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📦 "Corrugated Chronicles: Unpacking Liner Types & Uses 🏭📜 | Kraft, Test, Coated & More!"876543210

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📖✨ Terry Pratchett’s Discworld series is a sprawling, satirical, and endlessly imaginative collection of novels set on the Discworld 🌍—a flat, disc-shaped world that rests on the backs of four giant elephants 🐘🐘🐘🐘, themselves standing atop the shell of Great A’Tuin, an enormous spacefaring turtle 🐢✨🚀. First introduced in The Colour of Magic (1983) 📜🔮, the series spans 41 novels 📚 and is one of the most beloved fantasy series of all time. Pratchett’s world blends rich worldbuilding 🏰, humor 😂, and sharp social commentary 🎭, often parodying traditional fantasy tropes while exploring themes of politics 🗳️, philosophy 🤔, technology ⚙️, and human nature ❤️. While the books are all set in the same universe, they are loosely connected, with multiple subseries focusing on different characters and settings. 🧙‍♂️ Rincewind & The Wizards One of the most prominent story arcs follows the misadventures of Rincewind, a cowardly and inept wizard 🎩✨ from the Unseen University 🏛️, whose greatest skill is running away 🏃‍♂️💨. His journey, often accompanied by the sentient and dangerously unpredictable Luggage 🧳😈, takes him across the Disc’s strangest corners, introducing readers to its bizarre and comically dangerous landscapes. 🚔 The City Watch & Sam Vimes Another major storyline centers around the Ankh-Morpork City Watch 🚔🏙️, led by the cynical yet fiercely dedicated Sam Vimes 👮‍♂️🥃. These novels, beginning with Guards! Guards! 🐉, explore crime, corruption, and justice ⚖️ in Ankh-Morpork, a city where the only real law is pragmatism 💰. *Vimes’ character arc*—from a washed-up drunk 🍺 to a nobleman and defender of the people—is one of the series’ most compelling. 🧙‍♀️ The Witches of Lancre The series also features the witches of Lancre 🧹🌙, including: The formidable Granny Weatherwax 😠🔮 The earthy and practical Nanny Ogg 🍷😂 The young and determined Magrat Garlick 🌿✨ (later succeeded by Agnes Nitt 🎶) These novels, beginning with Equal Rites 📖, delve into folklore, gender roles, and the nature of power, often offering a uniquely Pratchett-esque take on fairy tales and myths 🏰✨. 💀 Death & His Granddaughter Another recurring protagonist is Death 💀—an actual anthropomorphic figure who speaks in CAPITAL LETTERS 🔠 and, despite his job, is deeply fascinated by humanity 🧍‍♂️. His books, starting with Mort ⏳, explore fate, free will, and the nature of existence 🌀 with a blend of humor and deep philosophical insight 🤯. His granddaughter, Susan Sto Helit 🏫, also plays a key role in some of these stories, bridging the gap between the supernatural and the mundane. ⚙️ Industrial Revolution & Other Subseries Other major subseries include the Industrial Revolution books, which focus on how technology, innovation, and capitalism shape society. Moving Pictures 🎬 satirizes Hollywood. The Truth 📰 explores journalism. Going Postal 📬 follows the redemption of conman Moist von Lipwig 🎩💰 as he revitalizes Ankh-Morpork’s postal service. These books show how progress and tradition clash in ways both absurd and profound 🤖📜. 🔥 Standalone Novels & Thought-Provoking Themes Beyond these subseries, Discworld includes standalone novels, such as: Pyramids 🏺 Small Gods ⛩️ The Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents 🐀🎭 Each offering unique explorations of history, religion, philosophy, and morality ⚖️📜. Pratchett’s ability to weave humor with deep, thought-provoking themes is a hallmark of his writing, making the series accessible to both casual readers and those looking for layered storytelling 📖✨. 🏛️ More Than Just Fantasy Despite its comedic approach 😂, Discworld is filled with incisive observations 👀 on real-world issues, from politics and bureaucracy 🏛️📑 to human resilience 💪 and the power of storytelling itself 🖊️. Pratchett’s sharp wit and compassionate perspective shine throughout.

