Showing results for "El arte de engañar al karma" in All Categories
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El arte de engañar al karma [The Art of Cheating Karma]
- By: Elísabet Benavent
- Narrated by: Sheila Blanco, Íñigo Montero
- Length: 20 hrs and 25 mins
- Unabridged
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Performance
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Una aspirante a actriz cansada de hacer castings...
Un artista reconocido en plena crisis creativa...
Unos valiosos cuadros encontrados en un desván...
Y el arte del engaño para cambiar las leyes del karma.
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Refrescante con un aprendizaje auténtico
- By carolina Jimenez Morón on 07-10-21
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El arte de engañar al karma [The Art of Cheating Karma]
- Narrated by: Sheila Blanco, Íñigo Montero
- Length: 20 hrs and 25 mins
- Release date: 04-15-21
- Language: Spanish
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In 1519, Hernando Cortés arrived in Mexico to investigate stories of a wealthy empire. What he encountered was beyond his wildest dreams; an advanced civilization with complex artistic, political, and religious systems (involving extensive human sacrifice) and replete with gold. This was the Aztec empire, headed by the aloof emperor, Montezuma.
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very interesting
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Great book, but why is the narrator so bad?
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This piece of writing by famed samurai Musashi (1584–1645) is the single-most influential work on samurai swordsmanship, offering insights into samurai history, the Zen Buddhist state of "no-mind" that enables warriors to triumph and the philosophical meaning of Bushido — "the way of the warrior."
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Like the translation but I feel it don’t do it justice
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The U.S.-backed military invasion of Cuba in 1961 remains one of the most ill-fated blunders in American history, with echoes of the event reverberating even today. Despite the Kennedy administration’s initial public insistence that the United States had nothing to do with the invasion, it soon became clear that the complex operation had been planned and approved by the best and brightest minds at the highest reaches of Washington, including the Joint Chiefs of Staff and President John F. Kennedy himself.
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When President Theodore Roosevelt welcomed the country’s most visible Black man, Booker T. Washington, into his circle of counselors in 1901, the two confronted a shocking and violent wave of racist outrage. In the previous decade, Jim Crow laws had legalized discrimination in the South, eroding social and economic gains for former slaves. Lynching was on the rise, and Black Americans faced new barriers to voting. Slavery had been abolished, but if newly freed citizens were condemned to lives as share croppers, how much improvement would their lives really see?
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Another Good Read by Brian Kilmeade
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