The Caruana Family Chronicles

The Caruana Family Chronicles
Author: Michael Caruana
Publisher: iUniverse
Total Pages: 110
Release: 2003-05-29
Genre: Art
ISBN: 0595280102

This book is a story in brief of our immediate family as we lived in Malta and our journey to America. It attempts to capture some of the key highlights of our lives in Malta and the transition to living in America. It would be of most interest to the members or our immediate family and resulting children, grandchildren et al.

A Family Guide to Narnia

A Family Guide to Narnia
Author: Christin Ditchfield
Publisher: Crossway
Total Pages: 134
Release: 2003-07-07
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1433516470

Do you read The Chronicles of Narnia sensing that the stories are full of biblical parallels, even if you're not always sure what they are or where to find them? This user-friendly companion to The Chronicles of Narnia is written for C. S. Lewis readers like you who want to discover the books' biblical and Christian roots. Read it, and you'll find that this chapter-by-chapter, book-by-book examination of The Chronicles will widen your spiritual vision.

Gibraltar, Identity and Empire

Gibraltar, Identity and Empire
Author: E.G. Archer
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 241
Release: 2013-01-11
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1136005501

The principal argument in Gibraltar and Empire is that Gibraltarians constitute a separate and distinctive people, notwithstanding the political stance taken by the government of Spain. Various factors - environmental, ethnic, economic, political, religious, linguistic, educational and informal - are adduced to explain the emergence of a sense of community on the Rock and an attachment to the United Kingdom. A secondary argument is that the British empire has left its mark in Gibraltar in various forms - such as militarily - and for a number of reasons. Gilbraltar and Empire's exploration of the manifold reasons why the Gibraltarians have bucked the trend in the history of decolonization comes at a time when the issues in question have come to the fore in diplomatic and political areas.

A Death in Malta

A Death in Malta
Author: Paul Caruana Galizia
Publisher: Penguin
Total Pages: 305
Release: 2023-11-07
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 0593543750

“A chronicle of the sort of silencing-by-murder that we might have thought happens only in Vladimir Putin’s Russia. . . . [and] a son’s distraught but beautiful tribute to his journalist-mother. . . . Exquisite.” —Wall Street Journal A journalist’s spellbinding account of the shocking murder of his muckraking mother and a quest for justice that has reverberated far beyond their tiny homeland An archipelago off the southern coast of Italy, Malta is a picturesque gem eroded by a climate of corruption, polarization, inequality, and a virtual absence of civic spirit. In this unpromising soil, a fearless journalist took root. Daphne Caruana Galizia fashioned herself into the country’s lonely voice of conscience, her muckraking and editorializing sending shock waves that threatened to topple those in power and made her at once the island’s best-known figure and its most reviled. In 2017, a campaign of intimidation against her culminated in a car bombing that took her life. Daphne was also he devoted and inspiring mother to three sons, who with their father have carried on the quest for justice and transparency after her death. Spellbindingly narrated by the youngest of them, the award-winning journalist Paul Caruana Galizia, A Death in Malta is at once a study in heroism and the powerful story of a family’s crusade for accountability in a society built on lies, with reverberations far beyond their homeland.

Quill & Quire

Quill & Quire
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 574
Release: 2001
Genre: Book industries and trade
ISBN:

The Lara Family

The Lara Family
Author: Simon R. DOUBLEDAY
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 209
Release: 2009-06-30
Genre: History
ISBN: 0674034295

For much of the Middle Ages, the Lara family was among the most powerful aristocratic lineages in Spain. Proteges of the monarchy at the time of El Cid, their influence reached extraordinary heights during the struggle against the Moors. Hand-in-glove with successive kings, they gathered an impressive array of military and political positions across the Iberian Peninsula. But cooperation gave way to confrontation, as the family was pitted against the crown in a series of civil wars. This book, the first modern study of the Laras, explores the causes of change in the dynamics of power, and narrates the dramatic story of the events that overtook the family. The Laras' militant quest for territorial strength and the conflict with the monarchy led toward a fatal end, but anticipated a form of aristocratic power that long outlived the family. The noble elite would come to dominate Spanish society in the coming centuries, and the Lara family provides important lessons for students of the history of nobility, monarchy, and power in the medieval and early modern world.