Documents pour «Legend Press»

Documents pour "Legend Press"
Affiche du document Invisible Strings

Invisible Strings

Naledi Mashishi

1h30min00

  • SF et fantasy
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
120 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 1h30min.
Longlisted for the Sunday Times Literary Fiction Award 2022Mamokgethi’s life is brought to an abrupt halt by an unplanned pregnancy. As her daughter Thato grows, she begins to develop otherworldly powers ranging from visions, to seeing the dead, to healing by touch.A young pastor, Solomon, is desperate to prove himself by preaching the word of God to a large and loyal congregation. When he discovers Thato’s powers, he makes Mamokgethi a tempting offer: in exchange for money, he would pass off Thato's healing powers as his own. As the pastor’s popularity and thirst for power grows, Thato is burdened with events beyond her control.Invisible Strings is a story about the past bleeding into the present, the living and the dead, and the danger that can come with authority.For the past two years, Kgethi had been drowning in a vast, darkening sea. Above her she saw the light of her pre-pregnancy world rapidly dimming. The colours of her varsity life characterised by late night McDonald’s, cheap fast fashion, and rooftop parties receded from her. She watched as her daydreams of being a rich and famous Top Billing presenter staying in world-class hotels, rubbing shoulders with local and international celebrities, and following in the footsteps of fashion icon Bonang Matheba floated away. Her pregnancy had formed a ball and chain around her ankles, dragging her towards a life of diaper changes, nighttime feedings, domestic tedium. She found her dreams now locked away in safes with no keys. She entered motherhood with a chest full of water, never quite able to accept that this was it. This was her new life. The only thing that still connected her to her old life was a delicate gold bracelet with links shaped like palm leaves. It was a cheap costume piece bought from the type of accessory store that sold earrings which turned ears green. But when Kgethi looked at the bracelet she remembered the day she had walked into a store in Braamfontein, wearing a crop top that showed off her impossibly flat stomach, and spotted it. She remembered how it used to clink against the plastic cups she held as she moved through a crowded dance floor. How she used to play with it when she sat bored in a lecture hall and when she flirted with the cute boys on campus. The bracelet was a lifeline, a final reminder that nearly three years ago she had once been a girl with an enviable, slim body and a real life. She looked at the bracelet and reminded herself of who she used to be. Naturally, she was furious when the bracelet went missing. She rummaged through her drawers and failed to find it. Her confusion quickly transitioned to annoyance as she realised what must have happened. Valuables in Johannesburg had a tendency to grow legs. They walked out of pockets, bags, and through windows silently. If you were particularly unlucky they were forcibly surrendered by the persuasive power of a loaded gun. Her gold leaf bracelet had vanished. She searched through her wardrobe then looked under her bed. ‘What’s going on?’ Her mother’s voice said. Kgethi looked up at her doorway. ‘I can’t find my bracelet. The gold leaf one. Have you seen it anywhere?’ ‘No,’ she said with an unsympathetic look. ‘Where did you last see it?’ ‘I don’t know! I just wore it two days ago!’ She said, cursing loudly again. ‘Well I’m sure it’ll turn up.’ She wasn’t so sure. The missing bracelet soured her mood, which worsened when she was forced to go grocery shopping with her two-year-old daughter. There was nothing that represented the tedium Kgethi’s life had been reduced to more than the strip malls of northern Johannesburg. They were uniform in appearance with the same supermarkets, the same try-hard trendy coffee shops, and the same kitschy home stores where suburban white women bought Live Laugh Love wall decor. She hated them. She supposed she should have been grateful Thato didn’t make the whole ordeal harder. Kgethi would watch as other two-year-olds threw tantrums over chocolates but her child never did. Thato had always been peaceful. As a baby she hardly cried. She slept through the night from birth, didn’t suffer from colic or diarrhea or any of the other ailments common to babies. She was often so quiet for such long periods of time that it was easy for the residents of the house to forget that she was there. Kgethi used to watch over that quiet, squishy, powder-scented blob of a human and will herself to feel something. She willed herself to wash the baby, change diapers, breastfeed, and carry out all the other duties that came with motherhood, but she only performed them out of obligation. There was a part of her that almost wished Thato would cry more. Or vomit. Or do something that demonstrated that there was a real person with real thoughts and feelings wrapped under the layers of blanket and baby fat. Instead she felt nothing. ‘You’re lucky, you know,’ her mother once told her. ‘She’s a very easy baby.’ Kgethi said nothing. Thato wasn’t just easy. She was barely human. She was a bundle of flesh that took quietly and gave nothing back. It was as though Thato had sensed that she was unplanned and had resolved to move through life causing as little fuss as possible. She walked quietly next to Kgethi, holding her hand while they approached Woolworths. Kgethi turned around to take out a trolley. When she looked back Thato was gone. She blinked. ‘Thato?’ Panic set in. She looked around and saw the Thato running into a store they had visited the previous week. Oh for fuck’s sake, she thought before setting off after her. ‘Thato! Thato come back here,’ she yelled. She ran into the store after her and grabbed her by the arm. ‘Thato! Why would you run off like that?’ She hissed. ‘Excuse me, Miss,’ the cashier said. As Kgethi looked up at her a glint of gold caught her eye. She looked closer and there in her hand was the gold leaf bracelet. ‘I think this belongs to you?’ She said. ‘You might have dropped it the last time you were here?’ Kgethi was stunned. She looked from the bracelet to Thato. But… how? She took the bracelet, grabbed Thato’s hand and left. She couldn’t stop thinking about the incident and what it meant. How could Thato have known? Kgethi hadn’t been with her the last time she had visited that shop.
Accès libre
Affiche du document The Almost Truth

