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    • The Prophet

      د.إ30.00

      A worldwide best-seller since its date of original publication in 1923, The Prophet has become a token of free thought and intellectual betterment across many generations of readers. This unique and timeless classic is composed of 28 prose poetry fables, each examining a different facet of the human experience. A treasure worth holding close, The Prophet is an unforgettable book of poems worth savoring.

    • JoJo & Gran Gran: See the Moon

      د.إ38.00

      JoJo and Gran Gran are having a sleepover! JoJo notices that the moon is a funny shape, so Gran Gran explains why. Featuring favourite characters from the hit […]

    • The Tiger Who Came to Tea

      Original price was: د.إ65.00.Current price is: د.إ40.00.

      The classic picture book story of Sophie and her extraordinary teatime guest has been loved by millions of children since it was first published more than fifty years […]

    • he Magic Pet Shop: Elepop Paperback

      Original price was: د.إ60.00.Current price is: د.إ44.99.

      Meet Elepop, the magical baby elephant who blows rainbow bubbles from her trunk! Her new owner, Princess Ivy, is the BIGGEST overthinker. So when Ivy and Elepop are […]

    • Tilly Plants a Tree Paperback

      Original price was: د.إ60.00.Current price is: د.إ45.00.

      Discover the joy of growing things in this non-fiction nature picture book series from Axel Scheffler and the National Trust Tilly has been learning all about trees and […]

    • Sam Plants a Sunflower Paperback

      Original price was: د.إ65.00.Current price is: د.إ45.00.

      Discover the joy of growing things in this non-fiction nature picture book series from Axel Scheffler and the National Trust Sam loves big, yellow sunflowers, so when his […]

    • Civil War Spies

      د.إ45.00

      CIVIL WAR SPIES BEHIND ENEMY LINES – They never led armies into battle. They worked in the shadows. Now you can meet these and other real-life spies on both sides of the American Civil War: The private detective who foiled an assassination plot on Abraham Lincoln; The brave woman who operated a major Union spy ring – in the capital of the Confederacy; The young southern scout who made the ultimate sacrifice… You will never forget their incredible true stories!

    • Pugicorn and Hugicorn Paperback

      Original price was: د.إ65.00.Current price is: د.إ45.99.

      It’s summer in Twinkleton-Under-Beanstalk, and Princess Ava and her magical pet Pugicorn are helping out at Mrs Paws’ Pupicorn Training School!The excitable pups must discover their rainbow powers in order to graduate at the end of the week. But one little pupicorn is more interested in hugs and cuddles than listening and learning…

    • Not Here to Be Liked

      د.إ48.00

      “Will leave a mark on your heart.” Stephanie Garber, author of the Caraval series “A smart romance with heart and guts and all the intoxicating feelings in between.” […]

    • The Dante Club

      د.إ50.00

      NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • Before The Dante Chamber, there was The Dante Club: “an ingenious thriller that . . . brings Dante Alighieri’s Inferno to vivid, even unsettling life.”―The Boston Globe

    • A Traveller’s Year

      د.إ50.00

      A Traveller’s Year is an anthology of extracts from diaries, journals and letters, two or three for each day of the year, on the subject of travel and exploration. The extracts convey men and women’s experiences of travel and discovery from the sixteenth to the early twenty-first centuries, with an emphasis on the period 1750–1950, the classic era of both European exploration and diary-writing. The authors of the pieces range from famous explorers such as Captains Cook and Scott to modern travel writers journeying through the contemporary world, from people who pushed back the boundaries of geographical knowledge to people who wrote about what they did on their summer holidays.

      The book includes an introduction, explanatory notes and mini-biographies of all the contributors.

    • Murder in My Backyard

      د.إ55.00

      Murder in My Backyard is the second mystery novel in the Inspector Ramsay series by Ann Cleeves, author of the Shetland and Vera Stanhope crime series.

      No one in Heppleburn has a bad word to say about Alice Parry . . . but her

    • The Losers Club

      د.إ55.00

      The beloved New York Times bestselling author of the modern classic Frindle celebrates books and the joy of reading with a new school story to love!

      Sixth grader Alec can’t put a good book down.

