Cornelius Nepos
Roman biographies of foreign commanders. Cornelius Nepos was born in Cisalpine Gaul but lived in Rome and was a friend of Cicero, Atticus, and Catullus. Most of his writings, which included poems, moral examples from history, a chronological sketc...
Cornelius: Cornelius - Point
Cornelius: Cornelius - Point [CD]
Cornelius
Cornelius, a crocodile who walks upright, sees things no crocodile has ever seen before.
Cornelius
Horrifying and hilarious, Cornelius the dog is a spectacular train wreck you just can t look away. Cornelius is a fumbling loser, the butt of everyone's jokes. When his friend Alspacka is kidnapped, the subsequent criminal investigation turns into...
Cornelius Castoriadis
Cornelius Castoriadis (1922-1997) was a Greek-French thinker best known for his work on 'autonomy' and 'human creation'. He was a political activist, psychoanalyst, philosopher, political and social thinker and economist. Recognised as a significa...
Cornelius Quartet
Jerry Cornelius is an English assassin, physicist, rock star, and messiah to the Age of Science. Written between 1965 and 1967, this sequence of four novels relating Cornelius's adventures has been credited with inspiring dozens of writers and art...
Cornelius: Point (Deluxe)
Cornelius: Point (Deluxe) [2 Vinyl LP]
Cornelius Jess: Distance
Cornelius Jess: Distance [Vinyl LP]
Cornelius: Fantasma (Orange)
Cornelius: Fantasma (Orange) [2 Vinyl LP]
Cardew Cornelius: Material
Cardew Cornelius: Material [CD]
Laura Cornelius Kellogg
Laura Cornelius Kellogg was an eloquent and fierce voice in early twentieth-century Native American affairs. An organizer, author, playwright, performer, and linguist, Kellogg worked tirelessly for Wisconsin Oneida cultural self-determination when...
A Cornelius Calendar
Jerry Cornelius is an English assassin, physicist, rock star, and messiah to the Age of Science. Cornelius's adventures have been credited with inspiring dozens of writers and artists to rethink the genre of science fiction. Set in a shifting, fluid version of the counter-culture 1960s, these books were among the most prominent 'New Wave' SF books. Jerry Cornelius is one of the most remarkable and distinctive characters in Moorcock's work, and his time-travelling, trippy and bizarre adventures are must-reads. Here are a selection of shorter novels and novellas, ranging across time and space... Contains 'The Adventures of Una Persson and Catherine Cornelius in the Twentieth Century', 'The Entropy Tango', 'The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle', 'The Alchemist's Question', 'Firing the Cathedral' and 'Modem Times 2.0'.
Cornelius: Point
Cornelius: Point [2 Vinyl LP]
Cornelius: Fantasma
Cornelius: Fantasma [2 Vinyl LP]
Corneluis Nord
Jag heter Cornelius Nordenfors, mitt konstnärsnamn är Cornelius Nord. Jag är född i Draculaland, bott i Svealand i trettio år. Legal läkare. På sextiotalet studerade jag på Konstakademin i Bukarest. Därefter har jag studerat konst på en privat hög...
Cornelis Sånger
CORNELIS SÅNGERHär har vi samlat 125 av Cornelis Vreeswijks sånger. Här finns inte bara de mest kända, utan även många andra av de fantastiska sånger och klurigheter som Cornelis hann spela in under sin alltför korta karriär. Så läs, spela och framförallt njut av skaldens sköna visor!Ur innehållet:ÅngbåtsbluesBalladen om herr Fredrik Åkare och den söta fröken Cecilia LindBrev från kolonienByssan lullDeirdres sambaDen lycklige nudistenFelicia adjöGrimasch om morgonenI natt jag drömde något somJag hade en gång en båtMin polare PerSomliga går med trasiga skorSommarkort (En stund på jorden)Turistens klaganoch många fler!
Cornelius: Dream in Dream
Cornelius: Dream in Dream [Vinyl LP]
Cornelius Peter: Drei Könige
Cornelius Peter: Drei Könige [CD]
Bumpus Cornelius: Known Yet
Bumpus Cornelius: Known Yet [CD]
Cornelius: Dream in Dream
Cornelius: Dream in Dream [Vinyl LP]
Cornelius / Mendelssohn / Schumann: Duet
Cornelius / Mendelssohn / Schumann: Duet [CD]
Cornelius Ryan: The Longest Day (D-Day June 6, 1944), a Bridge Too Far (Loa #318)
For the 75th anniversary of D-Day, a deluxe collector's edition gathering two gripping masterpieces of military history. Library of America presents two of the best books ever written about World War II in a deluxe collector's edition featuring 88 pages of photographs, full-color endpaper maps, rare archival material revealing how the books were written, and a new introduction by Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and historian Rick Atkinson (The Liberation Trilogy). The Longest Day tells the story of the Allies' greatest success, the Normandy invasions of June 6, 1944, Operation Overlord; A Bridge Too Far recounts perhaps their greatest failure, the catastrophic airborne invasion of Holland in September 1944, known as Operation Market Garden. Together, they reveal not only the twisting fortunes of war and the grand sweep and scale of the largest amphibious and airborne invasions ever mounted, but also the very real human experience of combat, the small but momentous individual acts
Imaginary Institution of Society
This is one of the most original and important works of contemporary European thought. First published in France in 1975, it is the major theoretical work of one of the foremost thinkers in Europe. Castoriadis offers a brilliant and far-reaching a...
Last Battle
The classic account of the final offensive against Hitler's Third Reich. The Battle for Berlin was the culminating struggle of World War II in the European theater, the last offensive against Hitler's Third Reich, which devastated one of Europe's historic capitals and marked the final defeat of Nazi Germany. It was also one of the war's bloodiest and most pivotal battles, whose outcome would shape international politics for decades to come. The Last Battle is Cornelius Ryan's compelling account of this final battle, a story of brutal extremes, of stunning military triumph alongside the stark conditions that the civilians of Berlin experienced in the face of the Allied assault. As always, Ryan delves beneath the military and political forces that were dictating events to explore the more immediate imperatives of survival, where, as the author describes it, 'to eat had become more important than to love, to burrow more dignified than to fight, to exist more militarily correct than to