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  • PHOTO PETER PEREIRA/4SEE<br />
<br />
Philip Milton Roth an American novelist that has been writting award winning fiction since 1959 seen at his agents office in New York City.
    h_00008385.jpg
  • PHOTO PETER PEREIRA/4SEE<br />
<br />
Philip Milton Roth an American novelist that has been writting award winning fiction since 1959 seen at his agents office in New York City.
    h_00008378.jpg
  • PHOTO PETER PEREIRA/4SEE<br />
<br />
Philip Milton Roth an American novelist that has been writting award winning fiction since 1959 seen at his agents office in New York City.
    h_00008384.jpg
  • PHOTO PETER PEREIRA/4SEE<br />
<br />
Philip Milton Roth an American novelist that has been writting award winning fiction since 1959 seen at his agents office in New York City.
    h_00008383.jpg
  • PHOTO PETER PEREIRA/4SEE<br />
<br />
Philip Milton Roth an American novelist that has been writting award winning fiction since 1959 seen at his agents office in New York City.
    h_00008381.jpg
  • PHOTO PETER PEREIRA/4SEE<br />
<br />
Philip Milton Roth an American novelist that has been writting award winning fiction since 1959 seen at his agents office in New York City.
    h_00008382.jpg
  • PHOTO PETER PEREIRA/4SEE<br />
<br />
Philip Milton Roth an American novelist that has been writting award winning fiction since 1959 seen at his agents office in New York City.
    h_00008380.jpg
  • PHOTO PETER PEREIRA/4SEE<br />
<br />
Philip Milton Roth an American novelist that has been writting award winning fiction since 1959 seen at his agents office in New York City.
    h_00008379.jpg
  • A teacher conducts class outside her classroom at the Escuela Republica del Mexico school in Guaimaca, Honduras.  Over 94% of Honduran children are enrolled in school, yet only 40% actually complete their schooling.  Hounduras is considered the third poorest country in the Western Hemisphere (Haiti, Nicaragua). With over 50% of the population living below the poverty line and 28% unemployed, Hondurans frequently turn to illegal immigration as a solution to their desperate situation. The Department of Homeland Security has noted an 95% increase in illegal immigrants coming from Honduras between 2000 and 2009, the largest increase of any country.
    h_00012429.jpg
  • A younger student climbs the bars on the classroom window as class is being conducted inside at the Escuela Republica del Mexico.  Children ask questions in english class at a school in Guaimaca, Honduras.  Over 94% of Honduran children are enrolled in school, yet only 40% actually complete their schooling.  Hounduras is considered the third poorest country in the Western Hemisphere (Haiti, Nicaragua). With over 50% of the population living below the poverty line and 28% unemployed, Hondurans frequently turn to illegal immigration as a solution to their desperate situation. The Department of Homeland Security has noted an 95% increase in illegal immigrants coming from Honduras between 2000 and 2009, the largest increase of any country.
    h_00012428.jpg
  • Children leave schooll in Guaimaca, Honduras.  Over 94% of Honduran children are enrolled in school, yet only 40% actually complete their schooling.  Hounduras is considered the third poorest country in the Western Hemisphere (Haiti, Nicaragua). With over 50% of the population living below the poverty line and 28% unemployed, Hondurans frequently turn to illegal immigration as a solution to their desperate situation. The Department of Homeland Security has noted an 95% increase in illegal immigrants coming from Honduras between 2000 and 2009, the largest increase of any country.
    h_00012427.jpg
  • Tchicuteny?s family register book. In Angola?s Namibe desert, at Giraul, in the Namibe province, Tchikuteny, from the Mucubal tribe, is the leader of a big family, maybe the biggest family in the world.<br />
He is the chief leader, the manager and responsible for the entire village. <br />
In his village, Tchikuteny lives nowadays with most of his big family, his 33 wives, that were once 43, but 10 left the village, and most of their descendants.<br />
Tchikuteny maintains the registry of all the new-borns, totalizing 154 sons, and his grandsons, that are around 60. Nowadays, 4 new babies are on the way, and 3 great grand children were born recently.<br />
Huge harmony, love and respect transpire in the village atmosphere. The sense of a community is the pillar of their sustainability and sustenance and their autonomy depends prominently on cattle and agriculture that is made by the villagers. Nevertheless, Tchikuteny village is in close connection with their surrounding communities. Children attend Giraul School and there is proximity and relations with the extended family that lives in the surroundings.<br />
Being the spiritual leader of the community, Tchikuteny is also responsible for the weekly religious works that happens in the village church. <br />
This big family opened his doors to share with us their daily lives.