      So when Principal Vance lays down the law–pay attention in class, or else–Alec takes action. He can’t lose all his reading time, so he starts a club. A club he intends to be the only member of. After all, reading isn’t a team sport, and no one would want to join something called the Losers Club, right? But as more and more kids find their way to Alec’s club–including his ex-friend turned bully and the girl Alec is maybe starting to like–Alec notices something. Real life might be messier than his favorite books, but it’s just as interesting.

    • Good Bad Girl:

      د.إ55.00

      ‘An author you need to check out’ – Harlan Coben, author of I Will Find You

      ‘One of the best psychological thriller writers’ – The Sun

    • Stop Them Dead

      د.إ55.00

      ‘Ruthlessly efficient, entertainment. Pedigree fun’ – The Times

      Discover the darkness that lurks around every corner in the latest instalment of the award-winning Grace series, now a major ITV series.

      A ruthle

    • Serial Killer Trivia

      د.إ60.00

      Discover chilling and mind-blowing facts in this ultimate collection of serial killer trivia for true crime fanatics.This bloody and completely true trivia collection will horrify and intrigue readers, with answers to questions like “What was John Wayne Gacy’s last meal?”, “Which serial killer was captured because of a bloody footprint left on his victim?”, “Who was the FBI agent credited with coining the term ‘serial killer’?” and “How was one mass murderer able to get away with selling his victim’s skeletons to medical students?”Perfect for any murderino, true crime junkie or connoisseur of macabre tales, this fact-packed book quizzes readers on their true crime knowledge and offers fascinating stories of well-known murderers as well as lesser-known, but just as nefarious, killers. You’ll be surprised at how many fascinating tidbits you’ll learn about the world’s most cold-blooded and dangerous people.

    • The Wonderful Wizard of Oz

      د.إ60.00

      Enjoy Frank L. Baum’s The Wonderful Wizard of Oz as you’ve never seen it before! Now in paperback, Olimpia Zagnoli’s modern, illustrative interpretation of this classic tale follows Dorothy on her famous journey to Oz. The quirky, colorful images breathe new life into this classic novel, making it a collectible for Oz lovers everywhere.

    • The Devils of Cardona

      د.إ60.00

      “A thrilling quest for justice… [A] novel that is as exciting as it is enlightening from its first pages to its satisfying end.” ―The New York Times Book Review

      “A page-turner in the proper sense… Mr. Carr has written a gripping

    • Destination Wedding

      د.إ60.00
      JFK Airport: Their Flight Is Delayed Due to Technical Reasons and Everyone Is Secretly Wishing Airlines Didn’t Announce That and Make All the Passengers Nervous

      “I cannot believe my mother is here with her boyfriend and I’m here alone,” Tina Das said to her best friend, Marianne Laing, in the British Airways business-­class lounge at JFK. Tina, in the hope that she would be able to sleep through the first leg of the flight to Heathrow, had rimless glasses on instead of her usual contacts. She never needed much makeup thanks to her thick eyebrows, which had been a liability when she was younger but were very fashionable now and gave her face all the drama it needed. She was wearing black North Face sweatpants that cinched at the ankle, a gray, long-­sleeved T-­shirt, and black-­and-­white Adidas sneakers. It was hot in the lounge so her Guess fur vest was hanging off the chair behind her.

      A bowl full of nuts was on the table in between them. Tina picked up a handful while staring out of the window and tossed them all into her mouth and started chewing before she realized she had eaten several whole pistachios, with shells. The hard, cracked pieces pierced her mouth and she spat them out. A grumpy old man appeared out of nowhere with a broom and shook his head at her as he swept up the pistachio shells.

      “I didn’t know they had shells,” Tina said apologetically.

      The man said nothing but kept looking at her as he swept, his broom knocking her foot aside.

      “It isn’t my fault,” Tina said to him again but he didn’t respond.

      The man walked away and Tina turned to Marianne and said, “At the price of these tickets, the nuts really shouldn’t have shells.”

      Marianne was applying lip balm and laughing. She was so good at putting on makeup that it was hard to say whether or not she had any on, but the smattering of brown freckles across her nose was visible and, despite the fact that it was November, still had a velvety brownness they usually acquired over the summer because she had recently been to San Francisco for Tom’s college roommate’s wedding. Marianne was wearing similar sweatpants and a plain black long-­sleeved T-­shirt, and a red shawl was draped over the back of her chair.

