Download - Into Hot List and Rights Catalogue 2014
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hot list rights catalogue2014
critical edge publishing
from far North
fiFinnish
lesson
s
Into is an independent and radical publishing house based in Helsinki, Finland, committed to increasing awareness about burning global issues. Its output pro-motes diversity, alternative voices and progressive change in politics, culture and business life.
We publish 60–70 non-fiction and fiction titles annu-ally, combining established authors with new arrivals. Into focuses on politics, environment, economics, history, development, gender and popular culture.
Into also publishes Finnish editions of Le Monde diplo-matique and the independent Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta, and runs Into-eBooks.com, an extensive collec-tion of English-language fiction and non-fiction titles by writers and independent publishers.
Into Publishing & Rosebud Books Meritullinkatu 21, FI-00170 Helsinki, Finland tel: +358 40 1795297, + 358 9 611 290
Foreign Rights and Inquiries: Milla Karppinen: [email protected], +358 50 551 3310
[email protected] www.facebook.com/intokustannus, twitter: into_publishing
www.intokustannus.fi, www.into-ebooks.com, www.rosebud.fi
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Contents4 Laura Gustafsson Whorestory, Anomalia
7 Maaria Päivinen Being Hungry, Being Thirsty
8 Pasi Sahlberg Finnish Lessons
11 Ilkka Taipale 100 Social Innovations from Finland
12 Peter von Bagh Sodankylä Forever
18 Ritva Kovalainen & Sanni Seppo Tree People
20 Ari Turunen & Petja Partanen Brute Force
21 Ari Turunen Don’t You Know Who I Am?
22 Ari Turunen Worldviews
23 Ari Turunen The Spirit of Intoxication
24 Timo Forss, Martti Lintunen & Tommi Tukiainen Book of Poles
27 Hanna Nikkanen The Web Rules
29 Kalle Kniivilä Putin’s People
30 Oksana Chelysheva They Followed Me in the Street
33 Heikki Patomäki The Great Eurozone Disaster
35 Rauli Partanen, Harri Paloheimo & Heikki Waris The World After Cheap Oil
38 Risto Isomäki 66 Ways to Absorb Carbon and Improve the Earths Reflectivity
40 Risto Isomäki Rethinking Nuclear Power
41 Risto Isomäki CETI Revisited
42 Risto Isomäki The Oil Palm Controversy
43 Risto Isomäki Ships, Sulphur and Climate
44 Emma Kari & Kukka Ranta Fish Tales
46 Maia Raitanen The Whale, the Whale!
48 Juha Suoranta & Sanna Ryynänen Rebellious Research
50 Kimmo Kiljunen Countries of the World
53 Antti Vihinen Me and Mozart
54 Kai Sadinmaa 10 Commandments to the Church
56 Tamas Matekovits Budabest Metro
58 Johanna Pohjola Mate
61 Marjut Hjelt Childhood Fairy Tales
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Laura Gustafsson
HUORASATU Whorestory is a debut novel that breaks genre boundaries. It hov-ers between conventional fiction, pornography and chick lit, and is unashamedly over the top in every respect. It raises the middle finger on behalf of all those who have been treated unjustly because of their gender, sexual orientation or social status. First and foremost,
the book is a description of how woman was created. Whorestory describes violence against women, but also likens violence perpetrated by men to breeches of animal rights. Despite the weighty subject matter, the novel’s text is light to read: the author combines eve-ryday realism, Greek mythology and fantasy to create a merry mix.
Laura Gustafsson
ANOMALIAAnomalia gives also a voice to those who, for one reason or another, don’t speak or no one listens to. This time, the voice belongs to children, animals and feral children. The book explores issues of human worth and the right to live, but does the human species possess an exclusive right to humanity? Anomalia is a story about humanity in animals and animality in humans. The experience of reading the book hurts, and it shows no mercy for the reader, even during the very last pages. Shutting your eyes is not an option either, for even if the main characters kept quiet, the stones would cry out their story.
FICTION
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LAURA
GUSTAFSSON is
a Finnish author and
playwright. In her work
Gustafsson often focuses on
themes of equality, transgression,
animals and gender. Her writings
are strongly political yet
equally invested in form
and language.
JOR
I G
US
TAFS
SO
N
Original novels in Finnish. Huorasatu has been published in France (Conte des putes) and in German (Die Hure), Anomalia in France. Foreign rights: Stilton Literary Agency
Debut novel Huorasatu was nominated for both most
prestigious literary awards Finlandia prize and Helsingin Sanomat Literature Prize.
Forthcoming new non-fiction book The History According to Cattle (Into) by Laura Gustafsson and visual artist Terike Haapoja, as part of The History of Others art and research project, exploring the lives and experiences of non-human animals and the investigation of their cultural history www.historyofothers.org.
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MAARIA
PÄIVINEN has
lived the last few years
in Munich, Germany, and is
nowadays a wanderer travelling
around the world. Three novels
and a poetry collection have been
published from Päivinen. Her novel
Pintanaarmuja (Scratches, ntamo
2013) was nominated for the
Runeberg Prize in 2014.
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Maaria Päivinen
BEING HUNGRY, BEING THIRSTY On nälkä, on jano (Being Hungry, Being Thirsty) is a novel, in which a woman enslaves men.
Scarlet-haired Emilie Silvia Grass loses control of her life. After mister Blumen leaves her, Emilie is filled with less than a twenty centimeters deep longing in her. Emilie starts a career as a pimp and pours her anguish out on men. But is it possible to ever get rid of the misery/longing – especially after having done so much damage?
The spooky and corgeous novel of Maaria Päivinen plays with the reality. It shows, how a human being can be cold and at the same time full of feelings.
The three novels of Päivinen show, how variedly and richly she can write.
– Parnasso
Pintanaarmuja (Scratches) is a strong verbal and emotional being, one of the best builders of feminine experience and language for a long time. – Voima
FICTION
Foreign rights: [email protected]
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Pasi Sahlberg
FINNISH LESSONSWhat can the world learn from educational change in Finland
Ever wondered how Finland man-aged to build its highly regarded school system? Look behind the headlines to find out what makes it work and how it evolved.
Get the insights and facts you’ll need to contribute to building an effective, low cost educational system at local, national and global level.
Pasi Sahlberg recounts the history of Finnish edu-cational reform as only a well-traveled insider can. He details how the Finnish strategy and tactics dif-fer from those of the global educational reform move-ment, and of the North American reforms in particu-lar.
Finnish Lessons goes beyond the facts and figures of Finnish education. Rather than proposing that other nations follow in Finland’s path, Finnish Lessons documents how Finland achieved success without going through the arduous and controversial process of implementing competition, school choice, and test-based accountability.
Here parents, educators and policy architects can gain the insight and facts necessary to constructively participate in improving their schools — even in a tightening economy.
This book is also a message of hope and encour-agement for other nations to find their own way to enact educational reform that works.