    h_00021299.jpg
  • Lady reading a book at Santa Luzia lookout, in Lisbon, with walls decorated with typical portuguese ceramic tiles and views to Alfama district.
    120327-LFC-0579.jpg
  • Lady reading a book at Santa Luzia lookout, in Lisbon, with walls decorated with typical portuguese ceramic tiles and views to Alfama district.
    120327-LFC-0487.jpg
  • Lady reading a book at Santa Luzia lookout, in Lisbon, with walls decorated with typical portuguese ceramic tiles and views to Alfama district.
    120327-LFC-0544.jpg
  • Lady reading a book at Santa Luzia lookout, in Lisbon, with walls decorated with typical portuguese ceramic tiles and views to Alfama district.
    120327-LFC-0437.jpg
  • Lady reading a book at Santa Luzia lookout, in Lisbon, with walls decorated with typical portuguese ceramic tiles and views to Alfama district.
    120327-LFC-0429.jpg
  • Lady reading a book at Santa Luzia lookout, in Lisbon, with walls decorated with typical portuguese ceramic tiles and views to Alfama district.
    120327-LFC-0383.jpg
  • Lady reading a book at Santa Luzia lookout, in Lisbon, with walls decorated with typical portuguese ceramic tiles and views to Alfama district.
    120327-LFC-0354.jpg
  • Lady reading a book at Santa Luzia lookout, in Lisbon, with walls decorated with typical portuguese ceramic tiles and views to Alfama district.
    120327-LFC-0314.jpg
  • Lady reading a book at Santa Luzia lookout, in Lisbon, with walls decorated with typical portuguese ceramic tiles and views to Alfama district.
    120327-LFC-0420.jpg
  • Lady reading a book at Santa Luzia lookout, in Lisbon, with walls decorated with typical portuguese ceramic tiles and views to Alfama district.
    120327-LFC-0295.jpg
  • Lady reading a book at Santa Luzia lookout, in Lisbon, with walls decorated with typical portuguese ceramic tiles and views to Alfama district.
    120327-LFC-0251.jpg
  • Wheat near Casasana. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015772.jpg
  • Pastrana. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015766.jpg
  • Budia. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015764.jpg
  • Pareja. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015759.jpg
  • Brihuega. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015756.jpg
  • Casasana. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015755.jpg
  • Brihuega. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015752.jpg
  • Cifuentes. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015749.jpg
  • Cifuentes. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015744.jpg
  • Corcoles. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015740.jpg
  • Brihuega. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015735.jpg
  • Man in La Puerta. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015731.jpg
  • Tetas de Viana. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015729.jpg
  • Bar. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015728.jpg
  • Vegetable garden in Pastrana. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015774.jpg
  • Sacedon. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015773.jpg
  • Image in Santiago church. Cifuentes. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015771.jpg
  • Budia. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015770.jpg
  • Old woman in Pastrana. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015769.jpg
  • Landscape. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015768.jpg
  • Entrepenas reservoir. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015767.jpg
  • Taracena. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015765.jpg
  • Ecce Homo from 1674 by Pedro de Mena. San Pedro church in Budia. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015763.jpg
  • Budia. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015762.jpg
  • Pastrana. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015761.jpg
  • Tajuna river. Brihuega. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015760.jpg
  • Casasana. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015758.jpg
  • Colegiata church in Pastrana. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015757.jpg
  • Santiago church. Cifuentes. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015754.jpg
  • Duron. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015753.jpg
  • Hostel in Sacedon. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015750.jpg
  • Torija castle. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015751.jpg
  • Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015746.jpg
  • Francisco Ranera, poet, in Casa Seco bar in Pastrana. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015747.jpg
  • Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015745.jpg