      “We’re like world-­weary businesswomen who travel internationally twice a month and are just so over it,” Marianne said. “I feel like I should be impatiently clacking away on a laptop but I have no work to do this week and I bet Tom’s fast asleep.”

      Marianne looked down at her phone and the itinerary that had been sent by the wedding planner.

      “It feels like we’re going to have a lot of free time,” Marianne said. “There aren’t that many events listed here. I thought Indian weddings had days and days of events.”

      “I think these days most people just pick and choose what parts they want to do. Shefali wanted to walk down the aisle in a white dress but my aunt put her foot down and said she could pick and choose what she wanted but she couldn’t change religions,” Tina said. “We’ll have time to explore the city, though.”

      Marianne nodded as she cracked open a pistachio and ate it and played with the shells in one hand.

      Their flight was two hours late so they were on glass number three of champagne and plate number two of mini sandwiches. Even on Tina’s decent income, these business-­class tickets were prohibitively expensive. She had managed to book an economy flight using her own money and then used her miles to upgrade herself. Tina was the vice president of development for Pixl, a streaming network for which she sought video content, a term she hated but a job that paid her enough to live alone in a two-­bedroom apartment overlooking McCarren Park in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Her work was frustrating—­ideas forever on the brink of becoming television shows but nothing concrete yet, nothing complete, nothing finished. Her enthusiasm for projects always waned as more people got involved and ideas gradually got altered and then shut down altogether.

      At Pixl, Tina was in charge of finding content from India so she had been back a few times over the past five years. But it was always to either Delhi or Bombay, where she stayed at a Taj Hotel, took a car and driver everywhere, and partied with producers from all over in rooftop bars and seaside clubs that could have been anywhere in the world. And then she returned to New York City without having seen much of actual India.

      Tina Das was conceived in India but born, nine months later, in Columbus, Ohio. Three months later, like her father, she held a coveted American passport. Her mother stubbornly held on to her Indian passport and Green Card. For the first eight years of her life, her parents took her to India every summer and they stayed with her aunt and uncle, the parents of Shefali, the bride, in New Delhi. In the eighth summer, her father got malaria and spent two weeks in Holy Family Hospital and decided, on the flight back, that he didn’t want to return to India next year.

      “Let’s go to London next summer instead,” Tina remembered him saying on the flight back that year. He had lost weight and his belt was looped tightly around, his pants bunching at the waist. Back in Ohio, he bought new pants, without pleats, Tina had noticed, and the following summer they went to London, then they went to Ubud, then Stockholm, then Buenos Aires, then Tokyo, and even Colombo the year before Tina left for Yale, but never back to India. Her mother went once when her mother died in Calcutta, but that was all before the divorce.

      Last year, Tina had come tantalizingly close to green lighting a reality show that would have featured the best musical talent from around Asia and put them together with a Bollywood music producer to create a band. She had found a K-­pop singer from Seoul, a dancer from Ho Chi Minh City, two beatboxing brothers from Sri Lanka, a drummer from Dharavi, the Bombay slum, and a female spoken-­word artist from Lahore, but the project fizzled, and Tina had gone home frustrated and depressed and worried about her career. She was still upset that it hadn’t moved forward and now all except Sid, the drummer, were committed to other projects. The K-­pop singer had joined a reality television show in Singapore as a judge, the two beatboxing brothers had moved to Berlin, the spoken word artist was seven months pregnant and focusing on fashion design, and the dancer from Vietnam was performing with a cruise line in Halong Bay.

      Tina felt bad about having let Sid down. Sid, with his easy confidence and priceless bright smile. Sid, who was tall and slim and had a rough beard and laughed easily during the audition and wore his pants baggy and who, back in New York, Tina thought about often—­what his life was like in India, who his friends were, who his family was. He was immensely attractive—­his confidence, his swagger, his inaccessibility—­and he often crossed her mind. After his audition, he had lifted his shirt to wipe the sweat off his face and revealed a perfect set of abs and dark hair trailing into his boxers. Tina had shaken her head, laughed, and called a lunch break.