Original edition in English (Teachers College Press). Available in 20 languages, including in Swedish, Spanish, Dutch, Chinese, Croatian, Korean, Hebrew and Portuguese. Foreign rights: [email protected].
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The story of Finland’s extraordinary educational reforms is one that should inform policymakers and educators
around the world. No one tells this story more clearly and engagingly than Pasi Sahlberg, who has lived and studied
these reforms for decades. This book is a must read. – Linda Darling-Hammond, Charles E. Ducommun
Professor of Education and Co-Director of the Stanford Center for Opportunity Policy in
Education at Stanford University
PASI SAHLBERG is a
Finnish educator and scholar.
He has worked as a schoolteacher,
teacher educator and policy advisor in
Finland and has studied education systems
and reforms around the world. His expertise
includes school improvement, international
education issues, classroom teaching and
learning, and school leadership. His best-selling
book Finnish Lessons: What can the world
learn from educational change in Finland
(Teachers College Press, 2011) won the
2013 Grawemeyer Award.
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ILKKA
TAIPALE (M.D.)
holds a degree in Social
Medicine. He has worked with
and for poor people, unemployed,
schizophrenics, homeless people,
prisoners and alcoholics all his
life. He has been a Member of
Parliament and a member of
Helsinki City Council.
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Ilkka Taipale (ed.)
100 SOCIAL INNOVATIONS FROM FINLANDOne might wonder what a single-chamber parlia-ment, dish drying cabinets and text messaging have in common. Or what the link is between mater-nity packs, xylitol, the sauna and free school meals. The answer is simple: they are all Finnish social innovations.
Finland has significant lessons learned to offer: how a country manage to over-came a ruthless civil war and develope to to a wel-fare state, how social inno-vations have led to societal harmony in terms of gen-der equality, minority rights, free education, and par-liamentary democracy and the consequent social sta-bility they create.
In Finland, as elsewhere, technical inventions have hogged all the economic limelight, but it is only recently that social innovations have been highlighted as the foundation of societal harmony. Gender equal-ity, free education, universal social security and parlia-mentary democracy, and the consequent social stabil-ity they create, have secured Finland’s welfare.
This book, which is both serious and entertaining, presents 100 Finnish social innovations.
Available in 22 languages: Finnish, Swedish, English, Russian, Hungarian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Polish, Japanese, Korean, Punjabi, Urdu, Hindi, Mandarin Chinese, Spanish, Portuguese, Mongolian, German, Kazakh, Arabic, Tamil and Bengali. Currently being translated into Turkish and Somali. Foreign rights: [email protected]
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Peter von Bagh
SODANKYLÄ FOREVER Masters of Cinema Under the Midnight Sun
Midnight Sun Forever is the cinematic conversation of all time, based on long, profound, and often rio-tously funny talks with the best directors in the world – from Michael Powell and Samuel Fuller to Wim Wenders and Abbas Kiarostami, from Francis Cop-pola and Jacques Demy to Milos Forman – and close to a hundred other raconteurs.
Foreign rights: oga.otava.fi and Rosebud Inquiries: Iida Simes, [email protected], tel +358 44 2063426.
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Woodstock is fuckin’ nothing ifyou’ve been at the Midnight Sun
Film Festival.
– D. A. Pennebaker in 1987
Five days and five nights in the village of Sodankylä, the heart of Finnish Lapland, north of the Arctic Cir-cle. Where the sun doesn’t set at all in summer.
Timeless masterpieces from veteran filmmakers are presented side by side with contemporary films. Lead-ing film critics provide their insight into cinema’s fin-est classics.
Ever since the festival’s origin, its director Peter von Bagh has interviewed the main guests in the famous morning discussions: These sessions form the core of this book.
I hate festivals. The only exceptions are the Midnight Sun Film Festival and a certain Cognac festival. Here I feel I am among friends, among
people who love cinema.
– Claude Chabrol in 1992
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Thanks to our guests throughout the 30 years, the spirit of Sodankylä is well known around the world. Just to mention a few, the following persons have visited the Midnight Sun Film Festival:
CHANTAL AKERMAN, FATIH AKIN, GIANNI AMELIO, ROY WARD BAKER, CARROLL BALLARD, MARCO BELLOCCHIO, LÁSZLÓ BENEDEK, LUIS GARCÍA BERLANGA, JOHN BERRY, JOHN BOORMAN, SEYMOUR CASSEL, CLAUDE CHABROL, YOUSSEF CHAHINE, MICHAEL CHAPMAN, SOULEYMANE CISSÉ, FRANCIS FORD COPPOLA, ROGER CORMAN, PEDRO COSTA, COSTA-GAVRAS, EDGARDO COZARINSKY, JOE DANTE, JEAN-PIERRE DARDENNE, LUC DARDENNE, TERENCE DAVIES, JONATHAN DEMME, JACQUES DEMY, CLAIRE DENIS, VITTORIO DE SETA, ANDRÉ DE TOTH, JEAN DRÉVILLE, VICTOR ERICE, RICHARD FLEISCHER, MILOS FORMAN, FREDDIE FRANCIS, SAMUEL FULLER, TERRY GILLIAM, AMOS GITAI, CLAUDE GORETTA, JEAN-PIERRE GORIN, ROBERT GUÉDIGUIAN, VAL GUEST, MONTE HELLMAN,
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1fiLms Under the midnight sUn
Our festival was born out of a strange fantasy and the legend of
our humble beginnings goes something like this: in november
1985, film director Anssi mänttäri was in sodankylä. it was
four in the morning. impenetrable darkness loomed behind the
window. some alcohol had probably been consumed. “Why,” he
asked the municipality’s Cultural secretary, “don’t we establish
an international film festival here?”
And why not, really. Anssi recounted his vision to the Kauris
mäki brothers, with whom he was collaborating at the time. he
also called me and asked me to be the festival director. i cannot
claim to have understood the genius of his idea from the start,
and, the stupid man that i am, considered his notion of the
filmmakers he wanted to invite for the first edition (John huston
and Akira Kurosawa) utopian. Fortunately, i regained my senses
sufficiently in a couple of months and decided to participate in
the work to arrange the first festival. And so the first midnight
sun Film Festival began on Friday, June 12, 1986.
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One of our greatest nights ever: Charlie Chaplin’s
The Gold Rush (1925) in its original form that had
been lost for generations. Our screening’s final
seal of authenticity was given by Chaplin’s original
score, adapted by timothy Brock, who conducted
the Oulu symphony Orchestra. “silent film was
universal. now we face the danger of national
identities losing their unique characteristics and
individual personalities being flattened,” manoel
de Oliveira emphasized.
PhOtOgrAPhs: tOmi KnUUtilA And JAAnA rAnniKKO
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1fiLms Under the midnight sUn
Our festival was born out of a strange fantasy and the legend of
our humble beginnings goes something like this: in november
1985, film director Anssi mänttäri was in sodankylä. it was
four in the morning. impenetrable darkness loomed behind the
window. some alcohol had probably been consumed. “Why,” he
asked the municipality’s Cultural secretary, “don’t we establish
an international film festival here?”
