Sunday, October 9, 2016

The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins





Rachel Verinder, a young English woman, inherits a large Indian diamond on her eighteenth birthday. It is a legacy from her uncle, a corrupt British army officer who served in India. The diamond is of great religious significance as well as being extremely valuable, and three Hindu priests have dedicated their lives to recovering it. The story incorporates elements of the legendary origins of the Hope Diamond (or perhaps the Orloff Diamond). Rachel’s eighteenth birthday is celebrated with a large party, at which the guests include her cousin Franklin Blake. She wears the Moonstone on her dress that evening for all to see, including some Indian jugglers who have called at the house. Later that night, the diamond is stolen from Rachel’s bedroom, and a period of turmoil, unhappiness, misunderstandings and ill-luck ensues. Told by a series of narratives from some of the main characters, the complex plot traces the subsequent efforts to explain the theft, identify the thief, trace the stone and recover it.

The book is available here

Monday, August 1, 2016

Five auto books to read for this month of August

From a tiny Swedish carmaker, Saab grew into one of the most recognized brands in the auto industry building truly inspired and captivating cars. Under GM umbrella, it entered into a slow but steady decline before going bankrupt in 2011. This book is about the carmaker and its evolution, its people and their ingenuity, its cars and their quirkiness, and its fans and their loyalty. It is about what had made this carmaker so special. The book can be found here


In less than a century, Jaguar grew from a tiny motorcycle sidecars manufacturer into one of of the leading luxury carmakers, surviving one World War, one oil crisis, and the Japanese invasion of the luxury segment. But that impressive growth and resiliency came at a price. Marketing replaced good engineering, branding won over product design, mass production and economies of scale took over craftmanship. Is the roaring Jaguar still alive? Will it be able to bounce again despite successive changes of owners? This book is a short account of the carmaker’s story, and the men behind it. The book can be found here.


For many years, Land Rover was synonymous with capable, good-value, and easy-to-maintain vehicles that served farmers and adventurers so well all over the world. But starting from the nineties, successive new owners stole the soul of the brand and made it into another luxury brand making opulent vehicles for "lifestyle" customers with a focus on marketing instead of products. Consequently the new models have lost their simplicity, good value, and reliability. They are now completely out of touch with their owners needs. Will Land Rover be able to recover what made it so original and thrive or will it join Rover, MG, and TVR in the list of extinct British automakers? The book can be found here



The Truth about Toyota and TPS explains how Toyota works and focuses on three areas: the production system and how it is built, the marketing of Toyota cars as being superior in quality and its ability to capitalize on this perception, and lastly the management of its workforce. However, behind the cast-iron reputation of the carmaker lays an obsolete organization struggling for survival in one of the auto industry most serious slumps. Will Toyota, the company that survived and succeeded through sixty years of competitive markets, be able to transform itself and prosper? Will it be able to reinvent the car of the 21st century and recover its supremacy? The book can be found here




In this book, Henry Ford, the founder of the Ford Motor Company, details how he got into business, the strategies that he used to become a wealthy and successful businessman, and what others can do by learning from the examples he has outlined. This book should be read by small business owners, business students and those interested in the history of the automobile. Henry Ford will take you through a journey of history, business and lessons to be learned from which he used to develop his financial empire. The book can be found here

Wednesday, January 20, 2016

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La civilisation des Arabes de Gustave Le Bon

"Au point de vue de la civilisation, bien peu de peuples ont dépassé les Arabes et l’on n’en citerait pas qui ait réalisé des progrès si grands dans un temps si court. Au point de vue religieux, ils ont fondé une des plus puissantes religions qui aient régné sur le monde, une de celles dont l’influence est la plus vivante encore. Au point de vue politique, ils ont créé un des plus gigantesques empires qu’ait connus l’histoire. Au point de vue intellectuel et moral ils ont civilisé l’Europe. Peu de races se sont élevées plus haut, mais peu de races sont descendues plus bas. Aucune ne présente d’exemple plus frappant de l’influence des facteurs qui président à la naissance des empires, à leur grandeur et à leur décadence."

Le livre est disponible ici 

Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Paradoxe sur le comédien de Denis Diderot


Paradoxe sur le comédien est un essai sur le théâtre rédigé sous forme de dialogue par Denis Diderot entre 1773 et 1777 et publié à titre posthume en 1830. Selon Diderot, qui s’oppose en cela à l’opinion générale de ses contemporains, l’acteur convaincant est celui qui est capable d’exprimer une émotion qu’il ne ressent pas. C’est le paradoxe : moins on sent, plus on fait sentir. Diderot expose deux sortes de jeux d’acteurs : (1) Jouer d’âme qui consiste à ressentir les émotions que l’on joue (2) Jouer d’intelligence qui repose sur le paraître et consiste à jouer sans ressentir. Ce paradoxe est le contraste entre l’expression du corps et l’absence d’émotion ressentie de la part de l’acteur, il joue sans éprouver. Il rit sans être gai, pleure sans être triste. L’acteur se sert de son corps comme d’un instrument. Le paradoxe du comédien met donc en évidence l’écart qui peut exister entre le corps et le psychisme (ce qui n’est pas somatique et relève de l’esprit et de l’intelligence).
Le livre est disponible ici

Biographie de l'auteur


Denis Diderot (1713 - 1784) est un écrivain, philosophe et encyclopédiste français des Lumières, à la fois romancier, dramaturge, conteur, essayiste, dialoguiste, critique d’art, critique littéraire, et traducteur.

