#Daniel Hernández Chambers
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witchbitchheadedtoaditch · 4 years ago
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The Basics of Kemetic Philosophy (without the appropriated shit from Judaism)
I'm starting a series on Kemetic philosophy because a lot of my readings on it have included things like Kabbalah (Kabala, Kabbala, Qabala, etc.) which is directly appropriated from Judaism, and definitely would not have been included in ancient Kemetic philosophy.
This series relies heavily on the following books/independent publications (this continues to be updated as the series continues):
The Instruction of Ptah-Hotep and the Instruction of Ka'Gemni: The Oldest Books in the World translated by John Murray
Teachings of Ptahhotep
Maat: The 11 Laws of God by Ra Un Nefer Amen (somewhat, this book literally has the Kabbalistic tree of life on its' cover so I don't take a lot from it--it's really just a good jumping-off point because it covers so much)
Maat: The Moral Idea in Ancient Egypt by Maulana Karenga
The Literature of Ancient Egypt: An Anthology of Stories, Instructions, and Poetry edited with an introduction by William Kelly Simpson. Authors include Robert K. Ritner, Vincent A. Tobin, and Edward F. Wente.
I Am Because We Are: Readings in Africana Philosophy by Fred Lee Hord, Mzee Lasana Okpara, and Johnathan Scott Lee.
Ancient Egyptian Literature: Volume I: The Old and Middle Kingdoms by Miriam Lichtheim (2006 Edition)
Current Research in Egyptology 2009: Proceedings of the Tenth Annual Symposium by Judith Corbelli, Daniel Baotright, and Claire Malleson
Old Kingdom, New Perspectives: Egyptian Art and Archaeology 2750-2150 BC by Nigel Strudwick and Helen Strudwick
Current Research in Egyptology 2010: Proceedings of the Eleventh Annual Symposium by Maarten Horn, Joost Kramer, Daniel Soliman, Nico Staring, Carina van den Hoven, and Lara Weiss
Current Research in Egyptology 2016: Proceedings of the Seventeenth Annual Symposium by Julia M. Chyla, Joanna Dêbowska-Ludwin, Karolina Rosińska-Balik, and Carl Walsh
Mathematics in Ancient Egypt: A Contextual History by Annette Imhausen
The Instruction of Amenemope: A Critical Edition and Commentary by James Roger Black
"The ancient Egyptian concept of Maat: Reflections on social justice and natural order" by R. James Ferguson
The Mind of Ancient Egypt: History and Meaning in the Time of the Pharaohs by Jan Assmann
Transformations of the Inner Self in Ancient Religions by Jan Assmann and Guy G. Stroumsa
Of God and Gods: Egypt, Israel, and the Rise of Monotheism by Jan Assmann
Death and Salvation in Ancient Egypt by Jan Assmann
Cultural Memory and Early Civilization: Writing, Remembrance, and Political Imagination by Jan Assmann
From Akhenaten to Moses: Ancient Egypt and Religious Change by Jan Assmann
Book of the Dead: Becoming God in Ancient Egypt edited by Foy Scalf with new object photography by Kevin Bryce Lowry
It also relies on the following journal articles/book chapters:
"A Modern Look at Ancient Wisdom: The Instruction of Ptahhotep Revisited" by Carole R. Fontaine in The Biblical Archaeologist Volume 44, No. 3
"The Teaching of Ptahhotep: The London Versions" by Alice Heyne in Current Research in Egyptology 2006: Proceedings of the Seventh Annual Symposium
"One Among Many: A Divine Call for Gender Equity" by Sandra Y Lewis in Phylon (1960-) Volume 55, No. 1 & 2.
"A Tale of Semantics and Suppressions: Reinterpreting Papyrus Mayer A and the So-called War of the High Priest during the Reign of Ramesses XI" by Kim Ridealgh in Studien zur Altägyptischen Kultur
EDITORIAL: African Philosophy as a radical critique" by Alena Rettová in Journal of African Cultural Studies Volume 28, No. 2
"Sanctuary Meret and the Royal Cult" by Miroslav Verner in Symposium zur Königsideologie / 7th Symposium on Egyptian Royal Ideology: Royal versus Divine Authority: Acquisition, Legitimization and Renewal of Power. Prague, June 26–28, 2013
"The Ogdoad and Divine Kingship in Dendara" by Filip Coppens and Jiří Janák in Symposium zur Königsideologie / 7th Symposium on Egyptian Royal Ideology: Royal versus Divine Authority: Acquisition, Legitimization and Renewal of Power. Prague, June 26–28, 2013
"The Egyptian Temple as a Place to House Collections (from the Old Kingdom to the Late Period) by Roberto A. Diaz Hernández in The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology Volume 103, No. 1
"Death and the Sun Temple: New Evidence for Private Mortuary Cults at Amarna" by Jacquelyn Williamson in The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology Volume 103, No. 1
"Mery-Maat, An Eighteenth Dynasty iry '3 pr pth From Memphis and His Hypothetical Family" by Rasha Metawi in The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology Volume 101, 2015
"A New Demotic Translation of (Excerpts of) A Chapter of The "Book of the Dead" by Joachim Friedrich Quack in The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology Volume 100, 2014
"The Shedshed of Wepwawet: An Artistic and Behavioural Interpretation" by Linda Evans in The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology Volume 97, 2011
"(De)queering Hatshepsut: Binary Bind in Archaeology of Egypt and Kingship Beyond the Corporeal" by Uroš Matić in Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory Volume 23, No. 3 "Binary Binds": Deconstructing and Gender Dichotomies in Archeological Practice.