And why not, really. Anssi recounted his vision to the Kauris
mäki brothers, with whom he was collaborating at the time. he
also called me and asked me to be the festival director. i cannot
claim to have understood the genius of his idea from the start,
and, the stupid man that i am, considered his notion of the
filmmakers he wanted to invite for the first edition (John huston
and Akira Kurosawa) utopian. Fortunately, i regained my senses
sufficiently in a couple of months and decided to participate in
the work to arrange the first festival. And so the first midnight
sun Film Festival began on Friday, June 12, 1986.
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So I spent the wartime surrounded by films and studied on a correspondence course. When I returned to Paris I continued my regular studies. The correspondence course had, after all, been very good: I had not wasted my time. In Paris I took advantage of the fact that my uncle had his cinema. He knew I loved films, and was very gener-ous with free tickets. I did not go to school that much because I had become used to the correspondence course. I usually studied at home. I wanted to go to a film school, but my parents were against it. They were very good people but rather petit bourgeois, and said it would not be good to me. I was supposed to study something else first and then do what I wanted. So I did all kinds of things. I first graduated as a Bachelor of Humanities, then studied law for two years and political science for three weeks. My father then said I should study pharmacology so that I could take over his pharmacy one day. I was always going to the cinema and thought why not, I could very well study some pharma-cology on the side. I studied pharmacology for two years – and become terrible bored. I wanted to find a way out, and decided to marry to make things simpler. I was unbelievably lucky, because – without me know-ing it – my wife was a rich heiress. So I spent a few years doing nothing much, just thinking about things, and we had two children. Then my wife’s grandmother hap-pened to die and leave a certain amount of money to her grandchildren. My wife didn’t know what to do with the
money, so I suggested: “Let’s make a film!” It became my first film Le Beau Serge (1958), which actually was a rather immoral story. I was lucky because the film was fairly suc-cessful and enabled me to make more films. The funny thing was that I had, as a matter of fact, also learned what I knew of filmmaking on a correspondence course. I had seen a film being shot one or two times, but I had never even worked as an assistant. When I made my first film I behaved like a banker: I said that because I’m paying, I’m also going to direct. So on the first day of the shoot I was given the view-finder and asked what I wanted shoot. The camera was there, and I was asked if it was the way I wanted it. I looked and looked, but couldn’t see a thing. The cam-eraman came to help me and said I was looking in the wrong place, I needed to put my eye a little further up. I managed to retain my authority, however, by asking them to bring the camera ten centimetres lower when I finally saw something.
This was what my childhood was like – or a part of it, to be more precise. It is not quite over yet.
samuel Fuller, the first Festival’s sovereign master of Ceremonies. in the background: timo malmi, later the strong Programme director specialising in modern cinema. PhOtOgrAPh: mAllA hUKKAnen
AGNIESZKA HOLLAND, OTAR IOSSELIANI, JIM JARMUSCH, PHILIP KAUFMAN, JERZY KAWALEROWICZ, IRVIN KERSHNER, MARLEN KHUTSIEV, ABBAS KIAROSTAMI, KRZYSZTOF KIESLOWSKI, ANDREI KONCHALOVSKY, EMIR KUSTURICA, JEAN-PIERRE LÉAUD, JOSEPH H. LEWIS, MAUD LINDER, DUŠAN MAKAVEJEV, SAMIRA MAKHMALBAF, NANNI MORETTI, ROBBY MÜLLER, CRISTIAN MUNGIU, MANOEL DE OLIVEIRA, JAFAR PANAHI, ROBERT PARRISH, IVAN PASSER, D.A. PENNEBAKER, MICHAEL POWELL, BOB RAFELSON, DINO RISI, FRANCESCO ROSI, JEAN ROUCH, CLAUDE SAUTET, JOHN SAYLES, JERRY SCHATZBERG, THELMA SCHOONMAKER, ETTORE SCOLA, VINCENT SHERMAN, JERZY SKOLIMOWSKI, ANDREI SMIRNOV, FERNANDO SOLANAS, SERGIO SOLLIMA, ELIA SULEIMAN, ISTVÁN SZABÓ, JEAN-CHARLES TACCHELLA, BÉLA TARR, BERTRAND TAVERNIER, PAOLO TAVIANI, VITTORIO TAVIANI, JAN TROELL, AGNÈS VARDA, APICHATPONG WEERASETHAKUL, WIM WENDERS, ROBERT WISE, KRZYSZTOF ZANUSSI
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We don’t live in the present alone. The past with all its memories, events and experiences is alive in us. Often, the past is more powerful than the
present.
– Peter von Bagh in Helsinki Forever
Peter von Bagh was a cinema historian, director, screenwriter, award-winning non-fiction writer, radio producer and the editor of the Filmihullu maga-zine. His main output consists of about 40 non-fiction books, mostly on cinema and history of popular cul-ture, including Elokuvan historia (History of Cinema) and Tähtien kirja (The Book of Stars). His book Kauris-mäki Über Kaurismäki (Bonnier Rights Finland) will be published by Alexander Verlag, an extensive artis-tic work encompassing the life and art of the world-renowned Finnish film director Aki Kaurismäki, and the roots of the cinephilie that moulded him into one of the most personal filmmakers of the world today.
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PETER
VON BAGH
(1943–2014)
Since 1986 Peter von Bagh was
Director of the Midnight Sun Film Festival,
and since 2001 worked as the Artistic Director
of Il Cinema Ritrovato Festival in Bologna. He
was a jury member at the Cannes Film Festival in
2004. World-renowned critic Jonathan Rosenbaum
chose von Bagh’s documentary Helsinki, Forever
as one of the top ten movies of the first decade
of the 21st century. Retrospective selections
of von Bagh’s films have been screened
in Buenos Aires, Moscow, Rotterdam
and Tromsø.
SA
NTE
RI
HA
PP
ON
EN
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Ritva Kovalainen & Sanni Seppo
TREE PEOPLEA description of Finnish myths associated with trees and forests.
Tree People provides a comprehensive depiction of the traditional beliefs of our ancestors concern-ing trees and forests and of the remnants of this tra-dition that Finns still carry within them. Tree People describes what trees can offer people besides fire wood and timber for utility articles and construction.
Ritva Kovalainen and Sanni Seppo are photo-graphic artists.
Available also in Finnish, Japanese, German. 192 pages and more than 300 photos. Foreign rights: Hiilinielutuotanto & Miellotar, Finland [email protected], Ritva Kovalainen +358 (0)40-5478464
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Contents of Tree People1. The World Tree myth 2. The sacred grove 3. The forest is a boundary 4. The bear, the sky and the pine 5. The karsikko 6. Good-luck tree, custom tree, sacred tree, yard-tree 7. My soul is the thick forest
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Ari Turunen & Petja Partanen
BRUTE FORCE The story of Finnish ice-breaking
Brute Force is an impressively written, lavishly illus-trated book about icebreaker ships. It introduces the reader to icebreakers from Finland and other coun-tries and tells about the history of icebreaking equip-ment.