  • Paris church in La Puerta. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015743.jpg
  • Old Parador in Torija. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015742.jpg
  • Moranchel. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015741.jpg
  • Wine cellar in Gargoles de Abajo. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015739.jpg
  • Cifuentes. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015738.jpg
  • Paris church in La Puerta. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015736.jpg
  • Hostel in La Puerta. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015734.jpg
  • Trillo. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015733.jpg
  • Cifuentes. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015732.jpg
  • Tajo river in Trillo. Alcarria area. Guadalajara province. Castile - La Mancha. Spain.<br />
2011 will be the 65th anniversary of Viaje a la Alcarria (Journey to the Alcarria). In the summer of 1946, seven years after the end of the Spanish Civil War, Camilo José Cela set out on foot to discover the heart of Spain. He chose Alcarria northeast of Madrid, because he believed that the region - peasant, simple, rustic - would suit his purposes: it was a place where nothing ever happened; it was a place remarkable for its Spanishness. This is travel writing at its best - picaresque in the tradition of Cervantes, elegiac, evoking a Spain that has almost ceased to exist. Regarded as his greatest book of non-fiction, Journey to the Alcarria should help establish why Cela, at the end of 1989, surprised an English-language readership unfamiliar with his work by receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature.
    h_00015730.jpg
  • Magoito Beach, in Sintra, Portugal. 10/04/2011 NO SALES IN PORTUGAL
    h_00013914.jpg
  • Magoito Beach, in Sintra, Portugal. 10/04/2011 NO SALES IN PORTUGAL
    h_00013924.jpg
  • Magoito Beach, in Sintra, Portugal. 10/04/2011 NO SALES IN PORTUGAL
    h_00013919.jpg
  • Train between Seville and Granada - ANDALUSIA region - Spain. Route by train after the steps of Washington Irving, romantic American writer who travelled in 1829 from Seville to Granada, where he wrote 'Tales of the Alhambra'. Fascinated by the wealth and exoticism of the Spanish-Muslim civilization, Irving was responsible, along with the French writers of the 19th century, for the romantic image of Al-Andalus. Alberto Paredes / 4SEE
    h_00010205.jpg
  • Train between Seville and Granada - ANDALUSIA region - Spain. Route by train after the steps of Washington Irving, romantic American writer who travelled in 1829 from Seville to Granada, where he wrote 'Tales of the Alhambra'. Fascinated by the wealth and exoticism of the Spanish-Muslim civilization, Irving was responsible, along with the French writers of the 19th century, for the romantic image of Al-Andalus. Alberto Paredes / 4SEE
    h_00010204.jpg
  • A group of people carry books through the streets of Yangon, Burma.<br />
Note: These images are not distributed or sold in Portugal
    TM_MG_7873.jpg
  • A woman has a bite of some chocolate at a book signing for a book named Harlem.  Harlem, a neighborhood of New York City in Manhattan, began as a Dutch village in 1658 and was later annexed to New York City in 1873.  At the beginning of the 20th century African-American's began arriving from the southern American states looking for work in the more industrious north.  With their migration, the African-American community brought with them a renaissance in the arts to Harlem that is still evident today.  After World War II Harlem began experiencing a significant rise in crime and poverty due to the Great Depression that lasted until the 21st century.  A new pride in the community has brought a renewed revival to Harlem, and crime rates have dropped to record lows giving the New York City neighborhood a new lease on life.
    h_00014000.jpg
  • A woman has a bite of some chocolate at a book signing for a book named Harlem.  Harlem, a neighborhood of New York City in Manhattan, began as a Dutch village in 1658 and was later annexed to New York City in 1873.  At the beginning of the 20th century African-American's began arriving from the southern American states looking for work in the more industrious north.  With their migration, the African-American community brought with them a renaissance in the arts to Harlem that is still evident today.  After World War II Harlem began experiencing a significant rise in crime and poverty due to the Great Depression that lasted until the 21st century.  A new pride in the community has brought a renewed revival to Harlem, and crime rates have dropped to record lows giving the New York City neighborhood a new lease on life.