      He had stayed in touch with her and checked in often to see if the show might get back on track and she never had any good news to give him. He had started working part-­time as a personal trainer to make money while working on his music. But Tina knew that personal training was just enough money to survive, whereas the show would have allowed him to move his mother out of their slum and into a concrete apartment, and she felt awful that she had let him down. Honestly, he’d said “slum,” but she wasn’t quite sure what he’d meant. Was it one room in a slum? Was a slum by definition a room? A shack? She had marveled at the sheer size of the blue-­tarp-­covered expanses of Dharavi she had flown over while landing in Bombay, but she couldn’t actually visualize the homes within it. She didn’t know how to ask and she didn’t want to show up at his doorstep with a camera, even though that would obviously make for good television. Maybe this was why she was struggling to get her projects off the ground—­reality television often felt too invasive for her.

      When she told Sid she was going to be in Delhi for a week, he had immediately said he would come from Bombay to see her “just to touch base.” Tina was dreading seeing him on this trip, dreading looking into his handsome, eager eyes and telling him that there was still no show and no other talent. It was easy to feed Sid fake hope over email but she knew she would have to tell him the truth this week. She would put him in touch with everyone she knew in Bombay in case they wanted to hire a personal trainer, she decided; it was the least she could do for him.

      Since she was meeting Sid, Tina could have tried to expense this trip as well but her boss, Rachel Sanders, knew the bride and knew Tina would not be doing any work. But maybe it was time to talk to Rachel about booking her business class for all her future work trips. Sheryl Sandberg said she should lean in, after all. Not that Tina had read the book but really the title told her everything she needed to know. Was Sheryl Sandberg still an appropriate role model or was that over now, Tina wondered. It was hard to keep up sometimes.

    • JOAN DIDION Where I Was from

      د.إ65.00

      From the bestselling, award-winning author of The Year of Magical Thinking and Notes to John: In this “arresting amalgam of memoir and historical timeline” (The Baltimore Sun), Didion―a native Californian―reassesses parts of h

    • Billy Sure Kid Entrepreneur and the No-Trouble Bubble

      د.إ65.00

      Billy Sure, twelve-year-old inventor and CEO of Sure Things, Inc., hosts a competition to find the Next Big Thing in the fifth book of a hilarious middle grade series!

      Everyone is talking about Billy Sure, the twelve-year-old genius and

    • The Football Encyclopedia

      د.إ70.00

      The Kingfisher Football Encyclopedia has a brand-new look to tie in with the 2022 FIFA World Cup Qatar, which promises to be the biggest football tournament in history. What’s […]

    • The New Silk Road: How a Rising Arab World is Turning Away from the West and Rediscovering China

      د.إ70.00

      The rise of the Arab world and China are part of the same story, once trading partners via the Silk Road. It isn’t a coincidence that Arab traders have returned to China at the same time that China is fast regaining its share of the global economy. This is a breakthrough account of how China is spurring growth in the Arab world.

    • Brixton Hill

      د.إ70.00

      Brixton Hill shares the confident sheen of its predecessors and offers [Moggach’s] most accomplished plot yet . . . And, like all the best storytellers, Moggach knows how to choreograph an ending’ – the Observer

      As Rob reaches the end of a seven year stretch inside, he winds up in an open prison in Brixton. Each morning, he exits the prison gates and begins the short walk to a local charity shop, where he spends the day in the backroom sorting through other people’s discarded belongings. All he needs to do is keep his nose out of trouble and in just a few months’ time, he’ll be out for good.

    • Things My Children Think I’m Wrong About

      د.إ70.00

      ‘Memorable, musical, witty and just brilliant in every way. Nic is hands down the best new poet to emerge in the last 20 years.‘ – Sophie Hannah

      Perfect for sharing and demanding to be read aloud, this funny, pithy, highly relatable collection of small but perfectly formed poems provides the antidote to the manifold frustrations and absurdities of adult life. A verse companion to modern parenthood, it is the ideal gift for any mother or father whose children know they are wrong about everything.

