ANATOMY OF A SCANDAL meets ARIADNE in this thrilling, evocatively told debut novel, reframing the controversial trial of Phaedra for the modern reader.
This is the age of vice, where money, pleasure, and power are everything,
and the family ties that bind can also kill.
A Good Morning America Book Club Pick.
From the day they first meet as teenagers Fern and Jessica are best friends. Despite their differences, they are there for each other throughout everything, navigating the difficulties of growing up and fitting in.
She was never meant for you. She was never meant for any of this. That girl was sentenced to death the moment I named her Juliette. Juliette Ferrars isn't who she thinks she is. Nothing in her world is what it seemed.
Three irresistible short stories by the global phenomenon Ali Hazelwood, now available together in paperback for the first time, with an exclusive bonus chapter.
Mara, Sadie, and Hannah are friends first, scientists always. Though their fields of
The heroic story of the only female Argonaut, told by Jennifer Saint, the bestselling author of ELEKTRA (UK, Sunday Times, May 2022) and ARIADNE (UK, Sunday Times, April 2021).
Monografie, do které přispělo deset domácích i zahraničních autorů, odborníků v oblastech dějin umění a historie, se zabývá různými aspekty uměleckého i politického života chorvatského sochaře Ivana Meštroviće (1883–1962).
SOMETIMES THE ONE WHO LOVES YOU IS THE ONE WHO HURTS YOU THE MOST. Lily hasn't always had it easy, but that's never stopped her from working hard for the life she wants.
Obrazová publikaci těžící z rozsáhlého fotoarchivu Wolfganga Domeyera, ekologa, který na Jizerku do tzv. Hnojového domu (Jizerka čp. 8) často zajížděl a dokumentoval život a prostředí staré jizerskohorské chalupy známého cestovatele Gustava Ginzela.
From the New York Times bestselling author of Girl in Pieces comes a stunning novel that Vanity Fair calls “impossibly moving” and “suffused with light”
When strange things are reported to be floating in rivers in rural Vermont after a flood, old myths about hill-dwelling monsters who abduct humans resurface in subsequent debates, much to the annoyance of local academic Albert N. Wilmarth