    h_00013764.jpg
  • Antonio Tabucchi, italian professor and writer, sitting at his working desk in his home in Lisbon, holding the manuscript of his next book.
    h_00017310.jpg
  • 2015/11/24 - Medellín, Colombia: John Velásquez, best known as “Popeye”, in Maria "Rosa Mistica", the Virgin of Aguacatala altar in Medellín. "Popeye" was Pablo Escobar's former head assassin who was released last year from jail after 23 years of imprisonment. He confesses being the author of about 300 hundred murders ordered by Colombia's most famous drug lord. Velásquez is trying to integrate in society, writing already two book about his time with Escobar and has plans to make a movie. (Eduardo Leal)
    EduardoLeal-EscobarLegacy-37.jpg
  • 2015/11/24 - Medellín, Colombia: John Velásquez, best known as “Popeye”, in Maria "Rosa Mistica", the Virgin of Aguacatala altar in Medellín. "Popeye" was Pablo Escobar's former head assassin who was released last year from jail after 23 years of imprisonment. He confesses being the author of about 300 hundred murders ordered by Colombia's most famous drug lord. Velásquez is trying to integrate in society, writing already two book about his time with Escobar and has plans to make a movie. (Eduardo Leal)
    EduardoLeal-EscobarLegacy-36.jpg
  • 2015/11/24 - Medellín, Colombia: John Velásquez, best known as “Popeye”, prays to Maria "Rosa Mistica", the Virgin of Aguacatala in Medellín. "Popeye" was Pablo Escobar's former head assassin who was released last year from jail after 23 years of imprisonment. He confesses being the author of about 300 hundred murders ordered by Colombia's most famous drug lord. Velásquez is trying to integrate in society, writing already two book about his time with Escobar and has plans to make a movie. (Eduardo Leal)
    EduardoLeal-EscobarLegacy-35.jpg
  • Aeneas, a Trojan hero described in the greek mythology, wanders in the Mediterranean after escaping from the Greeks, till he reachs Italy.<br />
In Book VI of the Aeneid, Virgil writes that Aeneas, after leaving Sicily, reaches Cuma where he finds Sibyl, a priestess whith the ability to conect with the world of the Dead. At this point the hero expresses the desire to speak one last time to his father and ask him for advice on the journey...
    A timeless Journey_02.jpg
  • Aeneas, a Trojan hero described in the greek mythology, wanders in the Mediterranean after escaping from the Greeks, till he reachs Italy.<br />
In Book VI of the Aeneid, Virgil writes that Aeneas, after leaving Sicily, reaches Cuma where he finds Sibyl, a priestess whith the ability to conect with the world of the Dead. At this point the hero expresses the desire to speak one last time to his father and ask him for advice on the journey...
    A timeless Journey_06.jpg
  • Aeneas, a Trojan hero described in the greek mythology, wanders in the Mediterranean after escaping from the Greeks, till he reachs Italy.<br />
In Book VI of the Aeneid, Virgil writes that Aeneas, after leaving Sicily, reaches Cuma where he finds Sibyl, a priestess whith the ability to conect with the world of the Dead. At this point the hero expresses the desire to speak one last time to his father and ask him for advice on the journey...
    A timeless Journey_05.jpg
  • Aeneas, a Trojan hero described in the greek mythology, wanders in the Mediterranean after escaping from the Greeks, till he reachs Italy.<br />
In Book VI of the Aeneid, Virgil writes that Aeneas, after leaving Sicily, reaches Cuma where he finds Sibyl, a priestess whith the ability to conect with the world of the Dead. At this point the hero expresses the desire to speak one last time to his father and ask him for advice on the journey...
    A timeless Journey_04.jpg
  • Aeneas, a Trojan hero described in the greek mythology, wanders in the Mediterranean after escaping from the Greeks, till he reachs Italy.<br />
In Book VI of the Aeneid, Virgil writes that Aeneas, after leaving Sicily, reaches Cuma where he finds Sibyl, a priestess whith the ability to conect with the world of the Dead. At this point the hero expresses the desire to speak one last time to his father and ask him for advice on the journey...