"Egyptian Maat and Hesiodic Metis" by Christopher A. Faraone and Emily Teeter in Mnemosyne Volume 57 Fasc. 2
"Maat and Order in African Cosmology: A Conceptual Tool for Understanding Indigenous Knowledge" by Denise Martin in Journal of Black Studies Volume 38, No. 6
"Memphis and Thebes: Disaster and Renewal in Ancient Egyptian Consciousness" by Ogden Goelet in The Classical World Volume 97, No. 1
"A Radical Reconstruction of Resistance Strategies: Black Girls and Black Women Reclaiming Our Power Using Transdisciplinary Applied Social Justice, Ma'at, and Rites of Passage" by Menah Pratt-Clarke in Journal of African American Studies Volume 17, No. 1
"Emblems for the Afterlife" by Marley Brown in Archaeology Volume 71, No. 3
"Human and Divine: The King's Two Bodies and The Royal Paradigm in Fifth Dynasty Egypt" by Massimiliano Nuzzolo in Symposium zur ägyptischen Königsideologie/8th Symposium on Egyptian Royal Ideology: Constructing Authority. Prestige, Reputation and the Perception of Power in Egyptian Kingship. Budapest, May 12-14, 2016
"The Block and Its Decoration" by Josef Wegner in The Sun-shade Chapel of Meritaten from the House-of-Waenre of Akhenaten
"The African Rites of Passage and the Black Fraternity" by Ali D. Chambers in Journal of Black Studies Volume 47, No. 4
"Review: Translating Ma'at" by Stephen Quirke in The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology Volume 80, 1994
"Additions to the Egyptian Book of the Dead" by T. George Allen in Journal of Near Eastern Studies Volume 11, No. 3
"Types of Rubrics in the Egyptian Book of the Dead" by T. George Allen in Journal of the American Oriental Society Volume 56, No. 2
"Book of the Dead, Book of the Living: BD Spells as Temple Texts" by Alexandra Von Lieven in The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology Volume 98, 2012
"Fragments of the "Book of the Dead" on Linen and Papyrus" by Ricardo A. Caminos in The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology Volume 56, 1970
"Herodotus and the Egyptian Idea of Immortality" by Louis V. Z̆abkar in Journal of Near Eastern Studies Volume 22, No. 1
"Theban and Memphite Book of the Dead Traditions in the Late Period" by Malcolm Mosher Jr. in Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt Volume 29, 1992
"The Conception of the Soul and the Belief in Resurrection Among the Egyptians" by Paul Carus in The Monist Volume 14, No. 3
"It's About Time: Ancient Egyptian Cosmology" by Joanne Conman in Studien zur Altägyptischen Kultur Volume 31, 2003
"Egyptian Parallels for an Incident in Hesiod's Theogony and an Episode in the Kumarbi Myth" by Edmund S. Meltzer in Journal of Near Eastern Studies Volume 33, No. 1
"The Book of the Dead" by Geo. St. Clair in The Journal of Theological Studies Volume 6, No. 21
"The Egyptian "Book of the Two Ways"" by Wilhelm Bonacker in Imago Mundi Volume 7, 1950
"The Papyrus of Nes-min: An Egyptian Book of the Dead" by William H. Peck in Bulletin of the Detroit Institute of Arts Volume 74, No. 1/2
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guillermoloren · 7 years ago
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"Los poderes de la oscuridad", de Bram Stoker y Valdimar Asmundsson
“Los poderes de la oscuridad”, de Bram Stoker y Valdimar Asmundsson
«La versión perdida de Drácula, que Bram Stoker reescribió con el primer traductor de la obra y a la vez editor en Islandia.» .
El pasado lunes, 20 de noviembre reseñé uno de los libros más entretenidos que he leído últimamente. Me refiero a Vampiros, una recopilación excelente en edición de Rosa Samper y Óscar Sáenz. Pues bien, esta vez le toca el turno al vampiro más conocido, el creado por Bra…
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bountyofbeads · 5 years ago
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China called the Hong Kong protesters who stormed the legislature “extreme radicals.” https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/02/world/asia/hong-kong-protestors.html
These young people are literally fighting for their Democratic freedoms that will be taken away from them in about 30 years as China inserts its influence and power over Hong Kong.
China Calls Hong Kong Protesters Who Stormed Legislature ‘Extreme Radicals’
By Javier C. Hernández | Published July 2, 2019 | New York Times | Posted July 2, 2019 |
HONG KONG — The Chinese government on Tuesday denounced those protesters in Hong Kong who stormed the city’s legislature as “extreme radicals,” and urged the police and government to hold them responsible.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs said the demonstrators had carried out “serious and illegal acts” that “trampled on the rule of law” during a daylong protest on Monday.
“We strongly condemn this behavior,” Geng Shuang, a spokesman for the ministry, told reporters at a regular news conference in Beijing.
The remarks were a stern warning to protesters after weeks of demonstrations against a contentious bill that would allow extraditions to mainland China.
Those protests turned chaotic on Monday, when a small group of opponents to the bill stormed the legislature, ramming glass doors, destroying official portraits and spray-painting slogans in the inner chamber.
President Xi Jinping has emphasized the importance of maintaining the integrity of China’s territory and sought to expand Beijing’s influence in Hong Kong, a semiautonomous territory. But the unrest in the former British colony has become an embarrassment for the party, which prides itself on the idea of a unified China.
Even as Mr. Xi’s patience is tested, experts said that the mainland was unlikely to take drastic action in Hong Kong, such as by deploying troops, and it would allow Hong Kong officials to address the tensions.
In a strongly worded statement, Beijing’s Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office said that “some extreme radicals” used the extradition bill to justify attacking the legislative office building’s facilities.
The office called it a “blatant challenge” to the One Country, Two Systems policy under which the Chinese government is obliged to provide Hong Kong with a high degree of autonomy.
Several different government agencies, including the foreign ministry, also expressed firm support for the Hong Kong government and the police.
The mainland Chinese news media, which is tightly controlled by the ruling Communist Party, has provided little reporting on the protests that have roiled Hong Kong for the past several weeks and thrown the city’s leadership into a political crisis.
But on Tuesday, Chinese government statements criticizing the protests received blanket coverage across major Chinese state media outlets alongside editorials that blamed the unrest on hostile western forces bent on fomenting a revolution in the territory. The protesters were portrayed as hooligans motivated by mob violence, with state-run outlets omitting details of their broader political demands.
“Out of blind arrogance and rage, protesters showed a complete disregard for law and order,” said an editorial in the Global Times, a nationalist tabloid.
By limiting discussion of the protests, the government was obscuring a potential embarrassment to the party and Mr. Xi. The government also might be eager to prevent outbursts of nationalism, which can be seen as a challenge to party’s primacy, analysts said.
“The Party always wants to stay ahead of Chinese nationalism,” said Dan Lynch, a professor of Asian and international studies at the City University of Hong Kong.
The protests were a test of the Communist Party’s patience with Hong Kong, said Kerry Brown, a professor of Chinese politics at King’s College London.
“They think, ‘we’ve allowed these people all these kinds of privileges and freedoms, and look at the way they behave,’” he said. “It will just reinforce the narrative that this is a spoiled kind of place.”
With other pressing matters like a trade dispute with the United States and a slowing economy, however, Professor Brown said Mr. Xi was likely to take a conservative approach, unless the unrest begins to inflict damage on Hong Kong’s economy.
What to Know About Hong Kong’s Evolving Protest Movement
By Daniel Victor | Published July 2, 2019 | New York Times | Posted July 2, 2019 |
HONG KONG — The protests in Hong Kong, leaderless but well coordinated, took a destructive turn on Monday, complicating what had been a mostly cohesive movement.
Scenes of protesters shattering glass to break into the Legislative Council building, followed by demonstrators scrawling graffiti on the walls inside and damaging furniture, caused some residents to question some of the tactics used. But many protesters defended the escalation by saying nothing else has worked, and that they were left with no choice if their demands — including the full withdrawal of a despised extradition bill — were to be met.
The resolution to the growing conflict could affect Hong Kong’s standing as an international business hub and its status as a foothold of democracy in China. Hong Kong is a semiautonomous Chinese territory with its own system of government separate from the mainland, which has mostly watched the unrest at arm’s length.
Here are the main takeaways from the recent protests, and a look at why they took a destructive turn on Monday.
[Need a primer? Read up on the basics of Hong Kong’s extradition bill, which sparked the protests.]
A leaderless, digital movement is called into question
There is no single leader or group deciding on or steering the strategy, tactics and goals of the movement. Instead, protesters have used forums and messaging apps to decide next steps.
Anyone can suggest a course of action, and others then vote on whether they support it. The most popular ideas rise to the top, and then people rally to make them happen.
At its best, this structure has empowered many people to participate and have their voices heard. Protesters say it keeps them all safe by not allowing the government to target specific leaders. Their success in halting the extradition bill, which was shelved by the territory’s chief executive, speaks to the movement’s power.
