Colour With Crayons Part - 4
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The Non-Fiction Collection 2 : 20 years of Penguin India
The present gold rush owes a great deal to the foresight of Penguin, easily the most prestigious global publisher, which made a home here when the world wasn?t yet in thrall to the Indian market. Penguin India began operating at a time when trade publishing in English was virtually unknown in the country.
The company launched its local programme in 1987 with seven titles: two novels in English and one in translation from Bengali, two biographies, a travelogue and a book of poems. Two decades on, it publishes 200 new books annually across a wide range of genres.
Along the way, it has published authors from every country in the Subcontinent. In 2005, with the launch of its Hindi list, Penguin became the first global publisher to publish in an Indian language other than English, and now releases over sixty titles every year in Hindi, Marathi, Malayalam and Urdu.
When it was set up in a two-bedroom flat in New Delhi, Penguin India?s most valuable asset was a boardroom table made of teak, at which strategies were devised, contracts signed and commitments made. Today, the table is no longer listed among the company?s assets.
Instead, it can boast the finest list of Indian authors (or authors of Indian origin) anywhere in the world. And the list keeps growing: among the long-admired names we?ll publish in the coming months are Kamala Markandaya, with her posthumous novel Bombay Tiger, and Amitav Ghosh, with his stunning new novel Sea of Poppies, the first in a trilogy.
Penguin India?s publishing remains as vibrant and confidently eclectic as our first clutch of titles promised. Our best authors, our true wealth, have stayed with us through the years, and helped us bring the best in contemporary Indian and international literature to readers everywhere.
These commemorative volumes of the finest writing we?ve published up to our twentieth year are dedicated to each one of them. Showcased here are authors who have topped best-seller charts in India and abroad, and won virtually every major literary prize, including the Nobel Prize, the Jnanpith Award, the Man Booker Prize, the Sahitya Akademi Award and the Commonwealth Writers? Prize.
It is unlikely you will find a richer, more representative collection of writing from or about South Asia. Now, when virtually every major international trade publisher is present in India, the fastest-growing English-language publishing market in the world, Penguin India remains committed to the vision laid out on that teak table twenty years ago.
It is a vision that has ensured that Penguin in India, as in the rest of the world, is the publisher of choice for the best writers and the most discerning readers. And this is exactly how things will be twenty years from now
(less)Blue is the Colour of Heaven :
Avoiding land mines and bullets, he spent months travelling through Iraq and Iran negotiating a way into Afghanistan. Joining forces with the war-weary Mujahedeen, he found unexpected allies and unforgettable friends.
Although Loseby encountered danger on many occasions, he experienced a strange joy; daily life was full of small acts of kindness and many acts of hostility - ordinary exchanges charged with tension and drama. The result is a rare glimpse of the Afghani people themselves, people of warmth, generosity and humour.
But this is not just a travel story,
(less)The Non-Fiction Collection 1: 20 years of Penguin India
The present gold rush owes a great deal to the foresight of Penguin, easily the most prestigious global publisher, which made a home here when the world wasn?t yet in thrall to the Indian market. Penguin India began operating at a time when trade publishing in English was virtually unknown in the country.
The company launched its local programme in 1987 with seven titles: two novels in English and one in translation from Bengali, two biographies, a travelogue and a book of poems. Two decades on, it publishes 200 new books annually across a wide range of genres.
Along the way, it has published authors from every country in the Subcontinent. In 2005, with the launch of its Hindi list, Penguin became the first global publisher to publish in an Indian language other than English, and now releases over sixty titles every year in Hindi, Marathi, Malayalam and Urdu.
When it was set up in a two-bedroom flat in New Delhi, Penguin India?s most valuable asset was a boardroom table made of teak, at which strategies were devised, contracts signed and commitments made. Today, the table is no longer listed among the company?s assets.
Instead, it can boast the finest list of Indian authors (or authors of Indian origin) anywhere in the world. And the list keeps growing: among the long-admired names we?ll publish in the coming months are Kamala Markandaya, with her posthumous novel Bombay Tiger, and Amitav Ghosh, with his stunning new novel Sea of Poppies, the first in a trilogy.
Penguin India?s publishing remains as vibrant and confidently eclectic as our first clutch of titles promised. Our best authors, our true wealth, have stayed with us through the years, and helped us bring the best in contemporary Indian and international literature to readers everywhere.