    A timeless Journey_03.jpg
  • Aeneas, a Trojan hero described in the greek mythology, wanders in the Mediterranean after escaping from the Greeks, till he reachs Italy.<br />
In Book VI of the Aeneid, Virgil writes that Aeneas, after leaving Sicily, reaches Cuma where he finds Sibyl, a priestess whith the ability to conect with the world of the Dead. At this point the hero expresses the desire to speak one last time to his father and ask him for advice on the journey...
    A timeless Journey_01.jpg
  • Farouk arrived in Johannesburg from Zimbabwe 4 days before this photo was shoot with his wife and his 3 years old son. He is a former book keeper and he hope to use his skills to find a job in South Africa.
    h_00011912.jpg
  • Farouk arrived in Johannesburg from Zimbabwe 4 days before this photo was shoot with his wife and his 3 years old son. He is a former book keeper and he hope to use his skills to find a job in South Africa.
    h_00011911.jpg
  • Farouk arrived in Johannesburg from Zimbabwe 4 days before this photo was shoot with his wife and his 3 years old son. He is a former book keeper and he hope to use his skills to find a job in South Africa.
    h_00011903.jpg
  • A man reads a book on the threshold of his home in Chichicastanango, Guatemala.
    h_00005196.jpg
  • Lt Christine Botelho fills in the log book as she prepares to do lockk down.  The Bristol County Jail & House of Correction located on Ash Street in New Bedford, Massachusetts was started in 1829, and is the oldest running jail in the United States.   The Ash street jail, as it is known, has been a controversial facility since it opened.  It is believed to be the site of the last pubic hanging in Massachusetts sometime in the 1890's.  Two big riots broke out in the 90's (1993, 1998) and since then the facility has been modified to alleviate some of the crowded conditions that resulted in the riots.
    h_00013012.jpg
  • Robert Potvin reads a book after lockdown in his cell.  Mr Potvin will be in the jail for a totalof 15 months after being sentenced.  The Bristol County Jail & House of Correction located on Ash Street in New Bedford, Massachusetts was started in 1829, and is the oldest running jail in the United States.   The Ash street jail, as it is known, has been a controversial facility since it opened.  It is believed to be the site of the last pubic hanging in Massachusetts sometime in the 1890's.  Two big riots broke out in the 90's (1993, 1998) and since then the facility has been modified to alleviate some of the crowded conditions that resulted in the riots.
    h_00013008.jpg
  • Antonio Tabucchi, italian professor and writer, sitting at his working desk in his home in Lisbon, holding the manuscript of his next book.
    h_00017309.jpg
  • Antonio Tabucchi, italian professor and writer, sitting at his working desk in his home in Lisbon, holding the manuscript of his next book.
    h_00017307.jpg
  • Antonio Tabucchi, italian professor and writer, sitting at his working desk in his home in Lisbon, holding the manuscript of his next book.
    h_00017306.jpg
  • A green receipt (Recibo Verde) book used by indipendent worker. In Portugal instead of offering to the worker a regular contract, a lot of companies "hire" their employers under recibo verde regimen. In this way the company can pay less taxes.
    h_00012232.jpg
  • A green receipt (Recibo Verde) book used by indipendent worker. In Portugal instead of offering to the worker a regular contract, a lot of companies "hire" their employers under recibo verde regimen. In this way the company can pay less taxes.
    h_00012227.jpg
  • A green receipt (Recibo Verde) book used by indipendent worker. In Portugal instead of offering to the worker a regular contract, a lot of companies "hire" their employers under recibo verde regimen. In this way the company can pay less taxes.
    h_00012228.jpg
  • A green receipt (Recibo Verde) book used by indipendent worker. In Portugal instead of offering to the worker a regular contract, a lot of companies "hire" their employers under recibo verde regimen. In this way the company can pay less taxes.
    h_00012223.jpg
  • Antonio Lobo Antunes, a distinguished Portuguese writer and novelist, photographed while editing and working on his next book.
    h_00007703.jpg
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