But that same leaderless structure’s weaknesses were on display on Monday. Such a system makes little distinction between the thousands of people who marched peacefully, the scores who vandalized the Legislative Council building, and the dozens who physically forced a path in. It also does not allow for a forceful leader who can discourage such violence. Though many aided those attacking the legislature by moving supplies through the crowd, other protesters disapproved of the destruction, driving a wedge between residents who broadly share a common ideology.
“Not too many Hong Kong citizens are able to differentiate between the radical protesters who barged into the Legislative Council and the general protesters whose agenda is peaceful and rational,” said Willy Lam, a political scientist at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.
Despite the lack of a clear leader, protesters have shown extensive coordination at the demonstrations, having planned the specifics online beforehand. Supply stations are set up to distribute water, snacks, gloves, umbrellas and shields made of cardboard. Volunteer first aid workers wear brightly colored vests. People form assembly lines to pass supplies across long distances, with protesters communicating what they need through a series of predetermined hand signals. Anyone walking in dangerous areas without a helmet or a mask is quickly offered one.
Still, no individual can speak on behalf of the protesters, which makes negotiations difficult, if not impossible. Mr. Lam called the lack of a leader a potential “fatal weakness” of the movement, allowing a small group of destructive protesters to set the tone for the entire group.
One major victory, but additional demands
Carrie Lam, Hong Kong’s chief executive, had plenty of political support in the territory’s pro-Beijing legislature to pass a bill that would allow extraditions to mainland China. The legislators were set to begin discussing the bill in early June, and intended to vote on it just weeks later.
Instead, hundreds of thousands of people marched through the city’s streets in protest on June 9, and three days later, protesters blocked the entrance to the council building. As a group of protesters tried to beak into the building, the police responded with batons, pepper spray and tear gas to disperse tens of thousands of people.
After a June 16 protest saw the largest turnout yet, Ms. Lam made a major concession: She postponed the bill, at least temporarily.
It was an undeniable victory for the protesters — but it did little to quell the unrest. Since the bill could later be reintroduced, protesters felt they remained in danger.
The police tactics to break up the demonstrations on June 12, including the use of more than 150 tear gas canisters to push protesters far away from the government office, created a new set of demands from the protesters. Now, instead of just calling for the withdrawal of the bill and Ms. Lam’s resignation, they said they wouldn’t be content unless there was an independent investigation of officers’ conduct. They also wanted the release of protesters arrested on June 12, and for the government to rescind its description of the demonstrations as a “riot,” a designation that carries legal significance.
None of that has happened. Many analysts say Ms. Lam is unlikely to step down, nor would Beijing accept her resignation if she offered it. She has more wiggle room on the other demands, but has not indicated any willingness to budge.
It sets the stage for a protracted conflict.
China is reluctant to get too involved
Just a few minutes’ walk away from the Legislative Council building, the People’s Liberation Army, China’s military, has an outpost with thousands of combat-ready soldiers ready to do Beijing’s bidding. But they have remained on the sidelines, even as the extended protests have turned violent and pose a political threat to President Xi Jinping.
Ivan Choy, a political scientist at Chinese University of Hong Kong, said deploying the army would be a last resort and a worst-case scenario for Mr. Xi. It would be widely seen as China reneging on the autonomy Beijing promised when Britain handed Hong Kong back to China in 1997.
“If the P.L.A. came out last night, it would seriously undermine confidence in ‘one country, two systems’ of the Hong Kong people and also the international community,” Mr. Choy said on Tuesday.
Mr. Xi still prefers to let Hong Kong officials handle the situation, he said. Hong Kong’s successful self-governance is important for China’s international image, and its failure would be a major black eye for the president.
But some in the Chinese government could use Monday’s escalation to justify tightening Hong Kong policies. They could also argue against making the concessions protesters seek, painting them as radicals who won’t be satisfied.
BUSINESSES ARE WATCHING, BUT HAVEN’T FLINCHED
The international business community that has made Hong Kong such a crucial economic center did not bat an eye at Monday’s protests. Hong Kong’s stock market was up on Tuesday, indicating little concern that the protests have crossed a worrisome red line.
A collapse of Hong Kong’s autonomy — or a lack of confidence that law and order could be upheld — would cause businesses to scramble for a new home in Asia. Several business groups spoke out against the extradition bill, while more expressed concern privately.
Most have had little to say about the protests. But the American Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong condemned the protesters’ behavior in a statement on Tuesday.
“We believe the violent protests of recent days do not reflect how the majority of people in this dynamic and advanced economy would choose to be heard,” it said. “We sincerely hope that Hong Kong will find ways for communication and collaboration between the government and the public in order to bring out the best of what Hong Kong has to offer as a premier business and financial hub.”
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tenerifeweekly · 3 years ago
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Daniel Hernández Chambers, Azagal Award for 'Department of Magical Affairs'
Daniel Hernández Chambers, Azagal Award for ‘Department of Magical Affairs’
SANTA CRUZ DE TENERIFE, 11 May. (EUROPE PRESS) – The writer Daniel Hernández, for his work ‘Department of Magical Affairs’, has won the 2022 Azagal Prize awarded by the Cabildo de Tenerife from the Education and Youth area. The jury, made up of 160 young readers from 25 educational centers throughout the island, decided on the youth literature award after a meeting with the three finalist…
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humanrightsupdates · 3 years ago
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Prisoners Of Conscience In Honduras Released
All the eight Guapinol defenders were unconditionally released in February 2022. On 24 February 2022, the sentencing court of Trujillo ordered the release of the six Guapinol defenders (José Daniel Márquez, Kelvin Alejandro Romero, José Abelino Cedillo, Porfirio Sorto Cedillo, Ewer Alexander Cedillo and Orbin Nahún Hernández) that remained in prison following a favourable resolution of the Supreme Court of Justice on 10 February 2022. Arnol Javier Alemán and Jeremías Martínez Díaz had been acquitted and released immediately on 9 February 2022.
NO FURTHER ACTION IS REQUESTED. MANY THANKS TO ALL WHO SENT APPEALS.
On 24 February 2022, the sentencing court of Trujillo ordered the release of the six Guapinol defenders (José Daniel Márquez, Kelvin Alejandro Romero, José Abelino Cedillo, Porfirio Sorto Cedillo, Ewer Alexander Cedillo and Orbin Nahún Hernández). They were found guilty of the crimes of illegal deprivation of liberty and aggravated damages against the contractor of the company Inversiones Los Pinares (ILP), and simple and aggravated damages against ILP on 9 February 2022. The six prisoners of conscience spent two years and a half wrongfully detained.
Only two of the eight members of the Municipal Committee for the Defence of Common and Public Assets (CMDBCP) were acquitted and immediately released on 9 February 2022. One day after, on 10 February 2022, the Honduras Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court of Justice (SCJ) issued two resolutions in favor of the eight defenders, in relation to two amparos writs filed in 2020 and in 2021 for violations of due process of law and their pre-trial detention. Following this resolution, on 24 February 2022, the sentencing court of Trujillo ordered the release of the six Guapinol defenders, who were freed later on the same day.
We believe that the public campaign on behalf of the eight Guapinol defenders, including appeals sent by Amnesty International members, have contributed to this positive outcome. After their release, the people who accompanied them deeply thanked Amnesty International for all the support.