These commemorative volumes of the finest writing we?ve published up to our twentieth year are dedicated to each one of them. Showcased here are authors who have topped best-seller charts in India and abroad, and won virtually every major literary prize, including the Nobel Prize, the Jnanpith Award, the Man Booker Prize, the Sahitya Akademi Award and the Commonwealth Writers? Prize.
It is unlikely you will find a richer, more representative collection of writing from or about South Asia. Now, when virtually every major international trade publisher is present in India, the fastest-growing English-language publishing market in the world, Penguin India remains committed to the vision laid out on that teak table twenty years ago.
It is a vision that has ensured that Penguin in India, as in the rest of the world, is the publisher of choice for the best writers and the most discerning readers. And this is exactly how things will be twenty years from now
(less)Agro's Colour Atlas of Medicinal Plants/Narayan Das
Future strategy for medicinal plants. Plates: 1.
Abelmoschus moschatus. 2.
Abies alba. 3.
Abroama Augusta. 4.
Abrus precatorius. 5.
Abutilon figarianum. 6.
Abutilon indicum. 7.
Acacia Arabica. 8.
Acacia catechu. 9.
Acacia pycantha. 10.
Acalypha indica. 11.
Acanthus mollis. 12.
Acer campestris. 13.
Achyranthes bidentata. 14.
Achyranthes japonica. 15.
Aconitum ferox. 16.
Aconitum heterophyllum Wall. 17.
Aconitum koreanum. 18.
Acontium balfourii. 19.
Acorus calamus. 20.
Acorus gramineus. 21.
Acounitum violaceum. 22.
Adansonia digitata. 23.
Adenanthera pavonia. 24.
Adenophora stricta. 25.
Adenophora triphylla. 26.
Adhatoda vasica. 27.
Adiantum capillus-veneris. 28.
Adonis vernalis. 29.
Aegle marmelos. 30.
Agastache rugosa. 31.
Agave Americana. 32.
Ageratum conyzoides. 33.
Agrimonia pilosa. 34.
Agropyrun repens. 35.
Ailanthus altissima. 36.
Ailanthus altissima. 37.
Ajuga reptans. 38.
Akebia quinata. 39.
Alangium salviifolium. 40.
Albizia julibrissin. 41.
Albizia lebbeck. 42.
Alchemilla vulgaris. 43.
Aleurites moluccana. 44.
Alisma orientalis. 45.
Alliaria petiolata. 46.
Allium cepa. 47.
Allium ursinum
(less)Asterix Omnibus 4
Asterix and Obelix join up to rescue Tragicomix and save the day.:In Asterix and the Chieftain's Shield, Caesar plans to hold a triumph featuring the shield of his defeated enemy, Vercingetorix.
But the shield is missing! Romans and Gauls race to track it down. :In Asterix and the Olympic Games, the athletes of the ancient world assemble in Athens to compete.
Asterix and the Gauls enter too but their magic potion is banned! Can our heroes win without it?
(less)The Fiction Collection 2 : 20 years of Penguin India
The present gold rush owes a great deal to the foresight of Penguin, easily the most prestigious global publisher, which made a home here when the world wasn?t yet in thrall to the Indian market. Penguin India began operating at a time when trade publishing in English was virtually unknown in the country.
The company launched its local programme in 1987 with seven titles: two novels in English and one in translation from Bengali, two biographies, a travelogue and a book of poems. Two decades on, it publishes 200 new books annually across a wide range of genres.
Along the way, it has published authors from every country in the Subcontinent. In 2005, with the launch of its Hindi list, Penguin became the first global publisher to publish in an Indian language other than English, and now releases over sixty titles every year in Hindi, Marathi, Malayalam and Urdu.
When it was set up in a two-bedroom flat in New Delhi, Penguin India?s most valuable asset was a boardroom table made of teak, at which strategies were devised, contracts signed and commitments made. Today, the table is no longer listed among the company?s assets.
Instead, it can boast the finest list of Indian authors (or authors of Indian origin) anywhere in the world. And the list keeps growing: among the long-admired names we?ll publish in the coming months are Kamala Markandaya, with her posthumous novel Bombay Tiger, and Amitav Ghosh, with his stunning new novel Sea of Poppies, the first in a trilogy.
Penguin India?s publishing remains as vibrant and confidently eclectic as our first clutch of titles promised. Our best authors, our true wealth, have stayed with us through the years, and helped us bring the best in contemporary Indian and international literature to readers everywhere.
