Happy Readers say
Bread And Sugar Water (by Abi Kobe Zar) - Amazon Review
Jerezano
I have read this book in the quickest time ever as it was very interesting. It also help to understand human feeling something which is lost nowadays, if you look for a better future than you should understand how people may think and feel, something which may be carried from your own culture may hurt somebody else.
As someone against racism I have learnt something very important from this book.
Gigi: The Librarian (by Eliselle) - Amazon Review
Debbie
Is a beautiful book. brings me memories of when i started reading book, what my mom used to tell me. i read this book everyday i can to my best friend's baby. i love it
SHE - Any Women Of The World (by Mark Terenziani) - Amazon review
Nicola Giannotti
Marco Terenziani has an incredible talent.
Seven Seconds (by Dr. Oscar Travino) - Amazon review
Riley
Enjoying life right now is the message I got after reading this book. I think positive thoughts are not done often enough. And this book opens your eyes to this. Very inspiring.




















Born in Italy in 1988, she currently lives and works in the UK.
Abdul Zar is an Italian-Ghanaian human rights activist and lawyer specialized in international law. Bread and Sugar Water is his first novel. It is a work that arises from the desire to tell about life, to tell the extraordinary normality from the point of view of a black person in a white country. There are economic, social and political implications that come from being part of a minority and precisely because such most people fail to understand what one can feel (in this case) and wear such a wonderful color that the rest of society (knowingly or not) associates negative things. Prejudices that have survived over the years, rooted in the mind of those who have decided to see color before the person.
Eliselle was born in Sassuolo, she completed her classical studies in Modena
Giulia D’Agostini was born in Florence (Italy) in 1989.
Andrea Manicardi was born at a very tender age on the last day of May 1968 in Carpi, in the beating heart of Emilia Rock-Magna, where he still resides and, despite his registration date, after the Sunset sometimes dribbles its professional commitments to run to perform on the stage of disreputable clubs in the company of other fugitives, dead or alive, from all the Conservatories of the Kingdom, thus nourishing the shadowy part of its curious, colorful and scarcely satiated soul.
Meltea Keller (Martina Biscarini) was born in Empoli in 1985. She translated the first Italian edition of Harpo Marx’s autobiography, Harpo Speaks (Erga, 2017). She wrote two music biographies (Mannarino, Cercare I colori; Arcana, 2018 and Rancore, Segui il coniglio bianco; Arcana, 2020) and a guide of Siena, (Guida ai Palazzi di Siena; Edizioni della Sera, 2021). She actively collaborates with ReWriters Magazine on which she has a blog called cli-fi focused on literature and the environment. She is the current vocalist of the all-female rock band Mumble Rumble, active since the Nineties.