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elisabetsosa97 · 4 years ago
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Nueva reseña de mis lecturas de 2020. Esta vez es el turno del primer volumen de "El legado de Olkrann" (@bruno_editorial) de Daniel Hernández Chambers, una fantasía medieval que @yasminamelian me regaló hace unos cuantos años y decidí releer. 🐉🏇🗡 La sinopsis está en las fotos y aquí viene mi reseña: Es un libro absorbente desde la primera página. He disfrutado de esta historia de fantasía de principio a fin. Tengo más ganas de saber qué les ocurre a los personajes de esta emocionante aventura La narrativa esta muy bien construida, los personajes son muy completos y te encariñas mucho con ellos y en definitiva es una muy buena forma de empezar una saga. #libros #books #bookworm #ratadebiblioteca #bookstagram #review #fantasía #fantasy #danielhernandezchambers #medieval https://www.instagram.com/p/CBc9hmRIA8F/?igshid=ffvd14jlk6oc
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wsmith215 · 4 years ago
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Sandinista leaders fall victim to coronavirus outbreak they downplayed
Photograph: Inti Ocón/AFP via Getty Images
Earlier this year, as countries enforced strict social-distancing rules to slow the spread of coronavirus, Nicaragua’s Sandinista rulers organized a string of pro-government rallies and marches under the banner “Love Walk in the Time of Covid-19”.
Among those who joined one of those crowds in Managua was Dr Félix Bravo, a doctor in the country’s public health system, whose loyalty to the Nicaraguan government apparently outweighed the World Health Organization’s warnings against large gatherings.
A month and a half later, Bravo was dead.
Officially, his death was caused by “atypical pneumonia” – a diagnosis which Nicaraguan doctors and epidemiologists say is routinely used by the country’s authorities to hide the country’s Covid-19 death toll.
President Daniel Ortega and his wife and vice-president, Rosario Murillo, insist that Nicaragua has so far avoided community spread of the virus, and seen just a handful of deaths from the pandemic.
Related: Nicaragua’s ‘express burials’ raise fears Ortega is hiding true scale of pandemic
But in the past month the virus appears to have reached the inner circle of the country’s political elite: at least 20 prominent Sandinistas – including ministers, members of the national assembly, senior advisers and a police commander – have died after displaying symptoms typical of Covid-19.
Several of the dead stand accused of playing a key role in the repression of a popular uprising against the Sandinista government in 2018, in which more than 300 people were killed.
Some had openly dismissed the threat posed by the pandemic. In March, Edwin Castro and Wilfredo Navarro, two Sandinista deputies in the national assembly, were caught on camera, mocking other legislators who entered the chamber wearing face masks.
Not longer after, Castro was taken to hospital for two weeks with coronavirus symptoms, and has not been seen in public since. Meanwhile Navarro’s cousin and parliamentary aide, Roberto Moreira, has died of Covid-19. 
Story continues
Gravediggers carry a coffin during a funeral at the Jardines del Recuerdo Cemetery in Managua on Friday amid the coronavirus pandemic. Photograph: Inti Ocón/AFP/Getty Images
Nicaragua’s health ministry says the country has 1,118 confirmed coronavirus cases and 46 deaths, but independent estimates say the figure is closer to 4,000 cases, with at least 980 deaths.
Last Monday, more than 30 local medical associations called for a “national lockdown” of three or four weeks, warning in an open letter that: “The exponential increase of Covid-19 cases has caused the collapse of the public and private health systems.”
The next day, Murillo named seven officials and senior Sandinistas who had died – or as she put it, “journeyed to another plane of life”.
“What remains is their legacy, their bravery and above all, the love with which they served the Nicaraguan people at every moment,” she said.
Among the dead were two senior Sandinista figures The telecoms minister, Orlando Castillo, was sanctioned by the US last year for “silencing independent media” after journalists were beaten, harassed and arrested in the wake of the civil revolt.
Also on the list was Orlando Noguero, mayor of Masaya, who led troops and hooded paramilitaries in a brutal counter-attack against mortar-wielding rebels who held the city for months during the uprising.
Murillo did not mention any cause of death in her eulogy for the dead officials, but medical sources told the Guardian that Castillo and Noguera both died in hospital wards which have been dedicated to patients with Covid-19 symptoms.
Noguera was swiftly buried in Masaya at private ceremony in which the gravediggers wore PPE – following a pattern of “express burials” in which coronavirus victims are interred behind closed doors.
The deaths of senior Sandinista figures are personal tragedies for their families, but some opposition activists see them as a kind of “divine justice”.
Other victims named by Murillo were Olivio Hernández Salguera, the national police’s public security chief who helped lead the crackdown on opposition protesters, and the union boss and deputy Rita Fletes, who once described herself as “Daniel Ortega’s daughter”.
As Noguera was laid to rest, opposition activists in Masaya lit rockets and firecrackers to celebrate the death of a man they accused of masterminding the crackdown on their city. “Covid-19 delivered the justice that all my brothers who were murdered in 2018 never saw,” said one local.
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descargalibros · 5 years ago
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Descarga El legado de Olkrann 2: El regreso del dragón blanco (Daniel Hernández Chambers)
5 / 5 ( 1 voto ) Mientras en el libro mágico aparece otra siniestra profecía, el Dragón Blanco, los miembros del Club Chatterton y un pequeño séquito cruzan el Umbral que los llevará a Olkrann con la intención de recuperar el trono… Categoría: Infantil / Juvenil Para ello, deberán pedirle ayuda a la reina […]
#libros #frases #amor #books #literatura #bookstagram #a #poesia #leer #book #love #libro #escritos #pensamientos #n #letras #lectura #poemas #ol #versos #vida #textos #librosrecomendados #reflexiones #frasesdeamor #sad #poema #os #accionpoetica #bhfyp
source https://www.descargalibros.es/descarga-el-legado-de-olkrann-2-el-regreso-del-dragon-blanco-daniel-hernandez-chambers
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365footballorg-blog · 6 years ago
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Norwich 11 unbeaten against Ipswich after East Anglian stalemate
Ipswich’s wait for a first win of the season and first triumph over rivals Norwich since 2009 continued after they were pegged back at Portman Road.
The hosts took a second-half lead when a deflected Gwion Edwards shot wrong-footed Canaries keeper Tim Krul and found the net.
Influential winger Edwards placed an effort wide just afterwards and was made to pay when Moritz Leitner levelled for Daniel Farke’s visitors, guiding a shot into the corner from outside the box following a spell of Norwich pressure.
Jon Walters – making his first appearance since rejoining Ipswich on loan – came closest to a winner but could not get a clean strike away after beating the offside trap.
More to follow.
