J'aime Lire BD
Special Ariol
Special Ariol
Course folle en gondole !
Enquête au Zoo
Academy Award winner Jean Dujardin stars in this French , romantic-laugh-out-loud-comedy that is all about the long and short of falling in love. When successful lawyer Diane ( Virginie Efira) gets a call from the man who has found her mobile phone, she is immediately intrigued and charmed. As she and Alexandre (Dujardin) chat and make plans to meet, it becomes evident that the chemistry between them is great indeed. However, when they meet the next day it turns out there may be one small problem. New relationships are always awkward and for Diane & Alexandre the challenges in their relationship could be somewhat of a tall order. Despite his charisma and good looks, Alexandre comes up a bit short ( almost 2 feet, actually). Is Diane out of his reach or can they meet in the middle? They're both looking for love but society is watching and judging. A perfect match in every way butone, will this new couple be up for the challenge? Will they be UP FOR LOVE?
Pipioli le souriceau rêve d'aller en Afrique comme son amie l'hirondelle. Le merle Zigomar accepte de l'y emmener...mais il n'a aucun sens de l'orientation. Un voyage inattendu les attend.
Bart le Baraqué est le plus grand et le plus robuste de tous les pirates de l'Atlantique.
Mo la Mauvaise est la plus folle et la plus formidable de tous les pirates du Pacifique.
Quand leurs routes se croisent, c'est une compétition sans merci qui s'engage pour déterminer qui est le meilleur pirate du monde. Après
avoir nagé avec les requins, lancé des boulets de canon et avalé des tonnes de galette, ils en viennent à comparer leurs butins. L'un des
deux parviendra-t-il à battre son rival ?
Ce conte épique de l'union de deux capitaines pirates est dit dans le jargon de loup de mer et magnifiquement illustré. Alors, larguez les
amarres, et vivez une fantastique aventure maritime !
Voici un livre enchanté à lire et à relire pour entrer dans le nonde merveilleux des princes et princesses, rêver de robes couleur de lune, de carrosses magiques et, aussi, pour rire des grenouilles qui cherchent en vain leurs princes charmants !
Charlotte s'ennuie. Entre sa grande sœur et son petit frère, personne ne s'occupe d'elle..."Puisque c'est comme ça, on va faire attention à moi !" Attention, Charlotte passe à l'action!
The periodical "J'aime Lire' is a joy to read for the 7yo to 10yo. It has a good diversity of topics and actvities to stimulate your children's imagination and to encourage them to read. You will find a story, different short comics and games written and created by the best youth literature authors.
The periodical "J'aime Lire' is a joy to read for the 7yo to 10yo. It has a good diversity of topics and actvities to stimulate your children's imagination and to encourage them to read. You will find a story, different short comics and games written and created by the best youth literature authors.
This monthly periodical is exclusively written for French beginners learners. You will find articles with vocabulary about different topics such as politics, cooking, arts and culture as well as a short story and some activities about French language. A CD ROM goes with each periodical.
This monthly periodical is exclusively written for French intermediate and advanced learners.You will find articles with vocabulary about different topics such as politics, cooking, arts and culture as well as a short story and some activities on the French language. You can hear all the articles in the CD that goes with the magazine.
In Isabelle's (Diane Kruger) family, every first marriage has ended in divorce. To circumvent her family's curse Isabelle devises a plan: marry and divorce a complete stranger before wedding her faultless fiancé Pierre. After her initial plan backfires she targets Jean-Yves, an adventurous yet quirky travel writer whom, she tries to manipulate with her powers of seduction.
A series of misadventures beset them as they take on Africa and then Moscow in whirwind succession, breaking Isabelle of her comfortable routine existence. Despite her best efforts to make him fall for her, things don't go to plan and Isabelle experiences the rush of life-on-the edge. will she discover that love doesn't always come in the perfect package?
La Brousse en folie is a New Caledonian comic book about four men, their families, their friends and their community living in New Caledonia. Discover a humoristic island way of life with all its different ethnicities and its typical speech.
La Brousse en folie is a New Caledonian comic book about four men, their families, their friends and their community living in New Caledonia. Discover a humoristic island way of life with all its different ethnicities and its typical speech.
La Brousse en folie is a New Caledonian comic book about four men, their families, their friends and their community living in New Caledonia. Discover a humoristic island way of life with all its different ethnicities and its typical speech.