These commemorative volumes of the finest writing we?ve published up to our twentieth year are dedicated to each one of them. Showcased here are authors who have topped best-seller charts in India and abroad, and won virtually every major literary prize, including the Nobel Prize, the Jnanpith Award, the Man Booker Prize, the Sahitya Akademi Award and the Commonwealth Writers? Prize.
It is unlikely you will find a richer, more representative collection of writing from or about South Asia. Now, when virtually every major international trade publisher is present in India, the fastest-growing English-language publishing market in the world, Penguin India remains committed to the vision laid out on that teak table twenty years ago.
It is a vision that has ensured that Penguin in India, as in the rest of the world, is the publisher of choice for the best writers and the most discerning readers. And this is exactly how things will be twenty years from now
(less)Colour Of Law And Abduction
But when a senator's son is killed in a hit-and-run, Fenney is asked by the state judge to put his air-conditioned lifestyle on hold to defend the accused: a black, heroin-addicted prostitute - a very different client to the people Fenney usually represents..
.THE ABDUCTION WhenElizabeth Brice turns up to collect her daughter Grace from football practice, the coach tells her she needn't have bothered, as Grace's uncle has already picked her up.
The only problem is - Grace has no uncles. And so begins a furious race against time to save Grace from unknown kidnappe But secrets from the past make the little girl's survival more uncertain with every passing minute
(less)The Book of Lost Tales Part One (Hardcover)
304/400 pp. The Book of Lost Tales was the first major work of imagination by J.
R.R.
Tolkien, begun in 1916-1917 when he was twenty-five years old and left incomplete several years later. It stands at the beginning of the entire conception of Middle-earth and Valinor, for the Lost Tales were the first form of the myths and legends that came to be called The Silmarillion.
Embedded in English legend and English association, they are set in the narrative frame of a great westward voyage over the Ocean by a mariner named Eriel (or AElfwine) to Tol Eressea, the Lonely Isle, where Elves dwelt; from them he learned their true history, the Lost Tales of Elfinesse. In the Tales are found the earliest accounts and original ideas of Gods and Elves, Dwarves, Balrogs, and Orcs; of the Silmarils and the Two Trees of Valinor; of Nargothrond and Gondolin; of the geography and cosmography of the invented world.
The Book of Lost Tales will be published in two volumes; this first part contains the Tales of Valinor; and the second will include Beren and Luthien, Turin and the Dragon, and the only full narratives of the Necklace of the Dwarves and the Fall of Gondolin. Each tale is followed by a commentary in the form of a short essay; together with the texts of associated poems; and each volume contains extensive information on names and vocabulary in the earliest Elvish languages.
Further books in this series are planned to extend the history of Middle-earth as it was refined and enlarged in later years, and will include the Long Lays of Beleriand, the Ambarkanta or Shape of the World, the Lhammas or Account of Tongues, annals, maps, and many other unpublished writings of J.R.
R. Tolkien.
About the Author : J R R Tolkien has contributed to The Book of Lost Tales Part One as an author. John Ronald Reuel Tolkien (1892-1973) was a major scholar of the English language, specializing in Old and Middle English.
Twice Professor of Anglo-Saxon (Old English) at the University of Oxford, he also wrote a number of stories, including most famously "The Hobbit" (1937) and "The Lord of the Rings" (1954-1955), which are set in a pre-historic era in an invented version of the world which he called by the Middle English name of Middle-earth
(less)Fauna of Manipur : Part II :
K. Sanyal.
2. Ixoidid ticks (ACARI : metastigmata)/A.
K Sanyal and S.K.
Dey. 3.
Araneae : spiders/Bijan Kumar Biswas and Kajal Biswas. 4.
Insecta : Thysanura/A.K.
Hazra, M. Biswas and S.
K. Mitra.
5. Insecta: collembola/A.
K. Hazra, G.
P. Mandal, S.
K. Mitra and B.
Bhattacharyya. 6.
Insecta : Ephemeroptera/V.D.
Srivastava. 7.
Insecta : Odonata/V.D.
Srivastava and C. Sinha.
8. Insecta : Orthoptera : acridoidea/M.
S. Shishodia and S.
K. Tondon.
9. Insecta : Orthoptera : tettigoniidae/M.
S. Shishodia and R.
S. Barman.
10. Insecta : Blattaria (Dictyoptera)/S.
K. Mandal.
11. Insecta : isoptera/P.
K. Maiti, N.
Saha and P.H.