The photographer Jouni Klinga took a cover photo from the end of the beam at the bow of the icebreaker Kontio:
I was signalling to the crane-operator while the icebreaker, the size of a block of flats, was rolling on through a broken icefield at 15 knots. On the pack ice, metre-sized chunks flew like flakes as Kontio carved through the virgin ice field. The rumble of the ice-breaker was replaced by the icefield’s remorseless grinding and crashing. I’ll never forget one of the most surreal moments of my career as a photographer.
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Ari Turunen
DON’T YOU KNOW WHO I AM? A history of arrogance
Ari Turunen’s hilarious book takes the reader to the sources of arro-gance and opens up new perspectives on the relationship bet-ween cause and effect in events from world history. We all know arrogant, obnoxious know-it-alls from our circle of acquaintan-ces, from work, politics, corridors of power, world his-tory – wherever there has been space for megaloma-niacs and ruthless behaviour. There is even a name for this phenomenon: hubris syndrome, a personality disorder concerning the possession of power. Original in Finnish (Atena).
Brute Force is written in a style accessible to the layperson, and covers the milestones in the development of icebreaking technology. Many inno-vations in the shipbuilding industry have their ori-gins in the specialised area of icebreakers. The world’s largest, most luxurious cruise ships berth using 360-degree azimuth thruster propellers, which were originally developed for icebreakers. The development of technology used in icebreakers, from thousand-horsepower steam-driven icebreakers to modern ice-breaking vessels that can go through two-metre-thick polar ice, has required great engineering ingenuity. Available in Finnish and English.
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TIETO
ARI TURUNEN has
written six popular books
on manners, superstition, lying,
resistance and intoxication. His books
are full of vivid anecdotes about the
reasons for human behaviour which are both
informative and entertaining. His books reveal
in a hilarious way why we behave the way
we do. Turunen has worked as a science
editor for 20 years. He has presented
many radio broadcasts and lectures
on cultural history and world
views.
Ari Turunen WORLDVIEWS What Word Maps Tell About Us and Them?
Every culture considers itself as the centre of the World. This has been the habit of thinking from the ancient Babylon and China to the modern-day Europe. Ari Turunen presents impressive selection of global maps of different cultures and eras.
New Ari Turunen book forthcoming in Spring 2015 Tolerance: How Bearing the Difference Created the 9 most Prosperous Cities in the World History.
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Ari Turunen THE SPIRIT OF INTOXICATION History of Drinking Habits
Half of the world’s alco-hol is consumed by Euro-peans. Alcohol is undoubt-edly the lubricator in the European cultural heritage. This book takes the reader to short expeditions into the history of intoxica-tion: what has it meant in different eras, what rules and rituals have been
involved in getting drunk, and how alcohol has appeared in different European customs.
The book reminds us that alcohol has been an essential element in European spiritual life. Drunken-ness has inspired literature and arts; it has even been a divine element for many religions and myths. Ari Turunen has an interesting and joyful grasp when he takes his readers through this human his-tory. Original in Finnish (Atena).
Foreign rights: [email protected]
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Timo Forss, Martti Lintunen & Tommi Tukiainen
BOOK OF POLESArctic and Antarctic
Why is the Antarctic melting slower than the Arctic? What is the northernmost place where you can find a statue of Lenin? Is there anything green in Green-land?
The huge commercial fleets are eagerly waiting for the new sea routes, especially the Northeast Passage in the Barents Sea. Technological development, high oil prices and melting of ice due to global warming could allow for exploration in the Arctic. However, there is serious doubt wether the mankind could pay the price in case of a severe accident.
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Greenland has been inhabited off and on for at least the last 4,500 years by Arctic peoples whose forebears migrated there from what is now Canada. Denmark has established sovereignty over the island. Greenland today is dependent on fishing and fish exports. Despite the fact that melting ice can be peri-lous for the traditional hunting culture, there are many people in Greenland who actually think melting gla-ciers could be highly beneficial for Greenland.
Timo Forss, Martti Lintunen and Tommi Tukiai-nen are heroic Finnish travelers and journalists who have been intrepid enough to visit Pyramiden and Longyearbyen in Svalbard, Nuuk in Greenland and Murmansk in Russia. Martti Lintunen went even further; he drove through Alaska and had a pint in a pub in the Arctic.
Thanks to Martti Lintunen, an expericed and world-famous photographer, the book is filled with fascinating images.
Foreign rights: Iida Simes, [email protected], tel +358 44 2063426.
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HANNA
NIKKANEN is an
investigative journalist
and an award-winning author
of non-fiction books. In 2012 she
published a book on The Arab Spring
with Lilly Korpiola (Arabikevät, Avain
Publishing), and in 2014 together with
Antti Järvi on how Aids arrived in
Finland (Karanteeni. Kuinka aids
saapui Suomeen, Siltala
Publishing).
Hanna Nikkanen received the EU Journalist Award and the Finnish State Award for Public Information for Viaton imperiumi (The innocent empire, 2010, Into), a book of reportage, where she investigated the resistance encountered by Finnish corporations in developing countries.
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Hanna Nikkanen
THE WEB RULES Investigative journalist Hanna Nikkanen has written an enlightening, varied book on the sorts of problems that digital internet communications have brought with them. Surveillance technologies used by the security services are expanding more rapidly than the means to shield popular movements from such sur-veillance, and practices that restrict our fundamental rights are advancing more rapidly than laws to protect those rights.
Hanna Nikkanen’s book acts as a prism to open up the multi-dimensional issues – including restric-tions on political freedoms, threats to public security, the spread of hate speech, digital class divisions, infor-mation leaks, exporting monitoring technology to oppressive regimes and reductions in privacy protec-tion – that have been brought about by ever-increas-ing online communication and companies to monitor that communication.
Sample translation in English available. Foreign rights: [email protected]
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KALLE
KNIIVILÄ is a
Finnish-Swedish journalist
who has travelled extensively in
the former Soviet Union and reported
from Russia since the beginning of the
1990s, when he first studied at Leningrad
State University and then worked as Moscow
correspondent for the Finnish left-wing daily
Kansan Uutiset. Since 1997 he has been
employed by Sydsvenska Dagbladet,
the largest daily newspaper in
southern Sweden.
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Kniivilä Kalle
PUTIN’S PEOPLE From Crisis to Global New Deal
In the West, Vladimir Putin is feared, not loved. He has occupied parts of neighbouring countries, crushed independent media and strangled the fragile Russian democracy in its cradle. But for Renat and Galina in the small town of Shumerlya 600 kilometers east of Moscow this is not what counts. The main thing for them is that their lives have improved under Putin. They have voted for their president, and they say they would vote for him again.
