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Gülseren Budayıcıoğlu (née Kavas; [1] born 1947) is a Turkish psychiatrist, writer and TV presenter.. Although she has written about many different subjects, in recent years she has become known for her novels which have been adapted to various TV series, including İstanbullu Gelin (2017–19), Doğduğun Ev Kaderindir (2019–21), Kırmızı Oda (2020–22), Masumlar Apartmanı (2020 ...
Beirut Nightmares (1976) is a novel written by Syrian author Ghada al-Samman.It was translated to several languages, including Russian (1987) and Polish (1984). [1] The novel covers cultural, societal, political, religious, and psychological aspects, in addition to fantasy and magical realism through hallucinations, involving symbolism as a way to explain these aspects.
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Yasmina desiring freedom in her love life, realises that the liveliness she desires within the oceans, skies, and trees, fades away when her boyfriend, Nemer, is used by his father as a partisan for the right-wing militia, the moment his father set a marriage for convenience with a daughter of a wealthy ally, changing Yasmina's views as a "free woman" from the "perspective of Beirut’s society".
God Bless You, Dr. Kevorkian, by Kurt Vonnegut, is a collection of short fictional interviews written by Vonnegut and first broadcast on WNYC. The title parodies that of Vonnegut's 1965 novel God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater. It was published in book form in 1999.
Aleida Guevara March [a] (born 24 November 1960) is a Cuban physician who is the eldest of four children born to Ernesto "Che" Guevara and his second wife, Aleida March. She is a doctor based at the William Soler Children's Hospital in Havana. She has also worked as a physician in Angola, Ecuador, and Nicaragua.
The novel opens with the main characters’, Khalil and his wife (Kifa), house getting bombed, after the murder of their daughter (Wedad) in the Lebanese Civil War. [3] The two characters and their sons run away to Switzerland after the Israeli colonization of the Lebanese lands and the civil war.
Michihiko Hachiya (蜂谷道彦, Hachiya Michihiko, 1903 in Okayama Prefecture - 1980) was a Japanese physician who survived the Hiroshima atomic bombing in August 1945. He kept a personal diary of his experience in the aftermath of the bombing which was later published as Hiroshima Diary in 1955.