Botuesi: Penguin Books
How to Use Your Enemies, Baltasar Gracián
In these witty, Machiavellian aphorisms, unlikely Spanish priest Baltasar Gracián shows us how to exploit friends and enemies alike to thrive in a world of deception and illusion.
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Janë 70 libra.
Botuesi: Penguin Books
In these witty, Machiavellian aphorisms, unlikely Spanish priest Baltasar Gracián shows us how to exploit friends and enemies alike to thrive in a world of deception and illusion.
Botuesi: Penguin Books
Four years ago someone got away with murder. Now it's time to uncover the truth . . .
Botuesi: Penguin Books
Five students go to detention. Only four leave alive.Yale hopeful Bronwyn has never publicly broken a rule.
Botuesi: Penguin Books
'Oh the cruelty of time, that destroys all things!'
Botuesi: Penguin Books
'I'll stop doing it as soon as I understand what I'm doing.'
Botuesi: Penguin Books
'... ever-present, phantom thing;My slave, my comrade, and my king'
Botuesi: Penguin Books
'It's a dreadful thing to yield...but resist now?Lay my pride bare to the blows of ruin?That's dreadful too.'
Botuesi: Penguin Books
But he was also the author of superb short tales that were as elegant as they were heartfelt, as compassionate as they were grotesque. This volume is the first to assemble all of Capote’s short fiction—a collection that indeed confirms his status as one of the masters of this form.
Botuesi: Penguin Books
A microcosm of Columbian life, its secrets lie hidden, encoded in a book, and only Aureliano Buendía can fathom its mysteries and reveal its shrouded destiny.
Botuesi: Penguin Books
This story features D'Arrast, who can be seen as a positive hero as opposed to Meursault in The Stranger.[4] He actively shapes his life and sacrifices himself in order to help a friend, instead of remaining passive.
Botuesi: Penguin Books
'He gave orders that they were not to get any hot glum pudding in flames, for fear the spirits in their innards might catch fire'
Botuesi: Penguin Books
'This is as much a mystery as the Immaculate Conception, which of itself must make a doctor an unbeliever