    • The Book of Two Ways

      د.إ75.00
      Prologue My calendar is full of dead people.&160; When my phone alarm chimes, I fish it out from the pocket of my cargo pants. I’ve forgotten, with the time change, to turn off the reminder. I’m still groggy with sleep, but I open the date and read the names: Iris Vale. Eun Ae Kim. Alan Rosenfeldt. Marlon Jensen .&160; I close my eyes, and do what I do every day at this moment: I remember them.&160; Iris, who had died tiny and birdlike, had once driven a getaway car for a man she loved who’d robbed a bank. Eun Ae, who had been a doctor in Korea, but couldn’t practice in the United States. Alan had proudly showed me the urn he bought for his cremated remains and then joked, I haven’t tried it on yet . Marlon had changed out all the toilets in his house and put in new flooring and cleaned the gutters; he bought graduation gifts for his two children and hid them away. He took his twelve-year-old daughter to a hotel ballroom and waltzed with her while I filmed it on his phone, so that the day she got married there would be video of her dancing with her father.&160; At one point, they were my clients. Now, they’re my stories to keep.&160; Everyone in my row is asleep. I slip my phone back into my pocket and carefully crawl over the woman to my right without disturbing her—air traveler’s yoga—to make my way to the bathroom in the rear of the plane. There I blow my nose and look in the mirror. I’m at the age where that’s a surprise, where I still think I’m going to see a younger woman rather than the one who blinks back&160;at me. Lines fan from the corners of my eyes, like the creases of a familiar map. If I untangle the braid that lies over my left shoulder, these terrible fluorescent lights would pick up those first gray strands in my hair. I’m wearing baggy pants with an elastic waist, like every other sensible nearly-forty woman who knows she’s going to be on a plane for a long-haul flight. I grab a handful of tissues and open the door, intent on heading back to my seat, but the little galley area is packed with flight attendants. They are knotted together like a frown.&160; They stop talking when I appear. “Ma’am,” one of them says, “could you please take your seat?”&160;It strikes me that their job isn’t really very different from mine. If you’re on a plane, you’re not where you started, and you’re not where you’re going. You’re caught in between. A flight attendant is the guide who helps you navigate that passage smoothly. As a death doula, I do the same thing, but the journey is from life to death, and at the end, you don’t disembark with two hundred other travelers. You go alone.&160;I climb back over the sleeping woman in the aisle seat and buckle my seatbelt just as the overhead lights blaze and the cabin comes alive.&160;“Ladies and gentlemen,” a voice announces, “we have just been informed by the captain that we’re going to have a planned emergency. Please listen to the flight attendants and follow their directions.”&160;I am frozen. Planned emergency . The oxymoron sticks in my mind.&160;There is a quick rush of sound—shock rolls through the cabin—but no screams, no loud cries. Even the baby behind me, who shrieked for the first two hours of the flight, is silent. “We’re crashing,” the woman on the aisle whispers. “Oh my God, we’re crashing.”She must be wrong; there hasn’t even been turbulence. Everything has been normal. But then the flight attendants station themselves in the aisles, performing a strange, staccato ballet of safety movements as instructions are read over the speakers. Fasten your&160; seatbelts. When you hear the word brace, assume the brace position. After the plane comes to a complete stop you’ll hear Release your seatbelts . Get out. Leave everything behind. Leave everything behind.&160; For someone who makes a living through death, I haven’t given a lot of thought to my own.&160;I have heard that when you are about to die, your life flashes before your eyes.&160;But I do not picture my husband, Brian, his sweater streaked with inevitable chalk dust from the old-school blackboards in his physics lab. Or Meret, as a little girl, asking me to check for monsters under the bed. I do not envision my mother, not like she was at the end or before that, when Kieran and I were young.&160;Instead, I see him.&160; As clearly as if it were yesterday, I imagine Wyatt in the middle of the Egyptian desert, the sun beating down on his hat, his neck ringed with dirt from the constant wind, his teeth a flash of lightning. A man who hasn’t been part of my life for fifteen years. A place I left behind.&160;A dissertation I never finished.&160;Ancient Egyptians believed that to get to the afterlife, they had to be deemed innocent in the Judgment Hall. Their hearts were weighed against the feather of Ma’at, of truth.&160;I am not so sure my heart will pass.