Line-ups[1]
Match Stats[2]
Live Text[3]
Line-ups
Ipswich
1Gerken
12Spence
5Pennington
4ChambersBooked at 26mins
3Knudsen
7Edwards
8SkuseSubstituted forChalobahat 45+7'minutes
11Nolan
14GrahamBooked at 42minsSubstituted forWardat 82'minutes
39Walters
9JacksonSubstituted forHarrisonat 84'minutes
Substitutes
6Chalobah
10Harrison
18Ward
21Downes
25Edun
30Kenlock
33Bialkowski
Norwich
1Krul
37Aarons
31Hanley
15KloseSubstituted forGodfreyat 45'minutesBooked at 49mins
12Lewis
27Tettey
10Leitner
17BuendíaSubstituted forThompsonat 64'minutes
22Pukki
25Hernández
11RhodesSubstituted forSrbenyat 79'minutes
Substitutes
4Godfrey
6Zimmermann
18Stiepermann
19Trybull
32Srbeny
33McGovern
34Thompson
Referee:
Robert Jones
Attendance:
25,690
Match Stats
Home TeamIpswichAway TeamNorwich
Possession
Home45%
Away55%
Shots
Home19
Away11
Shots on Target
Home6
Away2
Corners
Home7
Away6
Fouls
Home12
Away21
Live Text
Posted at
Match ends, Ipswich Town 1, Norwich City 1.
Full Time
Posted at 90'+5'
Second Half ends, Ipswich Town 1, Norwich City 1.
Posted at 90'+4'
Foul by Grant Hanley (Norwich City).
Posted at 90'+4'
Ellis Harrison (Ipswich Town) wins a free kick in the attacking half.
Posted at 90'+3'
Attempt missed. Grant Ward (Ipswich Town) right footed shot from the centre of the box is close, but misses to the left.
Posted at 90'+2'
Attempt missed. Dennis Srbeny (Norwich City) left footed shot from a difficult angle on the left is close, but misses to the left following a corner.
Posted at 90'+1'
Corner, Norwich City. Conceded by Trevoh Chalobah.
Posted at 88'
Foul by Maximillian Aarons (Norwich City).
Posted at 88'
Jonathan Walters (Ipswich Town) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Posted at 87'
Moritz Leitner (Norwich City) wins a free kick on the left wing.
Posted at 87'
Foul by Trevoh Chalobah (Ipswich Town).
Posted at 86'
Attempt saved. Grant Ward (Ipswich Town) right footed shot from outside the box is saved in the bottom left corner. Assisted by Jonas Knudsen.
Posted at 86'
Foul by Teemu Pukki (Norwich City).
Posted at 86'
Jon Nolan (Ipswich Town) wins a free kick on the left wing.
Posted at 85'
Attempt missed. Jonathan Walters (Ipswich Town) left footed shot from the centre of the box misses to the left.
Posted at 85'
Attempt blocked. Jonathan Walters (Ipswich Town) header from the centre of the box is blocked. Assisted by Matthew Pennington.
Substitution
Posted at 84'
Substitution, Ipswich Town. Ellis Harrison replaces Kayden Jackson.
Posted at 82'
Foul by Maximillian Aarons (Norwich City).
Posted at 82'
Jonathan Walters (Ipswich Town) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Posted at 82'
Delay over. They are ready to continue.
Substitution
Posted at 82'
Substitution, Ipswich Town. Grant Ward replaces Jordan Graham.
Posted at 80'
Delay in match Louis Thompson (Norwich City) because of an injury.
Substitution
Posted at 79'
Substitution, Norwich City. Dennis Srbeny replaces Jordan Rhodes.
Posted at 78'
Foul by Onel Hernández (Norwich City).
Posted at 78'
Jordan Spence (Ipswich Town) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Posted at 77'
Grant Hanley (Norwich City) wins a free kick in the defensive half.
Posted at 77'
Foul by Gwion Edwards (Ipswich Town).
Posted at 77'
Attempt saved. Kayden Jackson (Ipswich Town) right footed shot from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal.
Posted at 77'
Attempt saved. Jonathan Walters (Ipswich Town) right footed shot from very close range is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Matthew Pennington with a headed pass.
Posted at 74'
Moritz Leitner (Norwich City) wins a free kick on the left wing.
Posted at 74'
Foul by Gwion Edwards (Ipswich Town).
Posted at 73'
Foul by Jordan Rhodes (Norwich City).
Posted at 73'
Matthew Pennington (Ipswich Town) wins a free kick on the right wing.
Goal!
Posted at 71'
Goal! Ipswich Town 1, Norwich City 1. Moritz Leitner (Norwich City) left footed shot from outside the box to the bottom right corner.
Posted at 70'
Louis Thompson (Norwich City) wins a free kick on the right wing.
Posted at 70'
Foul by Jonas Knudsen (Ipswich Town).
Posted at 69'
Attempt saved. Jonas Knudsen (Ipswich Town) header from the centre of the box is saved in the centre of the goal. Assisted by Gwion Edwards with a cross.
Posted at 68'
Attempt missed. Grant Hanley (Norwich City) right footed shot from the centre of the box is too high. Assisted by Alexander Tettey following a corner.
Posted at 68'
Corner, Norwich City. Conceded by Jon Nolan.
Posted at 67'
Corner, Norwich City. Conceded by Jonas Knudsen.
Show more updates
goal
References
^ Line-ups (www.bbc.co.uk)
^ Match Stats (www.bbc.co.uk)
^ Live Text (www.bbc.co.uk)
BBC Sport – Football
Norwich 11 unbeaten against Ipswich after East Anglian stalemate was originally published on 365 Football
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guillermoloren · 7 years ago
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"La biblioteca mágica del Profesor Marloc", de Daniel Hernández Chambers (con ilustraciones de David Guirao)
“La biblioteca mágica del Profesor Marloc”, de Daniel Hernández Chambers (con ilustraciones de David Guirao)
Recomendado a partir de 9 años
«La biblioteca mágica del Profesor Marloc es una novela juvenil de aventuras trepidantes que atrapa al lector e invita a los jóvenes a descubrir los clásicos de la literatura juvenil.» .
—“Zorro Rojo a Madriguera, Zorro Rojo a Madriguera. No recibió respuesta, pero Zorro Rojo decidió transmitir el mensaje de todos modos. —Hora dieciocho cero cero, me pongo en marcha.…
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bountyofbeads · 5 years ago
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Angry Core of Hong Kong Protesters Storms Legislature, Dividing the Movement https://nyti.ms/2KOrRDb
This could be used by China to show that they need to rule Hong Kong with an iron fist and crack down on protesters.
“Those elements will be pushed to the max to elicit greater compliance from the population,” said Victor Shih, an associate professor of political economy at the University of California, San Diego.
“Now Beijing has a good excuse to become even more uncompromising,” said Jean-Pierre Cabestan, a political scientist at Hong Kong Baptist University.
Angry Core of Hong Kong Protesters Storms Legislature, Dividing the Movement
By Javier C. Hernández | Posted July 1, 2019 | New York Times | Posted July 1, 2019 |
HONG KONG — Hundreds of thousands of demonstrators marched in peaceful protest in Hong Kong on Monday as it commemorated its return to Chinain 1997, but the city was shaken by images of a smaller group of activists who broke into the legislature, smashed glass walls and spray-painted slogans in the inner chamber.
The split-screen protest offered vivid evidence that the divide in the former British colony is not merely between protesters and the Beijing-allied government — the protesters are increasingly at odds with one another.
On Monday, as activists armed with metal bars and makeshift battering rams were on the cusp of breaking down the doors of the Legislative Council, a group of veteran politicians sympathetic to their cause pleaded with them to reconsider.
Some were shaking their heads. Some were on their knees.