Vol 714 pour Sydney
Follow the adventures of Tintin, a courageous, young Belgian reporter with his faithful dog Milou around the world.
This volume refers to a flight that Tintin and his friends fail to catch, as they become embroiled in a plot to kidnap an eccentric millionaire from a supersonic business jet on an Indonesian island.
Docteur Schtroumpf
This comic is centered on a fictional colony of small, blue, human-like creatures who live in mushroom-shaped houses in the forest.
When Handy Smurf and Clumsy Smurf are installing a fence for Farmer Smurf, Handy Smurf mistakenly hits Clumsy Smurf with his hammer, so Papa Smurf is called to attend Clumsy Smurf's injury. The three Smurfs are grateful that Papa Smurf is there when they need him and Papa Smurf becomes Doctor Smurf.
Les pires copains du bout du monde
Frimeur des Îles is a New Caledonian comic book about two friends from Nouméa who loves going out, surfing and buying fancy equipments for their cars. They depict the new urban society of Nouméa.
Tintin et les Picaros
Follow the adventures of Tintin, a courageous, young Belgian reporter with his faithful dog Milou around the world.
In this volume, Tintin and his friends travel to the (fictional) South American nation of San Theodoros to rescue their friend Bianca Castafiore, who has been imprisoned by the government of General Tapioca. Once there, they become involved in the anti-government revolutionary activities of Tintin's old friend General Alcazar.
L'île la plus proche du paradoxe
Frimeur des Îles is a New Caledonian comic book about two friends from Nouméa who loves going out, surfing and buying fancy equipments for their cars. They depict the new urban society of Nouméa.
Les aventures d'Astérix
The series follows the adventures of a village of indomitable Gauls as they resist Roman occupation in 50 BC. They do so by means of a magic potion brewed by their druid Panoramix which temporarily gives the recipient superhuman strength.
The resistance of the Gaulish village against the Romans causes friction between dictator Julius Caesar and the Roman Senate, whose power had been reduced by Caesar. With their Magic Potion which gives them superhuman strength and is known only to their druid Getafix, they easily stand up against Rome and her laws.
La rose et le glaive
The series follows the adventures of a village of indomitable Gauls as they resist Roman occupation in 50 BC. They do so by means of a magic potion brewed by their druid Panoramix which temporarily gives the recipient superhuman strength.
When a bard woman, named Bravura arrives, the women are stunned by her singing and the men laugh at it; much to her annoyance. Over the next few days, Bravura exhorts Impedimenta (and later other village women) to resist the authority of her husband. Impedimenta then quarrels with Vitalstatistix, who joins Cacofonix in the forest. Impedimenta is then made chief by the women, while the men do not dare vote against their wives.
La grande traversée
The series follows the adventures of a village of indomitable Gauls as they resist Roman occupation in 50 BC. They do so by means of a magic potion brewed by their druid Panoramix which temporarily gives the recipient superhuman strength.
Unhygienix has run out of fresh fish. Since his stock has to be transported from Lutetia (modern-day Paris), it will be some time before the next delivery. However Getafix says he can't wait since he needs some for his potion. Asterix and Obelix volunteer to resolve the issue by going fishing, to which end they borrow a boat from Geriatrix. After a storm, they get lost, but despite Obelix's concerns, they do not reach the edge of the world; instead, following a brief encounter with the pirates, they arrive on an island (which the reader surmises is Manhattan Island) with delicious birds that the Gauls call "gobblers" (turkeys), bears and "Romans" with strange facial paintings (Native Americans).
Le lotus bleu
Follow the adventures of Tintin, a courageous, young Belgian reporter with his faithful dog Milou around the world.
Tintin is invited to China in the midst of the 1931 Japanese invasion, where he reveals the machinations of Japanese spies and uncovers a drug-smuggling ring.
Dalton city
Lucky Luke closes down the corrupt settlement of Fenton Town, Texas and arrests the owner, Dean Fenton. Fenton brags about his town to the Daltons while in prison. A mix-up with the newly installed telegraph results in Joe Dalton being released for 'good behavior'.
Winner of the Prix Femina award in 1987, this historical novel is set a thousand years ago in France, and follows the story of Odilon de Bernay, who serves as page to Liebaut de Malbry. Absire's books have won several prizes - "Lazarus" was his seventh award-winning novel.
