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The Street of Crocodiles, also known as The Cinnamon Shops (Polish: Sklepy cynamonowe, lit. ' Cinnamon Shops ' ), is a 1934 collection of short stories written by Bruno Schulz . First published in Polish, the collection was translated into English by Celina Wieniewska [ pl ] in 1963.
The book tells two separate but related tales: first, the romance between Nacib Saad, a respectable bar owner of Syrian origin, and his new cook Gabriela, an innocent and captivating migrant worker from the impoverished interior. The gap between the worlds of Nacib Saad and Gabriela make their romance a challenge to the unwritten rules of ...
The story is set in the 1920s in Cinnamon Gardens, a wealthy suburb of Colombo, Sri Lanka.It depicts the political unrest at the end of Britain’s colonial rule. The novel illustrates the socio-political climate of 1920s Sri Lanka, which helps to elucidate many of the issues that continue to plague modern-day Sri Lanka.
Author Tracey J Morgan pens a book about the capybara's great escape from her zoo enclosure.
Cinnamon Skin (1982) is the twentieth novel in the Travis McGee series by John D. MacDonald. Like a few other books in the series, McGee ends up traveling to Mexico to solve a crime. His friend Meyer's niece is killed by a bomb on the John Maynard Keynes, Meyer's houseboat, with two other people. As Meyer and McGee investigate the explosion ...
[a] Cinnamon also claims to have found Gwen disemboweled and hanging from a tree, and blames both deaths on Dark Mill South. Jade notes that the deaths sound similar to the opening scenes of the slasher movie Scream. Cinnamon is taken to the police station for her safety, but escapes. Banner and Jade follow Cinnamon to a nearby retirement home.
When his mother offers him chocolate syrup on his pancakes, Henry remembers moderation and decides to go without the syrup, using cinnamon instead. He is so delighted by the taste of cinnamon that he finds himself thinking of all the other foods that might be improved with cinnamon, only to wonder if there might be such a thing as "cinnamon fever".
Chai Time in Cinnamon Gardens is an enticing, if not entirely realised, opportunity for a wider conversation about Australia, the diversity of its people and the gaps in our collective cultural knowledge. This is a book that requires concentration and full immersion – but it will reward the reader for that investment." [3]