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

La Grèce contemporaine de Edmond About

Ce livre, écrit en 1851, raconte les souvenirs du séjour en Grèce de l’Edmond About (1852-1854). Il décrit les Grecs comme un peuple de moines, de fonctionnaires et de brigands, qui met toute sa finesse à duper l’Europe en exploitant chez elle la religion de l’antique Hellade. Un livre plein  d’ironie et de satire, qui reste toujours d’actualité surtout avec la crise de la dette dans ce pays.

Auteur: Edmond François Valentin About, né le 14 février 1828 à Dieuze et mort le 16 janvier 1885 à Paris, est un écrivain, journaliste et critique d’art français, membre de l’Académie française.



Le livre est disponible ici

Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Dix livres incroyables de Prodinnova



Have you ever wondered why you wouldn’t feel the burn if your arm could extend and reach the Sun? Why maternity clinics would be needed on future interplanetary vessels? Why extraterrestrials, if they exist, would be very different from how they are depicted in science fiction movies? Why these extraterrestrials may have originated from our Earth? This book tries to answer these questions and many others using a scientific approach in a witty style.




First published in 1915, a best-seller in the 1920s and long out of print, Interplanetary Travel is a short excursion into space physics. Using conundrums, entertaining examples, and unexpected comparisons, Yakov Perelman dispelled some of the public prejudice that prevailed against celestial mechanics and physics of being too abstract and unable to nourish the mind. He explored, in a witty style, the opportunity of successfully completing the flights imagined in some novelists’ wildest fantasies. He checked and corrected their boldest ideas. Even today, this book remains a reference for science students around the world.



This book is a collection of several physics and mathematics experiments. Many of them are simple pastimes meant for the recreation of young and old, assembled round the family table. Others, on the contrary, being of a really scientific character, are designed to introduce the reader to the study of Physics and mathematics. Regardless of their nature, all the experiments can be carried out without any special apparatus and are consequently without the least expense. Instruments used include kitchen utensils, corks, matches, glasses, and plates. The book is very useful for the young physicist who wishes to entertain his friends. It will show him not only how to do things by which he can render himself more entertaining than the best talker or the best joker in the company, but will reveal to him a hundred things by which he can amuse and astonish everybody he knows. The book is equally useful for the teacher who wishes to create in his students an interest in science. It will enable him to illustrate scientific principles, and render his instructions as interesting as an Arabian tale.



Published in 1913, a best-seller in the 1930s and long out of print, Physics for Entertainment was translated from Russian into many languages and influenced science students around the world. Among them was Grigori Yakovlevich Perelman, the Russian mathematician (unrelated to the author), who solved the Poincaré conjecture, and who was awarded and rejected the Fields Medal. Grigori’s father, an electrical engineer, gave him Physics for Entertainment to encourage his son’s interest in mathematics. In the foreword, the book’s author describes the contents as “conundrums, brain-teasers, entertaining anecdotes, and unexpected comparisons,” adding, “I have quoted extensively from Jules Verne, H. G. Wells, Mark Twain and other writers, because, besides providing entertainment, the fantastic experiments these writers describe may well serve as instructive illustrations at physics classes.” The book’s topics included how to jump from a moving car, and why, “according to the law of buoyancy, we would never drown in the Dead Sea.” Ideas from this book are still used by science teachers today.




You don’t know that much about mathematics and physics. You don’t understand everything about rockets, satellites, or interplanetary flights. But you dream of flying to other planets and want to know everything needed to do it. You want to understand the principles of rockets and spaceships. You want to know why extraterrestrial space stations are needed and why studying other planets helps us understand our Earth. This book simply and clearly answers these questions and much more.




This is another book is Yakov Perelman's successful series of science books. Presented in an easy form, well within the reach of most astronomy amateurs, it is useful introduction to this science. Through five key chapters (the Earth, the Moon, planets, stars, and gravitation), the author analyses the most important aspects of modern astronomy.




The purpose of the book is to initiate the reader into the basic facts of astronomy. Ordinary facts with which you may be acquainted are couched here in unexpected paradoxes, or slanted from an odd and unexpected angle. The theme is, as far as possible, free from “terminology” and technical concepts that so often make the reader shy of books on astronomy. The book contains chapters relating to the Earth, the Moon and other planets. The author has concentrated on materials not usually discussed in works of this nature. This book is written in a witty style and remains a reference for astronomy students around the world.




This book contains hundreds of colorful stories from the field of physics. Despite their entertaining appearance, they address several important and serious notions in this field. This book does not seek to replace school textbooks. Its purpose is to entice the reader to consciously observe physical phenomena, including the simplest ones which we have learned to ignore in our everyday life. It allows the reader to amass evidence about physical laws, and engage in a systematic study of physics.





You don’t know that much about physics. You don’t understand everything about gravity, magnetism, electricity or light, but you are curious and want to know more about these fields. This book helps you reaching this objective using many instructive and entertaining experiments. These are simple enough to be carried out using everyday objects at home or around it. They will fascinate not only teenagers but also adults who want to understand some of nature’s fundamental laws and use them in their daily lives.





Fun with Maths and Physics details a large number of intriguing physics experiments, entertaining mathematics problems, and amazing optical illusions. The book’s main objective is to arouse the reader’s scientific imagination, teach him to think in a scientific manner, and create in his mind a variety of associations between physical knowledge and a large number of real daily life observations. Immensely instructive and entertaining, it has been one of the best sellers in Russia during the first part of last century.