Gaby Naher

Gaby Naher is an Australian writer and ex-publicist. Her previous non-fiction work, The Truth About My Fathers, gained excellent reviews in Australia and was published there by Vintage. She is also a Tibet activist and director of Australia's ... [Read More]
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G Naher

Gaby Naher is an Australian writer and ex-publicist. Her previous non-fiction work, The Truth About My Fathers, gained excellent reviews in Australia and was published there by Vintage. She is also a Tibet activist and director of Australia's ... [Read More]
View Titles >

Juan Nakamori

Juan Nakamori lives in Japan. She writes for the top women's magazines there and has also published several books, including Angel Messages, in 1994, and then the second and third volumes in this series in 1996 and 1997 respectively. [Read More]
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J Nakamori

Juan Nakamori lives in Japan. She writes for the top women's magazines there and has also published several books, including Angel Messages, in 1994, and then the second and third volumes in this series in 1996 and 1997 respectively. [Read More]
View Titles >

Steve Nobel

Steve Nobel is Director of Alternatives at St James's Church, Piccadilly, which has long been one of the foremost venues in this country for lectures from eminent speakers from around the world on mind, body, spirit subjects. Steve has studied a ... [Read More]
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Gunilla Norris

Gunilla Norris is a well-known writer, meditation teacher and psychotherapist in private practice. She is the author of the spiritual classics Being Home and Becoming Bread, and has also written 11 children's books and a collection of poems. She ... [Read More]
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Feature of the Month

Mark Tully India


India
by Mark Tully

Have India's economic changes over the last twenty had any impact on the poor20and marginalised? Can India’s democracy contain the mounting resentment of those left out of the new economic order? Can a high growth rate be sustained with India’s notoriously corrupt and inefficient governance? Can the development of its creaking infrastructure be speeded up? How is India going to feed itself unless agriculture is reformed?

This timely book will answer these questions through interviews with industrialists and cricketers, God men and farmers, plutocrats and former untouchables. Full of fascinating stories of real people at a time of great change, it will be of interest to economists, business people, diplomats, politicians, as well as to those who love to travel and who take an interest in the rapid growth of one of the world’s largest countries, and what this means to us in the West.


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