&160;The woman to my right is softly praying in Spanish. I fumble for my phone, thinking to turn it on, to send a message, even though I know there is no signal, but I can’t seem to open the button on my pants pocket. A hand catches mine and squeezes.I look down at our fists, squeezed so tight a secret couldn’t slip between our palms. Brace , the flight attendants yell. Brace!&160; As we fall out of the sky, I wonder who will remember me. Much later I would learn that when a plane crashes and the emergency personnel show up, the flight attendants tell them how many&160;souls were on board. Souls, not people. As if they know our bodies are only passing through for a little while.&160; I would learn that one of the fuel filters became clogged midflight. That the second filter-clogging light came on in the cockpit forty-five minutes out, and in spite of what the pilots tried, they could not clear it, and they realized they’d have to do a land evacuation. I would learn that the plane came in short of Raleigh-Durham, sticking down in the football field of a private school. As it hit the bleachers with a wing, the plane tipped, rolled, broke into pieces.&160;Much later I would learn of the family with the baby behind me, whose row of three seats separated from the floor and was thrown from the aircraft, killing them instantaneously. I would hear about the six others who had been crushed as the metal buckled; the flight attendant who never came out of her coma. I would read the names of the passengers in the last ten rows who hadn’t gotten out of the broken fuselage before it erupted in flame.&160;I would learn that I was one of thirty-six people who walked away from the crash.&160;When I step out of the examination room of the hospital we’ve been taken to, I’m dazed. A woman in a uniform is in the hallway, talking to a man with a bandaged arm. She is part of an emergency response team from the airline that has overseen medical checks by physicians, given us clean clothes and food, and flown in frantic family members.&160;“Ms. Edelstein?” she says, and I blink, until I realize she is talking to me.&160;A million years ago, I had been Dawn McDowell. I’d published under that name. But my passport and license read Edelstein. Like Brian’s.&160;In her hand she has a checklist of crash survivors.&160;She puts a tick next to my name. “Have you been seen by a doctor?”&160;“Not yet.” I glance back at the examination room.&160;“Okay. I’m sure you have some questions . . . ?”&160;That’s an understatement.&160; Why am I alive, when others aren’t? Why did I book this particular flight? What if I’d been detained checking in, and had missed it? What if I’d made any of a thousand other choices that would have led&160;me far away from this crash? At that, I think of Brian, and his theory of the multiverse. Somewhere, in a parallel timeline, there is another me at my own funeral. At the same time, I think—again, always—of Wyatt. I have to get out of here. I don’t realize I have said this out loud until the airline representative responds. “Once we get the doctor’s paperwork, you’re clear to leave. Is someone coming for you, or do you need us to make travel arrangements?”We, the lucky ones, have been told we can have a plane ticket anywhere we need to go—to our destination, back to where the flight originated, even somewhere else, if necessary. I have already called my husband. Brian offered to come get me, but I told him not to. I didn’t say why. I clear my throat. “I have to book a flight,” I say.“Absolutely.” The woman nods. “Where do you need to go?” Boston, I think. Home. But there’s something about the way she phrases the question: need, instead of want; and another destination rises like steam in my mind.I open my mouth, and I answer.
    • The Essential Bar Book

      د.إ80.00

      The Essential Bar Book is full of indispensable information about everything boozy that’s good to drink. This easy-to-navigate A-to-Z guide covers it all, from the tools of the trade to the history and mythology behind classic and modern drinks, and features 115 recipes for the world’s most important cocktails.

    • The Black Swan:

      د.إ80.00

      The most influential book of the past seventy-five years: a groundbreaking exploration of everything we know about what we don’t know, now with a new section called “On Robustness and Fragility.”

      A black swan is a highly improbable event with three principal characteristics: It is unpredictable; it carries a massive impact; and, after the fact, we concoct an explanation that makes it appear less random, and more predictable, than it was. The astonishing success of Google was a black swan; so was 9/11. For Nassim Nicholas Taleb, black swans underlie almost everything about our world, from the rise of religions to events in our own personal lives.

    • How We Grow and Reproduce

      د.إ80.00

      The Human Body in Focus concentrates on the different systems of the human body, explaining the physical process that allow us to live, eat, breathe, move, think and reproduce

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