Le crabe aux pinces d'or
Follow the adventures of Tintin, a courageous, young Belgian reporter with his faithful dog Milou around the world.
Tintin is informed by Thomson and Thompson of a case involving the ramblings of a drunken man, later killed, found with a scrap of paper from what appears to be a tin of crab meat with the word "Karaboudjan" scrawled on it. It leads him to a ship called the Karaboudjan, where he is abducted by a syndicate of criminals who have hidden opium in the crab tins.
Le secret de la licorne
Follow the adventures of Tintin, a courageous, young Belgian reporter with his faithful dog Milou around the world.
Tintin discovers a riddle left by Haddock's ancestor, the 17th century Sir Francis Haddock, which could lead them to the hidden treasure of the pirate Red Rackham. To unravel the riddle, Tintin and Haddock must obtain three identical models of Sir Francis's ship, the Unicorn, but they discover that criminals are also after these model ships and are willing to kill in order to obtain them.
Astérix aux jeux olympiques
The series follows the adventures of a village of indomitable Gauls as they resist Roman occupation in 50 BC. They do so by means of a magic potion brewed by their druid Panoramix which temporarily gives the recipient superhuman strength.
Gluteus Maximus, an athletic Roman legionary, is chosen as one of Rome's representatives for the upcoming Olympic Games in Greece. Gaius Veriambitius, his centurion, hopes to share in the glory of Olympic victory. While training in the forest, Gluteus Maximus encounters Asterix and Obelix, who unintentionally outdo him at running, the javelin and boxing, thanks to the power of the magic potion.
Le Schtroumpf financier
Papa Smurf's lab explodes while he is making the formula "Ad Capitis mala et alios dolores sanandos" (which is how much Brainy Smurf is able to read because he is unable to translate it properly like he claims), and when the other Smurfs arrive, Papa Smurf is unconscious. A Smurf goes to the home of the good wizard Homnibus to ask for help. Homnibus realizes that Papa Smurf has fallen sick due to using sulfur in the formula, but he lacks some ingredients needed for the cure, so he sends his servant Oliver to buy some. The Smurf goes along with Oliver and learns about money and the humans' commerce system.
reportage
The first lines of Le quai de Ouistreham (which means “the Ouistreham quay”) immediately announce the general theme of the book. “The ‘credit crunch’. That’s what everyone is talking about, without really knowing what to say about it, or how to approach the subject.”
However, though the credit crunch is a subject that hovers in your mind throughout the whole book, what this piece of investigative journalism really is about is how people at the bottom of the social ladder, with no diplomas or valuable work experience, deal with unemployment while still desperately trying to get a job.
Le retour d'Ayla
On the journey back to the Zelandonii territory, Jondalar's home, many of the tribes Ayla encounters mistake Ayla's extreme creative intelligence and even her common-sense reasoning for supernatural powers. Jondalar and Ayla both insist that she has no such gifts, but they do not stay in one place long enough to convince anyone otherwise. Ayla continues to have prophetic dreams.
Blue Bay Palace is narrated by Maya, a girl from the wrong side of the tracks in Mauritius. Blue Bay sounds like it might be a decent place to grow up, but it's a poor little corner of this paradise, the side of the village where no one, for example has a car. Maya had ambitions to get out, but a day after she turned sixteen she met Dave, the spoilt and rich son of a Brahman family from Mahébourg ("It was only half an hour away from Blue Bay, but another world"). And so she too goes to work at Le Paradis, the resort where Dave works -- the hotel where he is, in fact, Maya's father's boss.
In The Last Brother by Nathacha Appanah, 1944 is coming to a close and nine-year-old Raj is unaware of the war devastating the rest of the world. He lives in Mauritius, a remote island in the Indian Ocean, where survival is a daily struggle for his family. When a brutal beating lands Raj in the hospital of the prison camp where his father is a guard, he meets a mysterious boy his own age. David is a refugee, one of a group of Jewish exiles whose harrowing journey took them from Nazi occupied Europe to Palestine, where they were refused entry and sent on to indefinite detainment in Mauritius.
