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Books published by publisher Peter Owen Publishers

  • Cyprian of Carthage: Studies in His Life, Language and Thought

    H. Bakker, P Van Geest, H. Van Loon

    Hardcover (Peeters Publishers, Dec. 31, 2010)
    Until the time of Augustine, Bishop Cyprian of Carthage was the theological authority in the West, and he has continued to influence theology ever since. This volume is the result of a symposium on the Church Father held by the Centre for Patristic Research (CPO), which is an initiative of VU University Amsterdam and Tilburg University. The symposium was held on the occasion of the 1750th anniversary of his martyrdom, which took place on 14 September 258. The contributions cover Cyprian's biography, hermeneutical and philological questions, theological issues such as baptism and the role of the laity in episcopal elections, and the reception of the Church Father's texts in ancient and modern times.
  • Excellence in the Teaching of English to Primary School Children

    Diane Duncan, Mark Brundrett, Peter Silcock

    Hardcover (Peter Francis Publishers, Oct. 10, 2002)
    None
  • Charlie Rabbit and The Little Garden Gate

    Eliza B Hill

    Paperback (George Owen Publishers, )
    None
  • Change the Name by Anna Kavan

    Anna Kavan

    Paperback (Peter Owen Publishers (1993-11-01), March 15, 1656)
    None
  • Agatha Christie and the Eleven Missing Days: The Revised and Expanded 2011 Edition by Jared Cade

    Jared Cade

    Paperback (Peter Owen Publishers, March 15, 1778)
    None
  • Angels on the Head of a Pin

    Yuri Druzhnikov, Thomas Moore

    eBook (Peter Owen Publishers, April 1, 2014)
    This novel is set in Moscow in the late 1960s, at a time when Khrushchev-era liberalization is being threatened by the return to personality cult and repression following the Soviet intervention in Czechoslovakia. The editor-in-chief of the Communist Party newspaper collapses with a heart attack outside the Central Committee building. This is partly brought on by the appearance of a samizdat manuscript on his desk that leads to his anguishing over who left it and what to do with it to avoid falling victim to the malevolence its content is likely to unleash. The solution lies with Yakov Rappoport, an ageing and cynical Jewish veteran of the war and two spells in the Gulag, the author of not only the obnoxious popular campaigns sponsored by the newspaper (and all its letters to the editor) but of every single speech that gets made in public by the principals of the regime as well. His efforts to help his stricken editor, as well as the novel's star-crossed lovers, lead to a hallucinatory climax.
  • The Man Who Planted Trees

    Jean Giono

    Paperback (Peter Owen Publishers, April 1, 2014)
    None
  • The Man Who Planted Trees by Jean Giono

    Jean Giono

    Paperback (Peter Owen Publishers (Mar. 1989), March 15, 1600)
    None
  • Scallywags

    Sean Treacy

    Paperback (Peter Owen Publishers, Oct. 1, 1979)
    Scallywags features one of the most unusual pairings in literary fiction: a randy Irishman and a homosexual cockney with delusions of grandeur.
  • Sweetwater

    Knut Faldbakken

    Hardcover (Peter Owen Publishers, Aug. 8, 1997)
    None
  • The Swordfish by Hugo Claus

    None

    Hardcover (Peter Owen Publishers, )
    None
  • Crimes of Love

    Marquis de Sade

    Paperback (Peter Owen Publishers, April 1, 2003)
    None