“Please ask if it’s worth it,” Claudia Mo, a lawmaker, told one black-masked protester. “Think about your mother.”
The confrontation made clear that the protest movement that has upended Hong Kong for months as citizens condemned meddling from the mainland is at a crossroads. Until now, protesters took pride in having no recognized leaders and using encrypted messaging to crowdsource their direction. But the pitfalls of that approach have begun to emerge, with protesters disagreeing over tactics and goals and lacking a consistent position from which to negotiate — even as the government toughens its stance.
“Now Beijing has a good excuse to become even more uncompromising,” said Jean-Pierre Cabestan, a political scientist at Hong Kong Baptist University.
On Monday, Hong Kong social media was filled with pleas for the protesters to return to nondestructive methods. And early Tuesday, Carrie Lam, Hong Kong’s chief executive, condemned the violence and praised the police, who she said had exercised restraint.
For weeks, the Hong Kong protest movement had stayed on the high road.
A few days after the police used rubber bullets and pepper spray against demonstrators on June 12, protesters held a vast and peaceful demonstration of more than two million, even though the government had suspended consideration of a bill that would allow extraditions to mainland China. Since then, smaller demonstrations have continued, without seeming to alienate the business community or lose focus.
On Monday, the vast majority of protesters were once again peaceful. But the images that dominated the day were generated by a core of a few hundred protesters who broke into the legislature.
The protesters now risk helping President Xi Jinping of China justify his desire for tighter control of Hong Kong, analysts say. Some say the protesters are overreaching, as they did during similar protests five years ago, when critics of the government rejected a compromise by Beijing and ended up with nothing.
The unrest was a sharp challenge not only to Hong Kong’s leaders but to Mr. Xi, who has sought to expand Beijing’s influence in the semiautonomous territory but now faces a turbulent political crisis with no signs of abating. The protest on Monday represented a brazen defiance of Beijing’s rule and was a dramatic display of the challenge that the party faces in winning over Hong Kong’s youth.
The protesters’ rejection of the pleas of sympathetic lawmakers, as well, highlights their deep disillusionment with Hong Kong’s political system. Many are skeptical that lawmakers, even those who embrace their cause and attend their rallies, have their interests at heart.
The distrust speaks to a widening gulf between the city’s political class and its youth, who feel that older generations have been too eager to compromise with Beijing and allowed the Communist Party to chip away at Hong Kong’s freedoms.
Since early June, protesters, many of them students, have urged the government to withdraw the extradition bill.
Responding to pressure from protesters, Hong Kong’s leader, Mrs. Lam, suspended the bill last month and apologized. But the protesters remain unsatisfied, demanding the bill be withdrawn entirely and that Mrs. Lam resign.
[Photos of the destruction in the legislature and clashes in the streets.]
Demonstrators poured into the streets on Monday, the anniversary of Hong Kong’s handover from Britain to China in 1997, a traditional day of protest for people who oppose China’s tightening grip.
In the morning, Mrs. Lam clinked glasses of champagne with other Hong Kong officials as they celebrated the 22nd anniversary, and watched on video displays as the flags of China and Hong Kong were raised in tandem outside the city’s harbor-front convention center.
But tensions erupted almost immediately. Hundreds of riot police officers used batons and pepper spray to beat back demonstrators who had gathered nearby. Many protesters were angered by the police’s response, and marched to the offices of the Legislative Council, where they used metal rods and carts to break the building’s glass facade.
At night, the protesters stormed into the legislature, building barricades inside and spraying messages on the walls calling for protesters who had been arrested last month to be released. “Murderous regime,” said one message.
The protest quickly became a broad repudiation of Chinese rule, with demonstrators tearing up copies of the Basic Law, a mini-constitution that took effect in 1997 and governs Hong Kong’s relations with Beijing, and calling for free and direct elections. One group raised a British, colonial-era flag.
“We need to let out our long-repressed emotions and to let the rest of the world know about this news,” said Kris Yeh, a 20-year-old protester who said he had helped smash glass doors and spray paint walls.
Protesters mostly cleared out of the legislature after three hours of occupation. Then a cordon of riot police charged to disperse the crowd outside.
The confrontation at the legislature divided protesters. Some denounced the actions of the protesters who crashed into the building. Others were less critical, saying they could understand the anger.
“I don’t support violence, no matter what, but I understand why people would do it,” said Emily Lau, a former lawmaker. “They are very frustrated because they say they have protested so much.”
Some argued that nonviolence had failed and that a more confrontational approach was necessary to protect Hong Kong’s freedoms.
“We have been too peaceful for the past few times, so the police think we are easily bullied,” said Natalie Fung, 28, who supported protesters with food and drinks outside the legislature. “The younger people are risking their safety and their futures for us.”
In Beijing, the state-run news media mostly ignored the protests. But they were perceived among some as a stark challenge to Mr. Xi’s rule, taking place on the 98th anniversary of the founding of the Communist Party of China.
The unrest has put Mr. Xi, who has promoted an image as a tough, uncompromising leader, in a difficult position, as he grapples with the prospect of more clashes between the police and protesters, or removing Mrs. Lam, a chief executive whom he swore in two years ago.
Still, mainland experts said the chaos on Monday might give the central government confidence that the movement in Hong Kong was unraveling and could fade on its own.
“This movement has reached its end,” said Tian Feilong, the executive director of a research institute on Hong Kong policy in Beijing, citing the divisions between lawmakers and more extreme protesters. “It will cool down by itself.”
Beijing already has a formidable network of sympathetic business executives, media outlets and civil servants in Hong Kong. But the political crisis might prompt officials to place even greater pressure on those groups, experts say, such as by threatening employees of mainland companies whose children participate in the protests.
“Those elements will be pushed to the max to elicit greater compliance from the population,” said Victor Shih, an associate professor of political economy at the University of California, San Diego.
The movement now enters a period of uncertainty. Arrests are likely. Divisions are growing among protesters. Without a recognized set of leaders, the demonstrations lack a sense of focus.
For many, the situation has rekindled memories of the campaign that became known as the Umbrella Revolution in 2014, an 11-week protest for free elections. The movement eventually fractured.
Victoria Hui, an associate professor who studies Hong Kong politics at the University of Notre Dame, said a successful protest required some level of coordination, even if it was decentralized.
“It cannot be leaderless,” she said. “They need better coordination. It’s not worth it to court arrest.”
Reporting was contributed by Austin Ramzy, Mike Ives, Tiffany May, Daniel Victor, Katherine Li, Ezra Cheung, Alexandra Stevenson and Gillian Wong from Hong Kong; and by Steven Lee Myers from Beijing.
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bookolica · 7 years ago
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Patxi Zubizarreta y Manuel J. Rodríguez, ganadores de los Premios Edelvives 2018
El Grupo Edelvives ha concedido su XXIX Premio de Literatura Infantil Ala Delta al guipuzcoano Patxi Zubizarreta por su novela ¡Corre, Kuru, corre! y al malagueño Manuel J. Rodríguez el XVIII Premio de Literatura Juvenil Alandar por El bloc de las edades. Ambos premios están dotados con 12.100 euros.