In July 1891, Arthur Rimbaud returns from Africa seriously ill. The furious poet decides to spend the last days of his life with his sister Isabelle. How can we explain this reconciliation? The mystery remains... Hospitalized in Marseille, he is at the end of his rope, with no strength left. The infection in his leg is so severe that it has to be amputated. To convalesce, he has no choice but to return to Charleville, to his childhood home. His mother, the terrible and ferocious Vitalie, hardly speaks to him through the long weeks of his agony. It is Isabelle, his young sister, who welcomes him, cares for him, comforts him. She goes with him when he decides against all reason to return to Africa. It is in her arms that he dies in Marseille on 10 November 1891.Since there is no evidence about what happened and what was said between the brother and the sister during those weeks, Philippe Besson has decided to invent it, and has chosen Isabelle's point of view to tell the tale. It is an audacious risk that succeeds. Through the pages of a fictitious private diary, he presents an indirect and tragic portrait of a woman overshadowed by her brilliant and scandalous brother. Devoted until the poet's last breath, Isabelle conscientiously collects his final confessions about his life, his loves, his poetry. But what does she understand, this virgin steeped in religion? And does she already know that she will betray him, later, when it comes time to take care of posterity? Torn between her love and her doubts, her admiration and her frustrations, Besson's Isabelle gradually appears as the sacrificial figure in the mythical struggle between the poet and his mother.
After the success of A Boy from Italy, the film adaptation of His Brotherby Patrice Chéreau, the 2003 RTL-Lire grand prize for Late Autumn, and the numerous translations of his books, Philippe Besson confirms his precocious rise to prominence.
The novel presents an engaging extraterrestrial, the Euguelion of the title (pronounced you-gaily-un, the name means "the bringer of good news"), who visits the Earth. Through the eyes of this sister from another planet--one eye happy, one sad--we are given a wickedly witty portrait of the situation of women in our world. "To resist is good," proclaims the Euguelion, "to transgress is better."
Les Diaboliques (The She-Devils) is a collection of short stories written by Barbey d'Aurevilly and published in France in 1874. Each story features a woman who commits an act of violence, or revenge, or some other crime. It is considered d'Aurevilly's masterpiece.
In 1975, the Khmer Rouge came to full power in Cambodia and began systematically to eliminate whole classes of society. The Cambodian genocide was among the grossest and most thorough of all the purges carried out by Left on Right or vice-versa in the years after 1945. The methods employed by the executioners in The Killing Fields, and by the torture teams in the interrogation complex at Tuol Sleng, had an abominable tang of inventiveness about them: the use of palm-leaf fibres to decapitate counter-revolutionaries, for instance, or the cages full of spiders and scorpions with which the torturers extracted meaningless confessions from their internees. François Bizot was a captive and this book his his memoir of his experience as a prisoner of the Khmers Rouges.
Set earlier than most of Balzac's Comedie Humaine, the novel covers the years 1803-6, when Napolean was making himself first Consul and then Emperor. The inclusion of Napoleon himself, as well as figures like Talleyrand and Fouche, makes this a historical novel. But it is also an early example of the detective story, in which the sinister, implacable police agent, Corentin, stalks his way towards vengeance on his aristocractic enemies.
La fille aux yeux d'or
Balzac starts with a rather gloomy view of Parisians: gloomy, pallid and dull, with no values other than a preoccupation with gold and pleasure. Everyone is striving to be better than his station, and the artist (who presumably includes Balzac himself) labours long and hard for little reward. The air is foul, the streets are dirty and it’s not a pretty picture of Paris at all. Only people transcend these negativities, and then only when they are young and innocent.Henri de Marsay, natural son of Lord Dudley and the Marquise de Vordac strolls out one day into the Tuileries in this Paris. His circumstances were unfortunate for Lord Dudley had married his mother off to an old gentleman called M. de Marsay who brought Henri up as his own (for the price of a life interest in the fund that Henri was to inherit). Before long de Marsay died and his mother remarried, to de Vordac; she had lost interest in both her son and Lord Dudley (partly because of the war between France and England, and partly because fidelity was never fashionable in Paris). Dudley himself had never taken any interest in the product of his fling, and so it was that Henri had no father other than de Marsay, who, prior to his death was a gambler and a wastrel.
Life begins when you meet a beautiful blond from Tucson, USA. You're no longer just Daniel, a pint-sized Parisian film freak. You're Bogart, Brando, and Redford all rolled into one - even though you're only eleven!
