Kati in Paris

Kati in Paris
Author: Astrid Lindgren
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 152
Release: 1961
Genre: Paris (France)
ISBN: LCCN:61001136

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Kati and her fiancé travel from Stockholm to Paris for their wedding and enough memories for their first year of marriage.

Kati in Paris

Kati in Paris
Author: Astrid Lindgren
Publsiher: Verlag Friedrich Oetinger
Total Pages: 150
Release: 2019-05-16
Genre: Young Adult Fiction
ISBN: 9783862744695

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Paris! Die Türme von Sacré Coeur, der Bois de Boulogne, die engen Gassen vom Montmartre. Lennart kennt ein Hotel, klein und billig, am linken Seineufer, in dem bereits Robespierre und Madame Curie gewohnt haben. Verliebt haben sich Kati und Lennart in Italien, aber heiraten möchten sie nur in Paris! Mit Kati in Paris liegt jetzt der dritte Band der Kati-Trilogie in neuer Überarbeitung vor.

Kati i Paris

Kati i Paris
Author: Astrid Lindgren
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 159
Release: 2000
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: 9187805952

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Paris A Love Story

Paris  A Love Story
Author: Kati Marton
Publsiher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 224
Release: 2013-03-12
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9781451691559

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Recounts how the author's marriages to Peter Jennings and the late Richard Holbrooke were shaped by the beauty and allure of Paris, where she found love and healing against a backdrop of historical events.

Kati Horna

Kati Horna
Author: Kati Horna,Museo Amparo (Puebla, Mexico),Péter Baki,Jean-François Chevrier,Estrella de Diego,Juan Manuel Bonet,Ángeles Alonso Espinosa,José Antonio Rodríguez,Norah Horna y Fernández
Publsiher: Rm
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2013
Genre: Photography
ISBN: 8415118732

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"On the occasion of the centenary of the birth of photographer Kati Horna, the Museo Amparo in Puebla has organized an exhibition of her work, scheduled to travel later to the Jeu de Paume in Paris and the Palau de la Virreina in Barcelona. The catalogue-book of the exhibition, published under a joint imprint with Editorial RM, represents a recognition of Horna's photographic career and is the first adequate single-volume treatment of her work. The book traces Kati Horna's steps from Budapest to Paris, Spain, and Mexico, following the career of a cosmopolitan figure in the twentieth-century avant-garde. It contains essays by Péter Baki, Jean-François Chevrier, Estrella de Diego, Juan Manuel Bonet, and José Antonio Rodríguez, as well as a chronology of Horna's life drawn up by Ángeles Alonso, a text by her daughter Norah Horna, and documentary material from her personal archive. The reproductions in the book, representative of all the genres practiced by Kati Horna, include hitherto unpublished images"--Publisher's website.

The 6 41 to Paris

The 6 41 to Paris
Author: Jean-Philippe Blondel
Publsiher: New Vessel Press
Total Pages: 153
Release: 2015-11-09
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9781939931313

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After decades, former lovers come face to face in a novel filled with a “suspenseful dread that makes you want to turn every page at locomotive pace” (St. Louis Post-Dispatch). Cécile, a stylish forty-seven-year-old, has spent the weekend visiting her parents in a provincial town southeast of Paris. By early Monday morning, she’s exhausted. These trips back home are always stressful, and she settles into a train compartment with an empty seat beside her. But it’s soon occupied by a man she instantly recognizes: Philippe Leduc, with whom she had a passionate affair that ended in her brutal humiliation almost thirty years ago. In the fraught hour and a half that ensues, their express train hurtles toward the French capital. Cécile and Philippe undertake their own face-to-face journey—In silence? What could they possibly say to one another?—with the reader gaining entrée to the most private of thoughts. This intense, intimate novel offers “a taut, suspenseful psychological journey from which there is no escape . . . Gripping” (Kati Marton, author of Paris: A Love Story). “Perfectly written and a remarkably suspenseful read . . . Absorbing, intriguing, insightful.” —Library Journal (starred review)

The Great Escape

The Great Escape
Author: Kati Marton
Publsiher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 233
Release: 2006-10-17
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781416542452

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The “intensely gripping story” of John von Neumann, Leo Szilard, Arthur Koestler, and six other world-renowned Hungarian Jews who fled the Nazis (The Washington Post Book World). In this book, New York Times–bestselling author Kati Marton tells the stunning tale of nine men who grew up in Budapest’s brief Golden Age, then, driven from Hungary by anti-Semitism, fled to the West, especially to the United States, and changed the world. These nine men, each celebrated for individual achievements, were part of a unique group who grew up in a time and place that will never come again. Four helped usher in the nuclear age and the computer, two were major movie myth-makers, two were immortal photographers, and one was a seminal writer. From a Peabody Award–winning journalist and finalist for a National Book Critics Circle Award, The Great Escape is a groundbreaking, poignant American story and an important untold chapter of the tumultuous last century. “Describes the crossroads where art and politics meet, the perils of dictatorship and the horrors of war, all of it punctuated by the frantic struggle to create the atomic bomb. . . . Deserves a special place on bookshelves alongside Budapest 1900.” —The New York Times Book Review “By looking at these nine lives—salvaged, and crucial—Marton provides a moving measure of how much was lost.” —The New Yorker “[Marton has] a keen understanding of what it means to leave one’s country behind.” —The Seattle Times “A haunting tale of the wartime Hungarian diaspora. . . . Marton writes beautifully.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review) “Filled with a number of wonderful anecdotes.” —Chicago Sun-Times “An engrossing book.” —Library Journal

Enemies of the People

Enemies of the People
Author: Kati Marton
Publsiher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2010-10-19
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9781416586135

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Relates the author's eyewitness account of her parents' arrests in Cold War Budapest, Hungary, and the terrible separation that followed, drawing on secret police files to reveal how her family was betrayed by friends and colleagues.