El jurado del Premio Ala Delta, que decidió otorgar el galardón por unanimidad, estuvo integrado por Carmen Blázquez (crítica literaria), Ana López Andrade (profesora), Ricarda Folla Fernández (bibliotecaria), Oriol Canosa (ganador de la pasada edición) e Ignacio Chao (editor), actuando como secretario Jorge Gómez. Según el jurado del premio, la obra, dirigida a lectores de diez años en adelante, constituye «una maravillosa aventura que rinde homenaje a la oralidad y enlaza con acierto el drama de la inmigración con la tradición literaria propia de las leyendas de Oriente. En sus muchos niveles de lectura, ¡Corre, Kuru, Corre!, invita a entender los dilatados límites de la diversidad, se cuestiona la preeminencia de Occidente y expresa un mensaje de solidaridad y esperanza con una sutileza digna de las grandes obras de la literatura infantil».
Kuru es un muchacho etíope que ha atravesado África para llegar a Europa, con la esperanza de reencontrarse con su hermana, que reside en Inglaterra. En un box de un hospital español coincide con Selam, una conocida suya a quien le cuenta la historia de Zarafa, una jirafa que el pachá egipcio Mehmet Alí regaló hace dos siglos a los reyes de Francia y que recorrió Etiopía, Sudán y Egipto antes de llegar a París. En ese país, en donde nunca se había visto un animal semejante, su repercusión fue tal que 1827 se convirtió en su año y se desató una auténtica jirafomanía.
«En lugar de contar el dramático periplo de Kuru a través de África –ha dicho Patxi Zubizarreta–, quise proponer al lector una historia paralela en la que podamos imaginar la de muchas personas que provienen de esos países que, como escribió Gloria Fuertes, son tan pobres que en ellos el arco iris es en blanco y negro. Personas que, a pesar de todos sus sufrimientos y desdenes, llevan siempre, como la jirafa protagonista, la cabeza alta».
Patxi Zubizarreta Dorronsoro, nacido en Ordizia en 1964, estudió Filología Vasca en Vitoria-Gasteiz, ciudad en la que reside. Ha escrito obras para adultos (Tres cartas desde Pamplona, De hiel y de miel, Camas deshechas), libros para niños y jóvenes (Usoa, llegaste por el aire, Una naranja en la basura o El maravilloso viaje de Xía Tenzin —con la que obtuvo por primera vez, en 2009, el Premio Ala Delta y posteriormente el Premio Euskadi) y ha traducido a la lengua vasca obras tan emblemáticas como El Principito, de Antoine de Saint-Exupéry o El callejón de los milagros, del nobel egipcio Naguib Mahfuz. Traducido y premiado, amante de la literatura árabe, también fusiona la literatura con otras disciplinas artísticas…
Sobre la obra ganadora del Premio Alandar, el jurado, que otorgó el galardón por unanimidad, estuvo compuesto por Luisa Mora (bibliotecaria), Andrea Villarrubia (profesora), Pablo Barrena (crítico literario), Daniel Hernández Chambers (ganador de la pasada edición) y Violante Krahe (editora), actuando como secretario Juan Nieto Marín; ha destacado que la novela, ambientada en la ciudad de Málaga, «es un relato muy bien contado, escrito por alguien que conoce a la perfección el tipo de relación entre maltratador y maltratada y los comportamientos patológicos que se establecen entre ambos, y sabe exponerlo con claridad, inteligencia y eficacia. Con unos sólidos protagonistas y unos personajes secundarios de largo recorrido, construidos de manera muy notable, la novela aborda, además, un tema del que es necesario hablar en la literatura dirigida a los jóvenes».
El bloc de las edades es una novela narrada en primera persona por Laura, de 20 años, que acaba de recibir un premio como ilustradora y rememora unos episodios que vivió cinco años antes. De imaginación desbordante y con ansias de independencia, la adolescente tiene problemas con su hermana mayor y con sus padres, quienes, además, sufren las consecuencias de la crisis económica. Para que no descuide su vocación por el dibujo, una tía suya que vive en Estados Unidos le regala un bloc. Pero una vez que pinta un retrato suyo y de sus tres mejores amigas sucede algo extraño: el cuaderno reproduce esos mismos retratos a lo largo de varias páginas, aunque en cada hoja los personajes envejecen un año. Al ver esos cambios, Laura se asusta, pero, sobre todo, se queda aterrorizada al comprobar que en la tercera página María desaparece del todo. Pronto tendrá una pista sobre su desaparición: es la primera de las cuatro que encuentra novio, un muchacho celoso, obsesivo y violento.
Para el autor, «siempre es emocionante publicar un nuevo libro, es ver cómo se transforman en un objeto precioso las muchas horas de ilusión puestas en crear una historia, compartida durante mucho tiempo con los personajes, sufriendo y disfrutando con ellos en una segunda vida, paralela a la vida real de uno. Pero si además esa publicación va aparejada a la obtención de un premio tan prestigioso como el Alandar, mi emoción se multiplica y la publicación de ese libro se convierte en la realización de un sueño».
Manuel J. Rodríguez nació en 1965 en Madrid, en donde vivió su infancia y parte de su adolescencia. Tras un periodo de seis años enrolado en la Armada, se instaló en Málaga, ciudad de origen de su familia. Allí trabaja desde 1992 como funcionario de la Administración de Justicia, profesión que le hace estar en contacto muy directo con los conflictos y realidades de la sociedad, algo que suele reflejarse en sus novelas. En 2007 ganó el Premio de Relato Corto del Ayuntamiento de Novelda (Alicante), lo que asegura que le animó a continuar con la escritura. Es autor de las novelas infantiles El secreto del árbol (2012) y Guille y el equipo Cascarria (Edelvives, 2017) y forma parte de una pequeña compañía de teatro/musical para niños, donde se encarga de los textos y las letras de las canciones.