Life begins when you meet a boy from France who calls you "Baby" and thinks you're a dish. You're no longer just Lauren, a precocious child who dreams of passion. You're in love - even though you're not quite twelve.
Trouble begins with a romantic old rogue and a yen for faraway places. Before you know it, there you are, adrift on the canals of Venice - young, in love, on the lam, and a long, long way from eleven!
Gary is a teenager living with his mum Nicole in Wellington. He never knew his father and his mother refuses to answers his questions. One day, Gary meets a French girl in a bar where she tells him that she knows his dad.
Bernanos is a liberal French Catholic writer who, among other things, spoke out against the Franco terror in Spain. More lately he has lived in Brazil. These "letters" are motivated by a love of justice and human dignity that is moving, even if its expression is often abstract and other-worldly.
Le Gône du Chaâba is an autobiographical novel. The title itself is a clever play on one of his regional language's words. 'Gone' is a term for 'kid' or 'lad' in the Lyonnais dialect of Arpitan used in his native region and city, while 'Chaâba' is an Arabic word, used in the book as the name of a shantytown in Sétif, Algeria. Both Azouz Begag and the protagonist of the novel grew up in a shanty town outside Lyon, almost entirely inhabited by Algerian or Kabyle immigrant workers. The language and culture were predominantly a mix of Algerian Arabic, Kabyle Tamazigh and Arpitan. The problems of the ghetto-like environments established by and for guest workers in France after WWII, of the individual children of these ghettos who are French Citizens by dint of being born in France and even often from French parents and for whom 'breaking out' is both very difficult and statistically improbable, and Azouz Begag's own success in managing being part of the mainstream of French culture without having to forget any part of his heritage but rather by accumulating all cultural influences, are at the heart of the novel.
Breathe is the haunting confession of nineteen-year-old Charlene Boher. From her prison cell, Charlene recounts her lonely adolescence. Growing up shy and unpopular, Charlene never had many friends. That is, until she meet Sarah, a beautiful and charismatic American-French girl who moved back to Paris for high school. Much to Charlene's shock and delight, the two girls quickly develop an intense friendship. With Sarah by her side, Charlene finally begins to feel accepted and even loved.
However, after a brief idyllic period, the girls' relationship becomes rocky and friendship veers towards obsession. As Sarah drops Charlene for older, more glamorous friends, Charlene's devotion spirals into hatred. Unfolding slowly and eerily towards a shocking conclusion, Breathe is an intense, convincing portrait of a possessive and ambiguous friendship.
In 1506, Michelangelo―a young but already renowned sculptor―is invited by the Sultan of Constantinople to design a bridge over the Golden Horn. The sultan has offered, alongside an enormous payment, the promise of immortality, since Leonardo da Vinci’s design had been rejected: “You will surpass him in glory if you accept, for you will succeed where he has failed, and you will give the world a monument without equal.”
Michelangelo, after some hesitation, flees Rome and an irritated Pope Julius II―whose commission he leaves unfinished―and arrives in Constantinople for this truly epic project. Once there, he explores the beauty and wonder of the Ottoman Empire, sketching and describing his impressions along the way, and becomes immersed in cloak-and-dagger palace intrigues as he struggles to create what could be his greatest architectural masterwork.
Tell Them of Battles, Kings, and Elephants―constructed from real historical fragments―is a story about why stories are told, why bridges are built, and how seemingly unmatched pieces, seen from the opposite sides of civilization, can mirror one another.
The Radiant Way is a 1987 novel by British novelist Margaret Drabble. The novel provides social commentary and critique of 1980s Britain, by exploring the lives of three Cambridge-educated women with careers as knowledge professionals.
Jazz, aliens, and witchcraft collide in this collection of short stories by renowned author Emmanuel Dongala. The influence of Kongo culture is tangible throughout, as customary beliefs clash with party conceptions of scientific and rational thought. In the first half of Jazz and Palm Wine, the characters emerge victorious from decades of colonial exploitation in the Congo only to confront the burdensome bureaucracy, oppressive legal systems, and corrupt governments of the post-colonial era. The ruling political party attempts to impose order and scientific thinking while the people struggles to deal with drought, infertility, and impossible regulations and policies; both sides mix witchcraft, diplomacy, and violence in their efforts to survive. The second half of the book is set in the United States during the turbulent civil rights struggles of the 1960s. In the title story, African and American leaders come together to save the world from extraterrestrials by serving vast quantities of palm wine and playing American jazz. The stories in Jazz and Palm Wine prompt conversations about identity, race, and co-existence, providing contextualization and a historical dimension that is often sorely lacking. Through these collisions and clashes, Dongala suggests a pathway to racial harmony, peaceful co-existence, and individual liberty through artistic creation.
