and Ravensbrück camps. Enduring gruelling conditions and backbreaking forced manual labour, she survived through a combination of guile and good fortune. But it was only after Sabine’s death that her daughter Eva discovered an archive of letters detailing her extraordinary life, revealing a rich inner world and a past she had discussed little. Amongst them were declarations of love from pilot Taro, shot down in his Spitfire over northern France aged just 26; notes from Sabine’s second love Gerard, executed by the Germans; letters to her mother smuggled out in her prison laundry; and passionate, creepy missives from a German professional criminal named Gebele who would ultimately save Sabine’s life. She emerges from this correspondence as a woman with an indefinable aura, somehow in control of her own destiny even when to all intents and purposes she was not. A transfixing story of survival, Sabine’s War captures a remarkable life in the words of the young woman who lived it.
Winner, Dan and Marilyn Laney Prize, Austin Civil War Round Table, 2005In an 1882 speech, former Confederate president Jefferson Davis made an exuberant claim: "That battle at Sabine Pass was more remarkable than the battle at Thermopylae." Indeed, Sabine Pass was the site of one of the most decisive Civil War battles fought in Texas. But unlike the Spartans, who succumbed to overwhelming Persian forces at Thermopylae more than two thousand years before, the Confederate underdogs triumphed in a battle that over time has become steeped in hyperbole. Providing a meticulously researched, scholarly account of this remarkable victory, Sabine Pass at last separates the legends from the evidence.In arresting prose, Edward T. Cotham, Jr., recounts the momentous hours of September 8, 1863, during which a handful of Texans-almost all of Irish descent-under the leadership of Houston saloonkeeper Richard W. Dowling, prevented a Union military force of more than 5,000 men, 22 transport vessels, and 4 gunboats from occupying Sabine Pass, the starting place for a large invasion that would soon have given the Union control of Texas.Sabine Pass sheds new light on previously overlooked details, such as the design and construction of the fort (Fort Griffin) that Dowling and his men defended, and includes the battle report prepared by Dowling himself. The result is a portrait of a mythic event that is even more provocative when stripped of embellishment.
The Collected Supernatural and Weird Fiction of Sabine Baring-Gould
Sabine Baring-Gould
Leonaur Ltd
2012
sidottu
The Collected Supernatural and Weird Fiction of Sabine Baring-Gould
Sabine Baring-Gould
Leonaur Ltd
2012
pokkari
Following her 2010 publication dedicated to roses, Cologne-based artist Sabine Moritz here turns her attention to lilies, which she first began depicting in the mid 1990s. Working on paper to produce fifty-nine charcoal, pastel and oil pastel drawings, similiarly she often approaches works as studies or exercises in observation and representation. During the development of this publication, which was originally conceived as a collection of Moritz s drawings of lilies, the artist had the idea to introduce another ongoing body of work drawings of objects alongside the lilies. These objects are primarily statues, statuettes and figurines hand-made works of art from different periods in history, such as a classical torso, an African figurine, and a Buddhist head. Moritz s drawings of objects reflect a range of ideas and registers, moods and sentiments. Including the objects alongside the lilies opens up questions of time, life, death, belief, truth, human psychology and the very process o
The Gaverocks; A Tale of the Cornish Coast. by the Author of "John Herring," Etc. [I.E. Sabine Baring Gould].
Sabine Baring-Gould
British Library, Historical Print Editions
2011
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