The Almost Truth

Anne Hamilton

1h42min45

  • Divers
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
137 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 1h43min.
'In a life full of books and not enough time to read them, I never read a novel twice. This one I will' Clo CareyWinner of the Irish Novel Fair 2021A compelling story of family, secrets, identity, and a reminder that love and life can surprise you… right until the very end.When Alina’s son, Fin, traces his long-absent birthfather, it’s the catalyst for decades of secrets to implode in Alina’s neatly ordered life.With the sudden appearance of Rory, and the ever-present pull of a very different life in Bangladesh, she’s left reeling.Three relationships, all of them built on half-truths. All Alina can truly be sure of, is that you can choose your family, you just can’t choose who they will turn out to be.'A lovely, compelling read about love, family, and finding yourself' Becky Hunter, author of One Moment'Intricately explores themes of home, family, identity, love, and loss, inviting readers to ponder the universal truths — and sometimes lies — that shape our lives' Jane Labous, author of Past Participle'Anne Hamilton handles with ease and grace this complex and compelling 'big Hindi movie' of a novel' Caroline Moir, author of The Brockenspectre'Set across Edinburgh, Bangladesh and Dublin, mysteries and family secrets abound in this intriguing novel' Elissa Soave, author of Ginger and Me'A captivating tale of human dilemmas and the consequences of half-truths' Olga Wojtas'A complex tale of interwoven cultures, told truthfully with humour and outright laughter, but always with Anne Hamilton's trademark sensitivity, understanding and honesty' Paul Soye, author of The Boy in the Gap'A gripping and brilliantly written novel from a huge new talent' Sophie Hannah
Accès libre
Affiche du document Lilith

Lilith

Nikki Marmery

2h09min00

  • Contes et Légendes
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
172 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 2h09min.
LILITH IS THE HEROINE WOMEN HAVE WAITED SIX THOUSAND YEARS FOR.ONE OF STYLIST'S BEST NEW FEMINIST RETELLINGS TO READ IN 2023A DELIA ONLINE BOOK OF THE MONTH‘LUSH, LYRICAL PROSE’ DAILY MAIL‘FEISTY, FURIOUS, AND STARTLINGLY FUNNY… EVERY PAGE SEETHES WITH LILITH’S RAGE AND HEARTACHE’ NAOMI KELSEYIn the Garden of Eden, at the beginning of time, an outrageous lie is born: that women are inferior.Lilith and Adam are equal and happy in the Garden of Eden. But when Adam decides Lilith should submit to his will and lie beneath him, she refuses – and is banished forever from Paradise. Demonised and sidelined, Lilith watches in fury as God creates Eve, the woman who accepts her submission. But Lilith has a secret: she has already tasted the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge. Endowed with Wisdom, she knows why Asherah – God’s wife and equal, the Queen of Heaven – is missing. Lilith has a plan: she will rescue Eve, find Asherah, restore balance to the world and regain her rightful place in Paradise.‘Lilith is beautifully written, thought-provoking, and always true to its heroine. Truly a unique, magnificent achievement’ Costanza Casati, author of Clytemnestra‘Stellar... This feminist reimagining of the Bible will grip readers’ Publishers Weekly, starred review‘A ferocious, heterodox mythic novel that upends notions of divinity, femininity versus masculinity, and human beings’ responsibility toward one another and the earth’ Foreword Reviews, starred review‘Furious, fierce & feminist… Simply the best book I’ve read in years’ Nydia Hetherington‘Fans of Madeline Miller and Jennifer Saint will love this evocative feminist retelling’ Rosie Andrews‘Perhaps the most powerful, audacious, hopeful novel I’ve ever read’ Louise Morrish‘Marmery’s exquisite prose brings this compelling, highly relevant tale of Adam’s first wife to life’ Laura Shepperson‘In a poetic voice, at once ancient and modern, Nikki Marmery’s Lilith conjures a feminist counter-narrative’ Kathleen B. Jones‘I learned so much from this joyous rampage through Biblical history’ Alice Albinia‘Marmery delivers one of the most gloriously feminist myth-meets-historical-fiction novels I’ve read’ Susan C. Wilson‘A furious tornado of a novel’ Maggie Brookes‘Fierce and utterly original’ Jennifer Saint‘The book I’ve been waiting my whole life for’ Victoria Hawthorne‘An extraordinary, important book’ Sara Sheridan‘Dynamite. I laughed loud, fumed louder’ Meg Clothier‘A battle cry of a book. A rich, vividly written story’ Sophie Keetch‘At long last we have the origin story women deserve’ Miranda Malins‘Defiant and magnificent’ Chikodili Emelumadu‘Ambitious and intriguing’ Elyse John‘Daring, fresh and playful’ Ann Morgan‘An invigoratingly furious book’ Niamh Boyce‘Witty and furious’ Joanne Burn‘Exquisitely written and full of wit and female rage’ Rani Selvarajah
Accès libre
Affiche du document The Seven Skins of Esther Wilding

