Patricia Highsmith, Paul Ingendaay (Hg.)
Hans Werner Kettenbach
Viktorija Tokarjewa
Joey Goebel
Patricia Highsmith, Paul Ingendaay (Hg.)
Patricia Highsmith, Paul Ingendaay (Hg.)
Patricia Highsmith, Paul Ingendaay (Hg.)
Magdalen Nabb
Anthony McCarten
Donna Leon
Patricia Highsmith, Paul Ingendaay (Hg.)
Tomi Ungerer
Magdalen Nabb
Ute Krause, Ute Krause (Ill.)
Magdalen Nabb
Magdalen Nabb
Magdalen Nabb
Magdalen Nabb
Magdalen Nabb
Magdalen Nabb
Tomi Ungerer
Patricia Highsmith, Paul Ingendaay (Hg.)
Patricia Highsmith, Paul Ingendaay (Hg.)
Barbara Hazen, Tomi Ungerer, Tomi Ungerer (Ill.)
Patricia Highsmith, Paul Ingendaay (Hg.)
Patricia Highsmith, Paul Ingendaay (Hg.)
Patricia Highsmith, Paul Ingendaay (Hg.)
Patricia Highsmith, Paul Ingendaay (Hg.)
Friedrich Dürrenmatt
Patricia Highsmith, Paul Ingendaay (Hg.)
Patricia Highsmith, Paul Ingendaay (Hg.)
Donna Leon
Tomi Ungerer
Joey Goebel
Walter Muschg
Tomi Ungerer, Tomi Ungerer (Ill.)
Rolf Dobelli
John Vermeulen
Magdalen Nabb
He is known as the ›prince of modern geography‹. His discovery of the ›Mercator projection‹ allowed the earth’s spherical form to be translated on to a two-dimensional map for the first time. The maps he made changed the world and made the oceans safer to navigate. We are speaking of Gerhard Mercator (1512 - 1594), humanist, scholar and cosmographer, whose life spanned one of the most interesting centuries in history, an era of breakthrough and change, of voyages of discovery – and of the merciless Inquisition, to which Mercator himself was to fall victim. Arrested for his Lutheran beliefs, he was incarcerated for several months; he owed his eventual release to influential benefactors at the court of Charles V. He subsequently left his Dutch home of Löwen and sought refuge with his family in the liberal city of Duisburg, where he was to develop his most significant ideas. John Vermeulen demonstrates his expert ability to intertwine fact and fiction. His aim is not to write a detached biography, but to allow the reader to experience the dramatic life of a man forced to battle against intrigue and ignorance, of a husband whose energy was drained by a difficult marriage, of a father who raised six children of whom only one would survive, of a scholar who discovered his heart’s true desire late in life – and was only able to enjoy the fruits of his labours at a ripe old age.