Bni Blouden is a small Algerian village in the mountains where life goes on at its normal pace. Down below, in the fertile valley, the French colonists have the good life. The year is 1939, still some time from Algerian freedom. However, the Arabs in Bni Blouden talk about striking and soon the country is in an uproar. When a fire breaks out, the strikers are accused of being arsonists and the strike leaders are arrested. This straightforward plot outline fails to convey the beauty of Dib’s novel. Its strength is in conveying what makes this simple village, with its simple people, a place of importance, a place of beauty, even. We see it primarily through the eyes of Omar and we see it as a place where ordinary men and women are trying to scratch out a miserable living in a country that has been torn from them by a colonizing power. They are not great people – (Bni Boublen may not be a wonderful place. They don’t know much, the people who live there, although they have the reputation of being educated. They know even less about Bni Boublen., says Comandar, Omar’s mentor) – but they have their dignity, they are individuals and Dib shows us how they much they matter. In short, they are worth fighting for and Dib shows us why.
Begins like a hopeful novel about an Iranian refugee starting a new life, then develops into an interesting epistolary novel as the main character decides to write letters to Montesquieu to improve her French. This is where she reflects on cultural differences, and the current regime in Iran as opposed to life in the West. The last third of the book throws the reader into an unexpected direction as an event triggers painful memories which resurface and threaten her newfound wellbeing and freedom
Hadriana in All My Dreams, winner of the prestigious Prix Renaudot, takes place primarily during Carnival in 1938 in the Haitian village of Jacmel. A beautiful young French woman, Hadriana, is about to marry a Haitian boy from a prominent family. But on the morning of the wedding, Hadriana drinks a mysterious potion and collapses at the altar. Transformed into a zombie, her wedding becomes her funeral. She is buried by the town, revived by an evil sorcerer, and then disappears into popular legend.
Set against a backdrop of magic and eroticism, and recounted with delirious humor, the novel raises universal questions about race and sexuality.
it is a very good book and it is interesting how we pick up on what people think of us. What we think of people and what we do with it.. Our spirit can fight our destiny but eventually it does catch up with us. We let go and everything is alright. Like Cohelo, Delacourt is a very spiritual writer because of the synchronicity he respects where timing is everything.
The story La chaussure sur le toit consists of ten short stories on the same theme: a shoe placed on the roof of the building opposite, in Paris. Each chapter is equivalent to a story with a well-defined character and a well-founded character: a dreamy child, a burglar in love, three crazy thugs, an undocumented immigrant, a television presenter, a melancholic dog, a homosexual firefighter, an eccentric lady, a contemporary artist, an angel in pants.
This book makes you want to go to Paris again, and to spend some time in the "historical" streets of this great city ! really ! Loved it, it's also very well written.
When Things of the Spirit Come First is Simone de Beauvoir's 'first' work of fiction. After a number of false starts, in 1937 she submitted this collection of interlinked stories to a publisher. But it was turned down by both Gallimard and Grasset. It consists of five short stories which are weaved together in such a way that it to structurally similar to a more traditional novel. The first, "Maurcelle", tells the story of the oldest of three siblings. She marries an abusive artist. The second, "Chantal", tells the story of a lycee philosophy teacher (like de Beauvoir). She idealizes her life and becomes involved in the lives of her students but ultimately refuses to help them. "Lisa" is the third and shortest story, about a girl who struggles to live a spiritual life while existing in a physical body. "Anne", the fourth story, is the result of many of de Beauvoir's earlier attempts at writing. It parallels the story of her friend Elisabeth Mabille (Zaza) who died soon after her mother refused to allow her to marry Maurice Merleau-Ponty. The final story, "Marguarite" expresses the existential views that de Beauvoir herself believed that life itself should be experienced, rather than spirituality.
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