Rahsia Cinta Ibu (Mom's Secret Love)


Book Description

Cut Hamizalia, a Grandaughter of The last King of Aceh decendent Teungku Panggiran Achmad, has decide to across the sea alone, and get her step aunt, that study in Penang Island to cure her mother, Cut Zamrina from depression after both kids death. A pretty young lady that split with her fiancee, Teuku Lendra Hakiem during the journey since Teuku heard about the conflict of Sabah 1963, must agreed with God's faith to settle down as normal people in Kampung Sungai Tapah, Ipoh Malaysia and grew up two step sons after her read a letter from juwita bin kusadi. Cut Hamizalia found life was hard as a normal people with step son that always against her, regardless how good she taking care of them. Her son always utilize Nadia to reach his dream living in England as rich boy. After waiting for 17 years, Cut Hamizalia was terrible shock meeting her fiancee ever again in her daughter's wedding, where her step aunt, Cut Zamalia has using critical situation, to pressure Teuku Lendra Hakiem stop look after Cut Hamizalia and marry her. Hamra marrying Lukman is a new momentum of reunion the tengku panggiran achmad's family, but Teuku Lendra Hakiem still keep his love and respect to Cut Hamizalia, therefore he always protect Hamra for Cut Zamalia's pressure. Hamra that having overweight body, even a very pretty look always suffer on bully by her mom's step aunt as well as all rich family of Teuku Lendra Hakiem, Hamra always thought marrying richest Petroleum business man is the most heaven on earth, therefore she marrying Teuku Lendra Hakiem, owner PT. Permina Oil in Jakart




Development of Modern Indonesian Poetry


Book Description

Indonesian poetry, like the country and also the language, is basically a product of this century. Only in the twentieth century have the people of this vast archipelago begun to achieve a unified cultural identity and national spirit; only since 1928 has the possibility, and by now the reality, of a common language been realized; and only since World War II have Indonesians achieved nationhood. Yet Indonesia has already produced a highly individual, lyric poetry that s in many ways unusual. Reflecting the diverse heritage of the Orient and the West—Moslem, Buddhist, Hindu, and Christian; Malay, Chinese, Dutch, and others—a poetic expression is developing that is accessible to, and meaningful for, both East and West. In this first major study of this poetic flowering, Burton Raffel traces its development, discusses the work of such major figures as Chairil Anwar, and points the paths the most recent poets are taking. This is illustrated with a wealth of examples—in translations mostly by the author, but also with samples of the original Indonesian to convey the flavor of the language—and by an extensive appendix of Indonesian literary criticism that indicates how the poets themselves view their role and their performance. The Development of Modern Indonesian Poetry provides the English-speaking public with a rare insight into the cultural development of the fifth most populous country in the world, and raises along the way some questions important for an understanding of the relationship between poetry and politics in nonaligned nations.







Young and Malay


Book Description




Stain


Book Description

Twelve people are invited to Carolyn’s home for a party that quickly takes a dark turn when she turns into a homicidal demon. Everyone is now in a desperate struggle for survival as they come to terms with the sins they committed against her.




The Bad Boy's Wife


Book Description

What happens when you marry the bad boy-the reckless, irresistible cowboy who steals your heart and whom you should have dumped after the affair? Cole Thompson, a gorgeous ne'er-do-well horse trainer, shocks everyone when he proposes to Hannah Baker, the daughter of a wealthy Southern family. When after a twenty-year marriage filled with infidelity and other secrets, Cole leaves her, it comes as a shock to no one but Hannah. Now, though, there are no longer just two of them to suffer the consequences: caught in the middle is Mattie, the child who was supposed to settle them down and make them better people. This is the story of a relationship and marriage told in reverse, from its fateful end to its magical beginnings. Can a husband, a wife and their ten-year-old pick up the pieces of their broken past and dare to expect something from the future? In the tradition of books like The Horse Whisperer and Cowboys Are my Weakness, Karen Shepard deals with issues of broken trust, and the damage we cause to the ones we love most.




Malaysian Cinema, Asian Film


Book Description

Annotation Elizabeth A. Kaye specializes in communications as part of her coaching and consulting practice. She has edited Requirements for Certification since the 2000-01 edition.




My Father’s Untold Story


Book Description

“I remember I adored my father in my youth and wanted to be like him when I grew up. Now I am eighty- five years going into eighty-six. I can’t say I am anything like him. When I was a child, life was different. Being one of the ten children made life more complex. I was the seventh child and the third daughter. So, I barely knew my father. He was always there in the house commanding respect. No one was given any especial attention. But everyone received care and love. In documenting his life, I had to rely on my memory of the things I absorbed form a distance. A word, a phrase, a comment, said during events.” Rosaly Puthucheary, teacher, writer, poet, mother, sister, daughter. “There is something cathartic about reading one’s own family in relation to historical events that define the psyche of a Nation, it simply gives greater context to our own existence.” Sanjay C Kuttan, writer, poet, son. “A riveting story of a young man with big dreams who arrives in Singapore from Kerala in the early 1900s.” Dr Anitha Devi Pillai, Senior Lecturer, National Institute of Education, Nanyang Technological University.




Indonesian Cinema


Book Description

Indonesia's quasi-military dictatorship has sought since 1965 to mould Indonesian society into a male-oriented, capitalist, Javanese-dominated national framework. Cinema and television are the most closely-controlled mass media in Indonesia, and films for mass consumption have played an important role in the government's vast socio-political engineering project.Krishna Sen describes the background and present-day Indonesian film industry and explores how the country's society and history are represented in its film culture. From a critique of four films, she concludes that Indonesian cinema privileges the military against the civilian, the middle class against the popular classes, and men against women. Backed by careful documentation from cinema literature, this is a radical, in-depth perspective on film - its implications, its vulnerability to manipulation and its artistic and propagandist value.