Roy. 12.
Insecta : Psocoptera/V.D.
Srivastava. 13.
Insecta : Hemiptera : heteroptera : pentatomoidea/S.P.
Chakraborty. 14.
Insecta : hemiptera : aphididae/R.C.
Basu and L.K.
Ghosh. 15.
Insecta : hemiptea : heteroptera : coreoidea/R.C.
Basu and S.C.
Mitra. 16.
Insecta : Hemiptera : homoptera : fulgoroidea, cercopoidea, cicadoidea and membracidae/B. Biswas, M.
Ghosh, Animesh Bal and G.C.
Sen. 17.
Insecta : Homoptera
(less)A Colour Atlas of Wildlife Diseases And
Acknowledgements. 1.
Artiodactylids. 2.
Carnivores. 3.
Non-human primates. 4.
Rodents and pangolins. 5.
Perissodactylids. 6.
Proboscids. 7.
Aves. 8.
Reptiles and amphibians. List of contributors.
Subject index. "After the first publications of Wild mammalia reproduction and conservation and Indian wildlife diseases and disorders by B.
M. Arora, Principal Scientist, Wildlife and Ex-director National Zoological Park it was realized that findings of various studies conducted in husbandry associated health problems and diseases and disorders in in-situ and ex-situ wildlife conservation be compiled and produce in the form of "A Colour Atlas of Wildlife Diseases And Disorders".
It appears that no such attempts have been made so far to bring out such practical guide for the professionals working in the filed of wildlife health, management and conservation. On the aspects this Atlas is embellished with pictorial illustrations (Predominately contains colour illustrations but where they were not available black and white) of cases of approx 860
(less)A Colour Atlas of Poultry Diseases :
Vegad J L Vegad Vedams Books 8181891309 Accountancy Audit Afghanistan AIDS Amitabh Bachchan Animal Science Poultry, Cattle Camel Cattle and Dairy Farming Poultry Zoological Survey of India Publication Anthropology and Sociology Anthropological Survey of India Publications Architecture Vastu Arts of India Archaeology Mohenjodaro/Harappa/Indus Valley Civilization Art History Buddhist Art Mandalas Painting Pahari Rock Art Sculpture Textiles Art Astrology Palmistry Astronomy Ayurveda Bangladesh Bhutan Biographies and Memoirs Botanical Sciences Agronomy Algae Aromatic Plants Bamboo Biodiversity Botanical Survey of India Publications Ethnobotany/Medicinal Plants Floras of India Forestry Fungi/Mosses Herbs Horticulture Grape Mango Mushrooms Jatropha Mangroves Orchids Organic Farming Plant Science Teak Buddhism Central Asian Studies Children Christianity Cinema/Films Cricket Cuisine Dalits Dance and Performing Arts Bharatanatyam Kathak Kathakali Theatre Demography Dictionaries/Glossaries Ecology/Environment Economics/Dev Studies Education Distance Education English Literature Indian Fiction Entomology Geography Climatology Geological Sciences Geological Survey of India Publication Government Publications
(less)HAMLYN ALL COLOUR 200 BBQ RECIPES
The book includes delicious ideas for main courses, accompaniments and desserts as well as vegetarian options and healthy salad choices, home-made marinades and appetizers that are great served at dinner parties
(less)Biodiversity Documentation for Kerala : Part I
1. Cyanophyta.
2. Chlorophyta.
3. Xanthophyta.
4. Euglenophyta.
5. Phaeophyta.
6. Rhodophyta.
Reference. Index of scientific names.
From the preface: "Proper documentation and investigation of biodiversity has become essential from the point of view of conservation and sustainable utilization, especially after the 1992 declaration on Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD). The Kerala State, situated in the southern part of the Western Ghats, a biodiversity hotspot, is rich in flora and fauna including several endemics.
The literature on various aspects of plants and animals is being generated by Research and Academic Institutes in Kerala over the years. However, there had been no concerted effort to compile this scattered information as a database.
The Western Ghats Cell of the Department of Planning and Economic Affairs, Government of Kerala, should be congratulated for initiating a programme in documenting the biodiversity of Kerala and approving a project to be implemented by Kerala Forest Research Institute (KFRI)
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