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planetaeris · 7 years ago
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Hechizo de arena… ... de Daniel Hernández Chambers y Òscar Julve (dibujos). Algar Editorial Colección: La clase monster (3)
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rotoworld-yahoopartner · 8 years ago
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Team News - Week 21
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Saturday Early Kickoff
Tottenham v West Bromwich Albion
Tottenham XI: Lloris (C), Walker, Dier, Alderweireld, Vertonghen, Rose, Wanyama, Dembele, Eriksen, Dele, Kane
Substitutes: Vorm, Davies, Trippier, Winks, Sissoko, Nkoudou, Son
Changes: None
West Brom XI: Foster; Dawson, McAuley, Olsson, Brunt; Fletcher, Yacob; Chadli, Morrison, Phillips; Rondon
Substitutes: Myhill; Galloway, Robson-Kanu, McClean, Leko, Field, Wilson
Changes: Olsson in for Evans
Saturday Midday Kickoffs
Burnley v Southampton
Burnley XI: Heaton; Lowton, Keane, Mee, Ward; Hendrick, Defour, Marney, Boyd; Barnes, Gray
Substitutes: Robinson, Flanagan, Darikwa Tarkowski, Barton, Kightly, Vokes
Changes: Marney and Defour in for Gudmundsson and Arfield
Southampton XI: Forster; Cédric, Yoshida, Van Dijk, Bertrand; Ward-Prowse, Romeu, Højbjerg; Tadic; Long, Redmond
Substitutes: Taylor, Clasie, Rodriguez, Martina, Reed, Stephens, Sims
Changes: van Dijk, Bertrand, Long and Hojbjerg in for Fonte, Rodriguez, Clasie and McQueen
Hull City v AFC Bournemouth
Hull City XI: Jakupovic; Maguire, Dawson, Davies, Robertson; Snodgrass, Mason, Huddlestone, Clucas; Hernández, Diomande
Substitutes: Marshall, Livermore, Weir, Niasse, Tymon, Bowen, Evandro
Changes: Jakupovic, Mason, Robertson and Hernandez in for Elmohamady, Mbokani, Livermore and Marshall
Bournemouth XI: Boruc; Smith, Mings, Cook, Daniels; Surman, Arter; Stanislas, Wilshere, Fraser; Afobe
Substitutes: Federici, B Smith, Gosling, Ibe, Pugh, King, Wilson
Changes: Surman, Afobe, Smith, Mings and Wilshere in for Francis, Wilson, Ake, Gosling and King
Sunderland v Stoke City
Sunderland XI: Mannone, Love, Van Aanholt, Djilbodji, O'Shea, Denayer, Rodwell, Larsson, Januzaj, Borini, Defoe
Substitutes: Mika, Maja, Asoro, Embleton, Jones, Manquillo, Honeyman
  Changes: Denayer in for Ndong
Stoke City XI: Grant; Johnson, Shawcross, M.Indi, Pieters; Whelan, Adam; Shaqiri, Allen, Arnautovic; Crouch
Substitutes: Given; Bardsley, Muniesa, Afellay, Imbula, Taylor, Ngoy
Changes: Whelan and Shaqiri in for Walters and Diouf
Swansea City v Arsenal
Swansea XI: Fabianski; Naughton, Fernandez, Mawson, Kingsley; Ki, Sigurdsson, Cork; Dyer, Routledge, Llorente
Substitutes: Nordfeldt, Rangel, Hoorn, Fulton, Fer, Borja, McBurnie
Changes: Kingsley and Dyer in for Fulton and Taylor
Arsenal XI: Cech; Gabriel, Mustafi, Koscielny, Monreal; Ramsey, Xhaka; Alexis, Ozil, Iwobi; Giroud
Substitutes: Ospina, Maitland-Niles, Reine-Adelaide, Oxlade-Chamberlain, Lucas, Welbeck
Changes: Gabriel and Ozil in for Bellerin and Coquelin
Watford v Middlesbrough
Watford XI: Gomes (GK); Kaboul, Prödl, Britos; Kabasele, Doucouré, Behrami, Capoue, Holebas; Deeney (c), Okaka
Substitutes: Pantilimon (GK), Cathcart, Zúñiga, Watson, Cleverley, Sinclair, Ighalo
  Changes:  Okaka in for Guedioura
Middlesbrough XI: Valdes; Fabio, Chambers, Bernando, Gibson, Friend; Leadbitter, De Roon; Forshaw, Negredo, Stuani
Substitutes: Guzan, Fry, Clayton, Traore, Downing, Fischer, Gestede
Changes: Valdes, Friend, Stuani, Bernardo and Leadbitter in for Guzan, Clayton, Traore, Barragan and Ramirez
West Ham United v Crystal Palace
West Ham XI: Randolph, Collins, Reid, Ogbonna, Antonio, Noble, Obiang, Cresswell, Lanzini, Feghouli, Carroll
Substitutes: Adrian, Byram, Fletcher, Calleri, Fernandes, Oxford, Quina
Changes: Collins, Noble and Carroll in for Kouyate, Nordtveit and Payet
Crystal Palace XI: Hennessey; Tomkins, Dann, Delaney, Ward; Cabaye, McArthur, Ledley; Puncheon, Townsend; Benteke
Substitutes: Speroni, Fryers, Kelly, Flamini, Schlupp, Lee, Remy
Changes: Dann and McArthur in for Zaha and Kelly
Saturday Late Kickoff
Leicester City v Chelsea
Leicester XI: Schmeichel, Chilwell, Morgan (c), Huth, Fuchs, Ndidi, Drinkwater, Mendy, Albrighton, Musa, Vardy
Substitutes: Zieler, Simpson, Wasilewski, King, Gray, Okazaki, Kapustka
Changes: Chilwell, Ndidi, Drinkwater, Albrighton, Musa and Vardy in for Simpson, King, Mendy, Okazaki, Ulloa and Mahrez
Chelsea XI: Courtois; Azpilicueta, David Luiz, Cahill (c); Moses, Kante, Matic, Alonso; Willian, Hazard, Pedro
Substitutes: Begovic, Ivanovic, Zouma, Chalobah, Loftus-Cheek, Fabregas, Batshuayi
Changes: Willian in for Costa
Sunday Early Kickoff
Everton v Manchester City
Everton XI: Joel, Baines, Williams, Funes Mori, Holgate, Coleman, Barry (c), Davies, Mirallas, Barkley, Lukaku
Substitutes: Stekelenburg, Schneiderlin, Jagielka, Lennon, McCarthy, Valencia, Lookman
Changes: Holgate, Barry and Mirallas in for Gana, Lennon and Calvert-Lewin
Manchester City XI: Bravo, Sagna, Stones, Otamendi, Clichy, Yaya Toure, Zabaleta (C), De Bruyne, Sterling, Silva, Aguero
Substitutes: Caballero, Kolarov, Delph, Sane, Navas, A Garcia, Iheanacho
Changes: Stones, Zabaleta and Aguero in for Kolarov, Fernandinho and Iheanacho
Sunday Midday Kickoff
Manchester United v Liverpool
Manchester United XI: De Gea, Valencia, Jones, Rojo, Darmian, Carrick, Herrera, Pogba, Mkhitaryan, Martial, Ibrahimović
Substitutes: Romero, Blind, Smalling, Fellaini, Mata, Rashford, Rooney
Changes: Martial in for Lingard
Liverpool XI: Mignolet, Alexander-Arnold, Lovren, Klavan, Milner, Henderson, Can, Wijnaldum, Lallana, Firmino, Origi
Substitutes: Karius, Gomez, Moreno, Stewart, Ejaria, Coutinho, Sturridge
Changes: Alexander-Arnold, Henderson and Origi in for Clyne, Sturridge and Mane
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themapo · 9 years ago
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Diseño colección de libros para la Editorial Bruño... El legado de Olkrann  del autor Daniel Hernández Chambers
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descargalibros · 5 years ago
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Descarga El legado de Olkrann 3: El reino de las almas perdidas (Daniel Hernández Chambers)
5 / 5 ( 1 voto ) En su empeño por recuperar el trono de Olkrann, el Dragón Blanco y su séquito se ven obligados a entrar en el reino de Nemeghram para pedirle ayuda al rey Lukon. Este, caprichoso e imprevisible, impone una condición: el joven Dragón deberá recuperar para él una ciudad que […]
#libros #frases #amor #books #literatura #bookstagram #a #poesia #leer #book #love #libro #escritos #pensamientos #n #letras #lectura #poemas #ol #versos #vida #textos #librosrecomendados #reflexiones #frasesdeamor #sad #poema #os #accionpoetica #bhfyp
source https://www.descargalibros.es/descarga-el-legado-de-olkrann-3-el-reino-de-las-almas-perdidas-daniel-hernandez-chambers
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