Since the large anti-government protests in 2012, Vladimir Putin has turned his back to the urban middle class and followed more conservative, nation-alist policies, aimed at consolidating the support of the silent Russian majority outside the big cities. This seems to be paying off, at least in the short run, while the state still can guarantee economic security for ordinary Russians.
Available in Swedish (Putins folk, May 2014) and Finnish (Putinin väkeä, September 2014). Fortcoming report book Vi blev ryssar (How we bacame Russians) in January 2015. Foreign rights: [email protected]
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Oksana Chelysheva
THEY FOLLOWED ME IN THE STREET
“Oksana Chelysheva is a Russian human rights activist, writer and cam-paigner. A resident of Nizhny Novgorod, she set up a char-ity to record abuses in Chechnya, the scene of not one but two sav-age Kremlin wars. In 2006 a court ordered the closure of the Rus-sia Chechen Friend-ship Society on the spurious grounds of
“extremism”. In 2011 Putin enacted an even harsher crackdown on non-governmental organisations. Those that receive funding from the west now officially have to register themselves as “for-eign agents”.
For Chelysheva, this clampdown was to have pro-found personal and professional consequences. In her memoir, They Followed Me in the Street, she describes the harassment she experienced first hand from Putin’s secret agents. In 2007 the local bosses in Nizhny Novogorod received orders to halt a “March of Dissent”, a forerunner of the mass anti-Putin street protests that would engulf Moscow and other Russian cities in 2011 and 2012. Chelysheva suddenly found herself in a “spy film script”. Two “heavily built young men” followed her at all times.
The following year, 2008, Chelysheva was in Fin-land when police raided the offices of her human rights group, the Foundation to Promote Tolerance, set up after the Russian Chechen Friendship Soci-
31
ety was disbanded. It was clear that if she went back to Nizhny Novgorod she faced arrest, imprisonment or worse. Chely-sheva took the painful decision to remain in Helsinki. She has not returned to Russia since, leav-ing behind her mother and teenage daughter. Even in exile, the Kremlin continues to punish her for her human rights advocacy. The book has several colour-ful vignettes, describing life in Russia, the callous and arbitrary behaviour of state officials, and the rise of a civic movement during the heady perestroika years. It is also very much Chelysheva’s own story, one of exile, separation, and resilience in the face of threats.”
Extract from the preface of They Followed Me in the Street by Luke Harding, award-winning journalist and author of best selling book Mafia State: How one repor-ter became an enemy of the brutal new Russia (Guardian books).
Chelysheva’s book is a
wake up call for the west – and the European Union in
particular.
OKSANA
CHELYSHEVA is
a Russian journalist and
activist, who lives in exile in
Finland and continues to highlight
the regressive approach to freedom of
expression in Russia. She has received
among the others Amnesty Media
award ”Human rights journalism
under threat” 2006 and The Oxfam
Novib/PEN International Free
Expression Award 2013.
Original in English and Finnish. Available also in Dutch. Foreign rights: [email protected]
32
Forthcoming in December 2014 Heikki Patomäki: Globalisation and the Future of Progressive Economic
Policies. A Public Investment Programme for Finland
(Into).
HEIKKI
PATOMÄKI is
Professor of World Politics
at the University of Helsinki,
Finland. He has written 20 books.
His most recent Academic book is The
Political Economy of Global Security.
War, Future Crises and Changes in Global
Governance (Routledge, 2008). He is
currently working on two new books,
Unprincipled Economics (with
Jamie Morgan) and Global
Futures.
The Great Eurozone Disaster is a valuable resource for both economists and political scientists concerned with modern Europe and worldwide economic and political integration.
- H. D. Renning, in CHOICE
33
Heikki Patomäki
THE GREAT EUROZONE DISASTERFrom Crisis to Global New Deal
The last couple of years have seen the eurozone lurch from crisis to calamity. In The Great Eurozone Disaster, Heikki Patomäki dissects the current crisis, revealing that its origins lie in the instability that has driven the process of finan-cialisation since the early 1970s. Furthermore, the public debt crises in the European deficit countries have been aggravated rather than alleviated by the responses of the Commission and leaders of the sur-plus countries, especially Germany.
Providing a captivating narrative about how Europe ended up in its present predicament, Pato-mäki presents a radical new vision for ‘global econo-mic democracy’ as the only viable way out of the cur-rent crisis.
Original in Finnish. Available also in English (Zed Books) and Greek. Foreign rights: [email protected]
The Great Eurozone Disaster demonstrates why Heikki Patomäki is one of Finland’s leading public intellectuals.
This compelling and eminently readable book on the Eurozone crisis sides with a revived Keynesianism. It
situates economic dynamics in a broader socio-political and above all global analysis that overcomes economistic
and nationalist myopia. It engages in a visionary scenario-painting of possible futures that breaks with post-
World War II nostalgia. Patomäki offers a breathtaking perspective that deserves serious consideration by anyone
concerned with a progressive and democratic future for Europe in the world.
- Magnus Ryner, King’s College London
34
Original title “Suomi öljyn jälkeen” was shortlisted for both of Finland’s top non-
fiction book awards in 2013, ”Tieto-Finlandia” Prize and
the Kanava award.
Will be pub-lished in English by Routledge on 31 October 2014. Original in Finnish.
If you are already familiar with the peak oil literature, this book will provide you with a
comprehensive, up-to-date summary that covers nearly every relevant topic within this field. If you are new to this discussion, prepare to have your
world shaken.
–Richard Heinberg, Senior Fellow, Post Carbon Institute
35
Rauli Partanen, Harri Paloheimo & Heikki Waris
THE WORLD AFTER CHEAP OILThe World After Cheap Oil offers a thorough package of information about oil, its uses and its role in our society’s important sectors. It presents the most prom-inent substitutes and alternatives, and their limits and promises. It also delves deep into the many risks, problems and mechanisms that can make the world after cheap oil a much more unstable place for nations and humanity as a whole. The book also explains why there has been so little public debate on the subject, and what the future might look like after oil produc-tion starts its final, terminal decline.
36
Contents of The World After Cheap Oil Introduction 1. Oil 2. The End of Cheap Oil 3. What Instead of Oil? 4. Oil in the Modern Industrialized Society 5. World After Cheap Oil Appendix 1: Oil in Numbers Appendix 2: Oil Markets Appendix 3: Reason Alone Won’t Make Change Happen
Foreign rights: Routledge, except in Portugues and German translated manuscripts available by [email protected]
Substantial evidence suggests that we are currently liv-ing at the peak of oil production with few prospects for cheap oil ever returning. Yet the media, politicians and regular people have hardly started to talk about what this means. Oil literally runs our societies from transportation to food production to economic activ-ity. Without oil, everything stops. There are powerful arguments that if we fail to increase oil production, we will also fail to grow our economy as a whole. For oil importing western nations the news is bleak, as higher oil prices seem to put a glass ceiling on their economic growth, making current debt problems worse no mat-ter what monetary and economic policies we might choose.
