Search results for ""author jay ramsay""
Fitzrovia Press The Dangerous Book: The Bible As You've Never Seen It
£8.46
John Hunt Publishing Crucible of Love New Edition The Alchemy of Passionate Relationships
Crucible of Love is a roadmap for a new understanding of love, radically challenging our conventional ideas about relationships. Written from the heart, with passion and clarity, it offers us a vision of what it means to live with love at the centre of our lives, and 'where the wedding means all of us', in true freedom and openness.
£11.24
David Paul The Message: Poems to Read the World
£9.67
Penguin Books Ltd The Romance of the Three Kingdoms
A new translation and abridgement of one of the four classical Chinese novels - an epic story of warring factions in the era of China's Han dynastyPart historical and part legend, The Romance of the Three Kingdoms dramatizes the lives of feudal lords and their retainers, recounting their personal and military battles, intrigues and struggles to achieve dominance for almost a hundred years. It is one of the most beloved works of East Asian literature, and the most famous historical novel in China.
£12.99
Red Wheel/Weiser The Promise of Kuan Yin: Wisdom, Miracles & Compassion
£15.22
Penguin Books Ltd The Most Venerable Book (Shang Shu)
A wonderfully enjoyable storehouse of ancient Chinese history and legends, which also has an important role in understanding 21st-century China'And remember: Heaven's blessing will cease forever if there's despair and poverty in your lands'The Most Venerable Book (also known as The Book of History) is one of the Five Classics, a key work of Chinese literature which preserves some of the most ancient and dramatic chronicles of the history, both real and mythological, of the Chinese state. For many centuries it was a central work for anyone wishing to work for the Imperial administration, preserving as it does a fascinating mixture of key Confucian concepts as well as page after page of heroes, benevolent rulers, sagacious ministers, and struggles against flood, corruption and vicious, despotic rulers. The First Emperor tried in 213 BC to have all copies of the book destroyed because of its subversive implication that 'the Mandate of Heaven' could be withdrawn from rulers who failed their people. For similar reasons it was also banned by Chairman Mao. Extraordinarily, the values of The Most Venerable Book have been revived by the Chinese government of the 2010s.
£10.99