Suche einschränken:
Zur Kasse

92 Ergebnisse - Zeige 81 von 92.

Gone With the Wind

Mitchell, Margaret
Gone With the Wind
A monumental classic considered by many to be not only the greatest love story ever written, but also the greatest Civil War saga.

CHF 36.50

The Fireless Cook Book

Mitchell, Margaret J.
The Fireless Cook Book
Does the idea appeal to you of putting your dinner on to cook and then going visiting, or to the theatre, or sitting down to read, write, or sew, with no further thought for your food until it is time to serve it? It sounds like a fairy tale to say that you can bring food to the boiling point, put it into a box of hay, and leave it for a few hours, returning to find it cooked, and often better cooked than in any other way! Yet it is true. Norw...

CHF 43.50

Via col vento

Mitchell, Margaret / Piceni, E. / Salvatore, A.
Via col vento
Rossella O'Hara è la viziata e capricciosa ereditiera della grande piantagione di Tara, in Georgia. Ma l'illusione di una vita facile e agiata si infrangerà in brevissimo tempo, quando i venti della guerra civile cominceranno a spirare sul sud degli Stati Uniti, spazzando via in pochi anni la società schiavista. Il più grande e famoso romanzo popolare americano narra così, in un colossale e vivissimo affresco storico, le vicende di una donna i...

CHF 26.00

Heavenly Trumpet

Mitchell, Margaret M.
Heavenly Trumpet
Arguing that all Pauline interpretation depends significantly on the ways in which readers formulate their own images of the apostle, Margaret M. Mitchell posits that John Chrysostom, the most prolific interpreter of the Pauline epistles in the early church, exemplifies this phenomenon. Mitchell brings together Chrysostom's copious portraits of Paul--of his body, his soul, and his life circumstances--and for the first time analyzes them as com...

CHF 86.00

Paul and the Rhetoric of Reconciliation

Mitchell, Margaret M.
Paul and the Rhetoric of Reconciliation
This work casts new light on the genre, function, and composition of Paul's first letter to the Corinthians. Margaret Mitchell thoroughly documents her argument that First Corinthians was a single letter, not a combination of fragments, whose aim was to persuade the Corinthian Christian community to become unified.

CHF 67.00