The World After Cheap Oil is a book on oil, its role in our industrialized society, the
reasons behind the peaking oil production and why it means the end of cheap oil, and
what this all will mean for you and me.
37
HARRI
PALOHEIMO
Founder of Peak Oil
Finland; CEO and co-founder
of Coreorient Ltd. developing
crowdsourced deliveries; M.Sc.; Phd
student at Aalto University on transport
energy efficiency; consultant for
companies, cities and the Finnish
Parliament in the areas of
energy and transport.
HEIKKI WARIS
Founder of Peak Oil
Finland; Co-founder of
Coreorient Ltd. developing
crowdsourced deliveries; M.Sc.;
consultant for companies, cities
and the Finnish Parliament in
the areas of energy and
transport.
VIL
LE
SU
TIN
EN
RAULI PARTANEN
President and founder
of Peak Oil Finland (a non-
profit organization), independent
writer, lecturer and consultant
on the environment, energy,
society, the economy and
their interrelations.
B.B.A.
38
Risto Isomäki
66 WAYS TO ABSORB CARBON AND IMPROVE THE EARTHS REFLECTIVITY From Reasonable Options to Mad Scientist Solutions
The melting of Greenland and West Antarctic ice sheets, arctic sea ice and Siberian permafrost has caused a rapid shift in the inter-national climate debate. A growing number of leading scientists and gov-ernments are now seriously discuss-ing and planning various emergency measures, or geo-
engineering solutions.Many of the proposed schemes are almost as dan-
gerous as the warming itself, and might actually lead to the end of the world as we know it. Safer and cheaper methods exist, but they have not received as much attention as the Mad Scientist solutions.
66 Ways to Absorb Carbon and Improve the Earth’s Reflectivity is the first book that presents the whole range of existing geoengineering proposals and ana-lyzes the dangers and benefits of each scheme. It also covers a wide range of less known ways to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions. Available in Finnish and English.
Foreign rights: [email protected]
39
RISTO
ISOMÄKI is a
science and science
fiction writer whose books
have been published in more
than fifteen languages.
He lives in Helsinki,
Finland.
40
Risto Isomäki
RETHINKING NUCLEAR POWER
Nuclear Electricity and Nuclear Weapons Proliferation (Spring 2015)
From the 1950’s until the 1970’s governments and corporations dreamt about nuclear aeroplanes and trains as well as freight and passenger ships pow-ered by small nuclear reactors. The Ploug-share programme of the US government searched constructive peaceful uses for nuclear weapons, like excavating canals and the basements of apartment houses and digging mines and gas
wells. Project Super-Orion tried to develop a spaceship that would have flown to Proxima Centauri pushed by the detonations of 25 million multi-megaton nuclear weapons. Sci-entists predicted that electricity provided by nuclear power plants would soon be so cheap that electric meters would become obsolete and unnecessary.
Today, everybody understands that such dreams were mere hallucinations, products of an age domi-nated by an euphoric belief in the limitless possibili-ties of modern science.
Rethinking Nuclear Power asks whether we have already woken up, or whether we are still dreaming. It claims that some of our still existing nuclear pro-grammes are at least as dangerous than the above-mentioned earlier proposals.
41
If we want to produce much more nuclear elec-tricity than we are currently doing, we have to move to breeder reactors that make more nuclear fuel than they consume, because there is not enough (econom-ically available) natural uranium. But if we move to a breeder reactor economy, every transportation of nuclear fuel to a power station provides the terror-ist organizations of the future with a new chance of acquiring nuclear weapons. The spread of breeder reactors would also multiply the number of nuclear weapons states.
Rethinking Nuclear Power analyzes the political and security choices related to breeder reactors and present kind of nuclear power plants and investigates whether our energy systems really needs nuclear power.
Isomäki Risto
CETI REVISITEDCETI Revisited inves-tigates the old idea of communicating with extraterrestrial civiliza-tions from a number of new angles. It proposes a new and affordable strategy for human-ity’s interstellar and intergalactic commu-nication efforts.
Most of our energy will soon come from the Sun. Large fields of para-bolic solar concent-rators can be connected together and used as enor-mous radio telescopes. They could also send radio messages to distant galaxies. Original in English.
42
Risto Isomäki
THE OIL PALM CONTROVERSYProblems, Possibilities and Politics
Oil palms and other food-producing palm trees used to be the agricul-tural mainstay in humid tropics for thousands of years, before the arrival of European colonists, but have since then been lar-gely replaced by western-style field farming and cattle raising.
Today, extensive oil palm cultivation might offer the most feasible and sustainable way of producing large quanti-ties of biofuels.
Unfortunately, many oil palm plantations have been established on the worst possible sites: on tropi-cal rainforest peat massifs, containing vast amounts of organic carbon. The expansion of oil palm plantations in Indonesia has sealed the doom of large rainforest areas in Indonesia and Malaysia. Whole villages have been evicted by infamous paramilitary forces. Plan-tations established on peatlands have released large quantities of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.
What kind of palm oil and biofuel policy should we adopt? Should we abandon all the possibilities related to tropical palm trees, or is it possible to pro-duce palm oil in a way that would both alleviate hun-ger and extreme poverty and reduce our greenhouse gas emissions? Original in Finnish.
43
Risto Isomäki & Esko Pettay
SHIPS, SULPHUR AND CLIMATEIs it a Good Time to Reduce the Sulphur Emissions from Shipping?
Sulphur dioxide pro-duced by ships can be harmful for human health when trans-ported by winds over densely inhabited areas. Because of this Interna-tional Maritime Organ-ization (IMO) decided in 2008 that the maxi-mum allowable sulphur content in ships’ fuel should be reduced to 0.5 per cent by 2020. The present average is 2.7 per cent.
But the sulphur spread by ships over the oceans also plays another and very different role: it has a strong cooling impact on our planet. Ships’ sulphur emissions have this far masked a major part of the global warming caused by carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases.
According to the worst-case scenarios the enforce-ment of the IMO treaty would roughly double the rate of global warming. Much of the impact would concentrate at the North Atlantic and accelerate the melting of the Arctic pack ice, terrestrial and subma-rine permafrost and the Greenland ice sheet. This could be dangerous, because the Arctic contains enormous stores of carbon and methane. These fro-zen greenhouse gas deposits will be released into the atmosphere if the region heats too much. Original in English.
44
KUKKA RANTA is an
investigative journalist,
writer and freelance
photographer. Her previous book
“Muutaman töhryn tähden” (Into
2011) was about the street art
subculture and repressive
anti-graffiti campaiging in
Helsinki city.
EMMA KARI is a
green politician and
environmental expert, who
has worked for many years
for nature conservation and
sustainable lifestyle
related issue.
