Splog Diglot Senior Member Czech Republic anthonylauder.c Joined 5679 days ago 1062 posts - 3263 votes Speaks: English*, Czech Studies: Mandarin
| Message 9 of 15 02 November 2009 at 3:29am | IP Logged |
For bilingual books in Czech + (English or French or German or Spanish) the main publisher is: Garamond particularly enjoyable are the Crime fiction books
1 person has voted this message useful
|
aru-aru Triglot Senior Member Latvia Joined 6467 days ago 244 posts - 331 votes Speaks: Latvian*, English, Russian
| Message 10 of 15 20 August 2010 at 10:55pm | IP Logged |
China and Taiwan publishes lots of those. I own a few, and I'll just give the names of the publisher.
汉英对照 stands for a bilingual book (Chinese-English), Google that and I believe you'll get enough of other choices. Other options 英汉对照, 中英双语.
外文出版社 (Foreign Languages Press) Their 经典的回声(Echo of Classics) Series is probably a good choice.
外语教学与研究出版社 (Foreign Language Teaching and Research Press) Some books here Chinese-French, Chinese-Korean and Chinese-Japanese books available
华语教学出版社 (Sinolingua) Your stop for bilingual grammar books and what not. Also available for a few different languages. Website here. Also offers two books by Ba Jin in bilingual edition. This is a publisher that I really like, though I do not have any bilingual novel of theirs.
中国人民大学出版社 (China Renmin University Press)
远方出版社 These guys publish Western classics in dual language version. I have Jules Verne. This seems to be a good choice for those not in favour of Chinese classics.
繁体字 anyone? Go for The Chinese University Press They have Chinese-English Bilingual Edition series, and the choice is BIG. Available on Amazon.
But guys, there are more. That side of the world loves parallel texts as much as Ilya Frank does.
1 person has voted this message useful
|
wilzy Newbie United States Joined 5193 days ago 15 posts - 24 votes Speaks: English* Studies: Turkish
| Message 11 of 15 26 January 2011 at 9:24am | IP Logged |
The AlKitab site listed above has quite a few Arabic/English readers, but they vary quite a bit with regard to difficulty.
I don't know about all the books listed, but thought this rating of books might be useful, especially for someone who wants an easier book to start out with (This is just my opinion of the ones I've read or temporarily given up on - it is based mostly on the amount of unknown vocab)
easiest - The Black Tulip, The Secret Garden
next level - A Man From Glasgow, Little Women, The Black Arrow, Tom Sawyer
next level - The Grapes of Wrath, Tom Jones, Moonfleet, Kidnapped, The Little Prince, The Adventures of Sinbad
more difficult - Cry The Beloved Country, Jamican Inn, Animal Farm, Alice In Wonderland
most difficult - Crime and Punishment, A Passage to India
3 persons have voted this message useful
|
KSAKSA Groupie Australia Joined 5155 days ago 65 posts - 99 votes Speaks: English* Studies: Arabic (Gulf)
| Message 12 of 15 30 March 2011 at 10:24am | IP Logged |
Thanks for listing the level of difficulty of the Dar Al-Bihar series...that's EXACTLY the type of list I needed!
1 person has voted this message useful
|
Warp3 Senior Member United States forum_posts.asp?TID= Joined 5545 days ago 1419 posts - 1766 votes Speaks: English* Studies: Spanish, Korean, Japanese
| Message 13 of 15 30 March 2011 at 4:33pm | IP Logged |
For Korean/English books, there are quite a few here: http://www.hanbooks.com/boinenwkotr.html
Sisa English Corp is the company that publishes most of the titles on that page and their selection is actually much larger than what Hanbooks shows. In the back of "어린 왕자 / The Little Prince" (the only one of the Sisa English Corp books that I've bought thus far) they have a list of 100 Korean/English books that they publish (and that may not even be the total now).
The Sisa books are designed for Koreans learning English (so the vocab notes explain English terms and phrases in Korean instead of vice-versa), but this doesn't really prevent them from being used the other way around and they are very inexpensive ($7.44/ea at Hanbooks and the books say 4,500원 on the back which means they should be even cheaper for anyone in South Korea).
Edited by Warp3 on 30 March 2011 at 4:36pm
2 persons have voted this message useful
|
pingvin10 Groupie Hungary Joined 6288 days ago 68 posts - 114 votes Speaks: Hungarian* Studies: English, German, Spanish, Turkish
| Message 14 of 15 30 January 2012 at 9:08pm | IP Logged |
For Hungarian (with corresponding translations in English, German, French, Spanish,
Italian and - though I can't find the section now, but I own some Russian novels too) I
recommend NORAN
Edited by pingvin10 on 30 January 2012 at 9:09pm
1 person has voted this message useful
|