
Eat Frozen Shit!
3.890 kr.Look no further! The book you’re currently holding is the only Icelandic phrasebook you’ll ever actually need. Eat Frozen Shit is not just a handy guide to “colorful language”, it is so much more!
Included in this book:
* A practical no-bullshit guide to everyday words and phrases!
* Filthy curse words!
* Funny sex phrases!
* Essential party vernacular!
* Cool slang!
* Uncool grandparents’ slang!
* Hilarious illustrations!
* A bunch of useless information!
* And more!Impress your friends and family by learning to curse in one of the oldest languages in the world. It’s a gift that keeps on giving.

Leikandinn: Greinar um menntun ungra barna
1.290 kr.Menntun ungra barna hefur verið í brennidepli víða um heim á undanförnum áratugum. Aukin áhersla á menntun yngstu borgaranna skýrist m.a. af niðurstöðum fjölda vísindarannsókna sem sýna verulegan ávinning af góðri menntun þeirra, ekki einungis fyrir þau sjálf heldur einnig fyrir samfélagið.
Þessi bók inniheldur 18 fræðigreinar sem hafa að geyma niðurstöður rannsókna um menntun ungra barna frá ýmsum sjónarhornum. Fjallað er um réttindi og sjónarmið barna, mikilvægi leiks og starfsaðferðir með ungum börnum. Jafnframt er rannsóknum á samfellu í námi barna gerð skil. Sjónum er einnig beint að börnum með fjölbreyttan tungumála- og menningarbakgrunn og mikilvægi fjölbreytilegra kennsluhátta fyrir öll börn. Þá er greint frá rannsóknum sem varpa ljósi á reynslu og sjónarmið foreldra ungra barna.
Bókinni er ætlað að mæta brýnni þörf fyrir íslenskt efni um menntun ungra barna handa kennurum, tómstundafræðingum, þroskaþjálfum og öðru fagfólki á sviði uppeldis- og menntavísinda. Þess er einnig vænst að bókin nýtist háskólanemum sem leggja stund á þessar fræðigreinar. Jafnframt á bókin erindi við þá sem móta stefnu í málefnum barna og aðra sem láta sig menntun yngstu borgaranna varða.

To Meet in Hell
1.290 kr.To Meet in Hell: Bergen-Belsen, the British Officer Who Liberated It, and the Jewish Girl He Saved

Can Socialists be Happy?
2.490 kr.No thinking person can or does genuinely keep out of politics, in an age like the present one.
Unfailingly wise and often startlingly prophetic, George Orwell’s essays are masterpieces of plain English prose. This stirring new collection brings together his most cherished pieces with lesser-known gems, ranging over everything from tree planting to living with the atom bomb, sleeping rough to the perils of getting what you want in politics.


In The Kitchen: Essays on food and life
3.490 kr.‘A delightful collection of original, vibrant and heart-warming writing.’ – Nigel Slater
‘I learned that before entering the kitchen, I must get the measure of its hold over me.’
Food can embody our personal history as well as wider cultural histories. But what are the stories we tell ourselves about the kitchen, and how do we first come to it? How do the cookbooks we read shape us? Can cooking be a tool for connection in the kitchen and outside of it?
In these essays thirteen writers consider the subjects of cooking and eating and how they shape our lives, and the possibilities and limitations the kitchen poses. Rachel Roddy traces an alternative personal history through the cookers in her life; Rebecca May Johnson considers the radical potential of finger food; Ruby Tandoh discovers other definitions of sweetness through the work of writer Doreen Fernandez; Yemisí Aríbisálà remembers a love affair in which food failed as a language; and Julia Turshen considers food’s ties to community.
A collection to savour and inspire, In the Kitchen brings together thirteen contemporary writers whose work brilliantly explores food, capturing their reflections on their experiences in the kitchen and beyond.
Contributors
Juliet Annan
Yemisí Aríbisálà
Laura Freeman
Joel Golby
Daisy Johnson
Rebecca May Johnson
Rebecca Liu
Nina Mingya Powles
Ella Risbridger
Rachel Roddy
Mayukh Sen
Ruby Tandoh
Julia Turshen
‘A moving and beautiful tribute to food and taste and how these essential things wrap themselves round the colour of our lives.’ – Stylist
‘Immerse yourself in the culinary charms of this foodie essay collection.’ – Town & Country
‘This warming and varied collection of essays on food, cooking and all the emotions that get tangled up in the process, is a true balm.’ – New Statesman
‘In the Kitchen is literary comfort food for the soul and I heartily recommend it.’ – Idler

Freewheeling: Essays on Cycling
3.690 kr.Cycling? It’s one of my life’s constants, it feeds my need for beauty, for delight and for aimless exploring. It makes my body hum and brings me safely back to the present . . . I hope to continue pedalling, nice and slowly, for the rest of my life, with the same curiosity that ignited my childhood.
In these essays twelve writers consider the joys of cycling, whether in a city late at night, or along country lanes on a summer’s day. Yara Rodrigues Fowler and Xani Byrne write a moving essay on coming to terms with loss through tandem biking, Jon McGregor reminisces on the significance of cycling to Dunwich Beach throughout his life, Annie Lord sings the praises on cycling home on Lime Bikes from parties and the late Dervla Murphy regales us with stories of her cycle to India on her bike, named Roz.
These essays are a celebration of life on two wheels, touching on the joy, exhilaration and serenity to be found while cycling, and how bikes become an extension of ourselves, a type of armour, and a metaphor for life.
Contributors
Imogen Binnie
Aniefiok Ekpoudom
Yara Rodrigues Fowler & Xani Byrne
Mina Holland
Annie Lord
Jon McGregor
Moya Lothian-McLean
Dervla Murphy
David O’Doherty
Jini Reddy
Ashleigh Young
‘Thrums with beauty, wears its humanity like a crown.’ Michael Pedersen
‘The writing here has enough lightness of spirit to whip out on your morning commute . . . the essays have also been judiciously chosen, have an aerodynamic focus, and you’ll speed through them.’ LeftLion
‘An evocative and thought-provoking anthology that captures the multifaceted world of cycling . . . A delightful ride.’ BIKE magazine

Ecce Homo : How One Becomes What One is
2.490 kr.I am not a man, I am dynamite
Weeks before his final mental breakdown, Nietzsche set out to compose his autobiography, and Ecce Homo is the result. A summary of his life’s work as a philosopher, with chapter headings including ‘Why I Am So Wise’ and ‘Why I Write Such Good Books’, it is part mocking self-judgement and part battle cry, and remains one of the most singular, strange examples of the genre ever written.

For Art & For Life
2.490 kr.Few artists’ letters are as self-revelatory as Vincent van Gogh’s. From the humanistic inspiration behind The Potato Eaters to his long-time obsession with painting the vision that eventually became The Starry Night, the letters in this selection paint an intense personal narrative of his artistic development and creative process across the years. They reveal a man of great spiritual and emotional depths who – in his own words – did everything ‘for art and for life itself’.


Unpacking My Library
2.490 kr.Every sort of passion verges on chaos, I know, but what the collecting passion verges on is a chaos of memories.’From intimate musings on his book collection, to a dream-like trip through the bustling streets of Marseille, each of these essays offers a compelling journey into the mind of one of the twentieth century’s most influential philosophers.

Why I am a Stoic
2.490 kr.Plagued by ill-health, violently sick at sea, irritated by renovation costs: Seneca is never less than sympathetically human. In these letters written 2000 years ago, the ancient philosopher speaks to the reader today with lucidity and warmth. Whether advising on how to live a good life, spend time alone or free oneself from fears of death, Seneca is the wise and compassionate friend we all need now.