45
Emma Kari & Kukka Ranta
FISH TALES Emptying oceans and people left ashore
Fish tales is a book about the fish trade effects on emptying oceans and human migration. Approxi-mately half of the EU’s imports of fish is caught illegally.
Content includes: In the shadow of the power companies – Salmon vs. power companies – Rulers of the rapids – The last professional fishermen – Destroyer flotillas – Dissipation – Vanishing species – Fish farming – Ocean acidification – Fish wars – Gear and equipment – Fish are animals – Fish feel pain – Whose fish? – Tragedy of the seas – Common rules of play – The archipelagic electorate – Last of their species – Unprotected free game – Voice of authority – The politics of overfishing – Subsidised trawlers – Detective of the illegal fish trade – Illegal fish – Alleged corruption – Working on a trawler – Overfishing – The right to local waters – Pressure rising in West Africa – Government sell-out – Occupied Western Sahara– Two-way piracy in Somalia – The big crash – Last resort – Sea Horse – Life on the streets – Responsible sourcing – Waves of change – Sustainable seafood vending – Pro salmon initiative– Hope for the River Kymi – What can I do?
Original in Finnish. Sample translation in English available. Foreign rights: [email protected]
46
Maia Raitanen
THE WHALE, THE WHALE!The World’s most charming whale book
The book of 76 whales divided into nine tribes, with humorous drawings of whales and stories about their way of life. It is suitable for all ages, fascinated by the mysteries of the deep sea.
Maia Raitanen has illustrated textbooks and non-fiction books since 1980. Her earlier works include Finland’s Charming Fishing Book (Sano Muikku: Suomen vie-hättävin kalakirja, Into 2012). Original in Finnish.
Foreign rights: [email protected]
47
48
Juha Suoranta & Sanna Ryynänen
REBELLIOUS RESEARCHRebellious research departs from the mainstream social sciences by joining forces with diverse groups of people in the struggle for equality and justice. It takes a stand on social and political issues, is action ori-ented, and participatory.
The concept of ‘rebellious research’ brings together various research traditions, discourses and meth-ods that bind practice and theory into transformative praxis for a better world, such as workers inquiry, crit-ical cartography, public sociology, liberation theology, feminist research and guerrilla history.
Rebellious research is a socially committed activ-ity, based on horizontal relations between all those
49
SANNA
RYYNÄNEN is a
social scientist and social
pedagogue who currently works
as a Senior Lecturer of Social
Pedagogy at the University of Eastern
Finland. She has familiarised herself
with rebellious research practices
in Brazil where she has studied,
done research and
lectured.
involved in the research process. The researcher is eth-ically and politically united with the people and the circumstances in which it takes place and seeks to be effective. The book is a contribution to the debate on what social research should be if it is to be of real value in solving global social and ecological problems.
Sample translation in English available. Other Into books by Juha Suoranta are Hidden in Plain Sight (2010) and Reception Centre (2011).Foreign rights: [email protected]
JUHA SUORANTA
is Professor of
Adult Education in the
University of Tampere. His
research areas are research
methodology, critical
pedagogy, and radical
adult education.
50
Kimmo Kiljunen
COUNTRIES OF THE WORLDFlags and History
Countries of the World – Flags and History is a unique combination of the history of flags and of independ-ent countries that offers an often surprising perspec-tive on the world. It is a comprehensive volume that covers all 194 independent countries of the world, reviewing their history through the evolution of their national flags. The book illustrates all national flags ever used in the world throughout history.
Rich in curious details, the book is an excel-lent source of quiz questions. Intended for the gen-eral reader and richly illustrated, it is equally suitable for political professionals in search of in-depth back-ground.
Foreign Rights: [email protected]
KIMMO
KILJUNEN is a
Special Representative for
Peace Mediation at the Ministry
for Foreign Affairs of Finland. He is a
specialist on democracy and human rights
issues especially in the context of the OSCE
and Council of Europe. He has is a Docent in
development research at the University of
Helsinki. He was a Member of Parliament for
a long time and has published nearly two
dozen books on international politics
and global development issues.
VIL
LE
SU
TIN
EN
51
52
ANTTI VIHINEN was
a CEO of Sibelius Hall
Congress and Concert Centre
in Lahti, Finland, in 1999–2010.
His doctoral dissertation dealed
with Jean Sibelius’s association
with Nazis and he was a
professor of cultural theory
in Karlsruhe, Germany.
53
Antti Vihinen
ME AND MOZARTMinä ja Mozart (Me and Mozart) is brazen and exhil-arating biography of Mozart, the greatest rock star of 17th century. Composer’s correspondence unwraps an incredible life story of a child star and a genious, but also a career enhancement by-product of his father and a true friend of potty humour. Who actually was this Wolfgang Amadé Mozart, later known as Ama-deus?
Antti Vihinen combines Mozart’s adventures with his own life story. As a result the book opens surpris-ing perspectives throughout the Western cultural his-tory.
Foreign rights: [email protected]
54
Kai Sadinmaa
10 COMMANDMENTS TO THE CHURCHThe church has forgotten the political radicalism of Jesus. Jesus of Nazareth was not a lapdog of the mighty and powerful but an insurgent, a liberator of the poor. The Church has distorted the real meaning of the Gospel and tells lies about Jesus.The priest Kai Sadinmaa’s “10 commandments to the Church” is an irresistible book. It is a stumbling block to the establishment. Both believers and non-believers will listen to Sadinmaa’s powerful words. Original in Finnish.
10 commandments: 1. Do not lie about Jesus 2. Stop wooing new members 3. Preach political gospel 4. Quit the investment business 5. Stop favouring the rich 6. Do not bow to power 7. Give up hypocrisy 8. Give up the mass and other forms of magic 9. Let homosexuals love 10. Do not turn the Bible into God
Foreign rights: [email protected]
55
“Chapter 1: Do not lie about Jesus
The true Jesus is not the shy, quiet, lamb-like Christ described by the church but an untamed and masculine Lion of Judea: he is a man full of defiance and fury. He is not a compromise-prone consensus man but the unconditional master of Nazareth who does not truckle to power and might, does not nod his head, does not bow to every direc-tion condescendingly like a priest so that nobody will be offended. He does not fawn or woo or try to secure a pleasant post before retirement, the taxing right or other perks offered by the church, but leaps straight into the fire without calculating the cost, the pros and cons, caring nothing about his own safety. He gives up everything – family, wife, children, friends, career, suc-cess, power, glory, life – but he will not give up free-dom. For that he pays the highest price.
He fights to the last on behalf of the small man, challenging accustomed practises and traditional hab-its. He opposes home, religion and fatherland alike so that all people can be sisters and brothers to each other. He does not found a religion but destroys it in the name of the freedom of man, of love, and of God. He tears down oppressing doctrines and dead letters so that we can live, breathe, and love. He attacks the subjugation and enslavement of men. He topples all authorities, breaks fences, crushes prejudices, turns
every stone, looks you in the eye, challenges and
teases, comes straight at you, speaks directly to your heart through all walls, expla-nations, excuses, demanding your
soul, your heart and your will.”