The Seven Skins of Esther Wilding

Holly Ringland

3h04min30

  • Contes et Légendes
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
246 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 3h04min.
‘It’s impossible to come away from this magical story unchanged’ Sally Piper‘Richly immersive. A mysterious and magical journey through loss and grief’ Fiona ValpyThe last time Esther Wilding’s beloved older sister Aura was seen, she was walking along the shore towards the sea. In the wake of Aura’s disappearance, Esther’s family struggles to live with their loss.To seek the truth about her sister’s death, Esther reluctantly travels from Tasmania to Copenhagen, and then to the Faroe Islands. On her journey, Esther is guided by the stories Aura left behind in her treasured journal; seven fairy tales about selkies, swans and women, alongside cryptic verses Aura wrote and had secretly tattooed on her body.The Seven Skins of Esther Wilding is about the far-reaches of sisterly love, the power of wearing your heart on your skin and the way life can transform when we find the courage to feel the fullness of both grief and joy.‘I was swept away by this triumphant and luminous story’ Myfanwy Jones‘Astonishing in its scope, detail and sensitivity... tender, magical, epic, funny and devastating’ Kate Leaver‘Holly Ringland creates expansive, magical worlds in her novels and packs them full of love’ Victoria Hannan‘Ringland is a virtuoso of fairytale storytelling for adults’ Sydney Morning Herald‘Vivid and soaring... a haunting story of trauma and redemption’ Books+Publishing‘A beautiful story… with shimmering layers of age-old stories and rituals from indigenous Australia and Scandinavia’ The Yorkshire Times
Accès libre
Affiche du document Code-It: How To Teach Primary Programming Using Scratch

Code-It: How To Teach Primary Programming Using Scratch

Phil Bagge

2h15min00

  • Informatique
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
180 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 2h15min.
The Scratch: The ideal place to begin programming!Key Stage 2 Programming Curriculum Guide .Most primary teachers and pupils have little – if any – experience programming. This book, classroom-tested and perfected by the author through his website code-it.co.uk, aids teachers in providing Key Stage 2 pupils with an exciting and challenging computer science curriculum.Code It can be used to supplement existing programming modules or as a complete KS2 computer science program of study. It contains a series of programming projects that gradually introduce pupils to algorithm design and evaluation, generalisation and decomposition. Pupils will learn how to use sequence, repetition, selection and variables through becoming creators of a wide variety of programming projects. Maths, literacy, humanities, gaming, music and control skills are all put to the test.There are four pupil workbooks to provide structure, resources and home learning links. These are designed to work in conjunction with the teacher book. A growing bank of online videos are also available, designed to help teachers improve their own skills and take full advantage of the cross-curricular benefits of developing depth in programming.The Scratch programming language, already widely recognised in schools, is freely accessible online or as a download at home. Scratch is the ideal place to begin programming as there is no other system that allows pupils to create such a wide variety of projects across primary and secondary education. It also enables pupils to extend their understanding independently through the Scratch online community – the new computing curriculum is truly transformational!
Accès libre
Affiche du document Which One is Nettie?

Which One is Nettie?

Wendy Goucher

18min45

  • Jeunesse - Pour les 6 - 12 ans
  • Youscribe plus
  • Livre epub
  • Livre lcp
25 pages. Temps de lecture estimé 19min.
In her second adventure in Cyberland with her friend Webby, Nettie is shocked to discover Charlie the dog pretending to be her after she had left her tablet device unlocked.Young children may not be able to read words or design passwords, but they can begin to understand the importance of keeping things safe. Parents and carers will also be opening a discussion about privacy which is important to small children outside of their use of computers and devices. Using the story of Nettie and Webby, adults can continue their introduction to cybersecurity that they began in the first books. For young children it is not only about getting them to behave securely online, it is also about establishing a way children and adults can talk about cyber security as they grow. In this book the start the conversation is around the importance of locking screens on devices, but where it goes from there is up to you. Academic research has shown the importance of planting the seeds of understanding of password safety with children as soon as possible so they develop good safe cyber habits.Further discussion at the end of the book points towards a basic understanding about designing secure password security and the importance of keeping passwords private.'Perfect for starting conversations around online safety' Heather Toomey, Cyber Lead, Derbyshire's Education Data Hub'Very child friendly and engaging' Teju Herath, Associate Processor in Information Systems, Brock University
Accès libre

...

x Cacher la playlist

Commandes > x
     

Aucune piste en cours de lecture

 

 

--|--
--|--
Activer/Désactiver le son