KAI SADINMAA
is a priest and a writer.
He is the author of the radio
play Different Kind of Devotion and
and the stage play The Redeemer of
Vuosaari. Sadinmaa has become known
among other things for his radical
radiospeeches. He has been ordained
as a priest in 1994. Born in Lapland,
Sadinmaa now lives in Helsinki
with his family.
56
Capital is running rampant on the greycold streets of Budapest. All commodities are for sale and the value of human beings is low. But a sound from the deep calls to even lower depths of the soil. There, in the veins of the city throbs a blue EV-3 metro train. It carries an alternative.
TAMAS
MATEKOVITS
is on a search for a
gang of co-bandits with a
rangefinder camera in his
hand, social sciences in his
head and a deep commitment
for social transformation
in his heart.
57
Lajos KassákBéla Tarr
André KertészAttila Kotányi
Lukács & Mészáros Syrius feat László Hortobágyi
Attila József
Tamas Matekovits
BUDABEST METRO Budapest Metro is a heavy and hard-hitting non-fic-tion novel and photographic essay in a collage style. It’s a journey into the deep structures of the cultural history and contemporary life of Budapest. Together with a fascinating gallery of radicals from differ-ent times and everyday metro passengers, the book searches for a breakthrough from the vicious circle of our mode of being.
Radical construction and movement in the basic structures of the city. The low frequencies in the metro tunnels start to break the apocapitalist order. The underground photographic architecture repre-sents our challenge to create a communal mode of being.
German translation sample available. Foreign rights: [email protected]
58
Johanna Pohjola
MATEA colourful book on Indians sacred beverage and Che Guevara’s favorite drink. Mate-book includes fun facts and tips for beginners as well as experts. Illustrated nonfiction book takes the reader to a trip to South America, and guides you through the mate culture.
Original in Finnish. Available also in Estonian. Foreign rights: [email protected]
59
JOHANNA
POHJOLA is
journalist specialized
in South America. She has
lived in Argentina, made here
anthropology master’s thesis
on mate and drank hundreds
of litres of this sacred
beverage.
VIL
LE
SU
TIN
EN
60
MARJUT HJELT is a
folklorists, journalist
and author, who has written
books on dark elves, mermaid,
goblins and elves. Her first book
tells a story of 1800s sorcerer,
conjurers and healer
Kuikka-Koponen.
OO
NA
HJE
LT
VIL
LE
SU
TIN
EN
61
Marjut Hjelt
CHILDHOOD FAIRY TALESBeautiful and richly illustrated nonfiction book presents vividly the classic fairy tale books and the characters, fairy tales beloved writers and collectors.
The work is based on the Brummeriana-collection of Finnish National Library, acquired by the National Library in the early 1990s, from the well-known chil-dren’s book collector, Professor Markus Brummer-Korvenkontiolta. The Brummeriana collection of more than 20 000 books is an internationally impor-tant collection, real treasure for friends and researchers of children and youth literature. It contains many rari-ties – books that do not exist anywhere else. Original in Finnish.
Foreign rights: [email protected]
62
Forthcoming spring 2015
63
Into-eBooks.comgathers together already over 50 publishers
from all over the world. It offers better distribution for independent publishers and
provides an open and alternative platform for eBooks.
For more information, please contact
Milla Karppinen, [email protected].
Forthcoming spring 2015
64
Into books 2014
65
Into books 2014
66
67
68
Sami Koivuniemi
69
Into crew
JAANA AIRAKSINENPublisher
LIONEL CLERC
TIMO KALEVI FORSS
ARI HÄKKINEN
TEX HÄNNINEN
ESKO JUHOLA
NINA KAIRISALO
MILLA KARPPINEN
[email protected]. +358 40 179 5297email:[email protected]
SAMI KOIVUNIEMI
Sami Koivuniemi
ANTTI KUKKONEN
MAIJA LÄHTEENMÄKI
TATU MATILAINEN
JONI NIKKOLA
ANNAPAJALA
MIKA RÖNKKÖ Editor-Chief
ELINA SALONEN
VILLE SUTINEN
70
Voima is the sister of Into, a monthly Finnish paper focusing on culture, environmental issues and radical politics. It is available free of charge in 600 di�erent venues across Finland, reaching 90 000 monthly readers.
Voima is mostly funded by advertisements, which paradoxically seems to be the most e�ective way to stay journalistically independent.
.�
71
.
Tim
o Aarnialan kuvitusta
B. T
ravenin romaaniin K
uolemanlaiva.
For hunters of real life and for shipwrecked
genuine issuesno miracles.
w w w . r o s e b u d . f i
High-quality non-fiction book shop Kolmen sepän kirjakauppa at the Kaivopiha quarters • Tiedekulma a.k.a. Think Corner in Porthania
at the University of Helsinki • Kaapelin Kauppa at the Cable FactoryKorjaamo Shop in Töölö • Kurvin Kirja in the lively and ever so fashionable Kallio district • And also a small and beatiful shop
in old Market hall, Kuopio, Savolax
Rosebud shops are in centre of Helsinki:
In the middle of arrogant, all dominantmulti-national financial power
one must have knowledge and civilization.Heavy words, contemplated wisdom, hope.
Dreams of a better world.Black on white. A good book
72PHOTOGRAPH: TARU KALVI
“ T h i s i s t h e t r a d i t i o n a l h i g h p o i n t
o f t h e fe s t i v a l ” ,
w e h e a r y o u s a y b e f o r e t h e c o m b i n a t i o n o f
m o v i n g p i c t u r e s a n d l i v e m u s i c s t a r t .
T h a n k y o u , Pe t e r v o n B a g h .
H y v ä ä m a t k a a , Pe t t e r i .
B e c a u s e o f y o u w e u n d e r s t a n d s o m u c h
m o r e a b o u t t h e b e a u t y a n d t h e d e e p e s t
m e a n i n g s o f t h e a r t o f s h a d o w s a n d l i g h t .
M a n y t i m e s t h e f r a g i l e a n d t h i n f i l m i s t h e
s t r o n g e s t t o o l .
PHOTOGRAPH: TARU KALVI
fiFinnish
lesson
s
I N S PI R E D I NVOLVE D
14
Into is an independent and radical publishing house from Helsinki, Finland. We publish 60–70 non-fiction / fiction titles annually, combining
established authors with new arrivals. Into focuses on politics, environment, economics,
history, development, gender and popular culture.
Into also runs Into-eBooks.com, an extensive collection of English-language fiction and
non-fiction titles by writers and independent publishers.
www.intokustannus.fi
GET INTO
WORDS INTO ACTION
The Inuit have 53 words for snow
In Finland we have one word for publishing with endless
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gusto, passion...