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6 episodios

Portada del episodio Audio only episode 01

Audio only episode 01

It is a rare phenomenon in the vast and oft-redundant corpus of children's literature that a work achieves not merely longevity but a sort of transcendent immortality. Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland , Lewis Carroll’s 1865 foray into the delirium of the dreamworld, belongs to this gilded pantheon, not as a mere divertissement for the young, but as an ontological ballet—an allegorical pas de deux between sense and nonsense, identity and fluidity, reality and recursive self-annihilation. That the book is often sequestered within the nursery is not only a gross misapprehension but, dare I say, a tragic underestimation of its manifold philosophical valences. At first glance, the premise appears trifling: a precocious child tumbles through a rabbit hole into a world ungoverned by the strictures of adult rationality. But to say Carroll merely "wrote a children’s book" is akin to accusing Joyce of composing a seaside holiday brochure. Indeed, Wonderland is less a place than a state of cognitive dislocation, an epistemological Möbius strip where the familiar grotesquely mirrors the strange. In Carroll's genius lies the conjuration of a realm wherein the scaffolding of logic collapses—not in nihilistic surrender, but in playful subversion.Consider, if you will, the chessboard of dialectical inversions Carroll deploys: the Mad Hatter’s riddle with no answer, the Queen’s fanatical invocation to behead, the Cheshire Cat’s grin that lingers even after the body has vanished—each an exquisite manifestation of logocentric unraveling. These episodes, while often dismissed as whimsical or eccentric, function rather like Derridean footnotes scribbled in invisible ink: they deconstruct their own coherence. The tea party is not a party at all, but a grim satire of stagnation and ritual; the Caucus Race a brutal allegory of democratic futility; the Caterpillar’s existential inquiry (“Who are YOU?”) a metaphysical gauntlet thrown before the reader’s own unstable subjectivity.It is in Alice herself, however, that the novel’s most revelatory vector unfolds. She is neither heroine nor oracle, but a cipher—fluid, elastic, uncertain. Her frequent oscillations in size mirror the vertigo of identity in flux. She forgets poems, misrecites rhymes, speaks with animals, and grapples constantly with the rupture between the child’s empirical intuition and the adult’s ossified logic. Through her, Carroll proposes that identity is not a Platonic constant but a negotiation—a performative act, a dream within a dream, an echo heard through a cracked mirror. Of course, no review worth its salt could omit mention of Carroll’s linguistic prestidigitation. The prose scintillates with neologisms, parodies, portmanteaux, and recursive puns—a lexiconic play-space where language liberates itself from syntax and sense. “Jabberwocky,” though technically a poem in the sequel, hovers over this text like a ghost of future verbal entropy. Here is not mere whimsy but something sublime: language erupting into ecstatic nonsense, a reminder that communication is not always about conveying but concealing. And then there is the moral, or rather, the resplendent lack thereof. Carroll’s refusal to moralize—to deliver tidy lessons or sanctimonious epilogues—places him in delicious opposition to the heavy-handed didacticism of his Victorian contemporaries. Wonderland is not concerned with making good girls or industrious boys; it does not seek to correct the child but to empower their bewilderment. It whispers, seductively, that confusion is sacred. In sum, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland is not a tale for children, but for the child in the philosopher, the skeptic, the poet, and the madman. It is a text that, like Alice herself, resists being pinned down, even as it dances delightfully on the pin.

20 de jul de 2025 - 10 min
Soy muy de podcasts. Mientras hago la cama, mientras recojo la casa, mientras trabajo… Y en Podimo encuentro podcast que me encantan. De emprendimiento, de salid, de humor… De lo que quiera! Estoy encantada 👍
Soy muy de podcasts. Mientras hago la cama, mientras recojo la casa, mientras trabajo… Y en Podimo encuentro podcast que me encantan. De emprendimiento, de salid, de humor… De lo que quiera! Estoy encantada 👍
MI TOC es feliz, que maravilla. Ordenador, limpio, sugerencias de categorías nuevas a explorar!!!
Me suscribi con los 14 días de prueba para escuchar el Podcast de Misterios Cotidianos, pero al final me quedo mas tiempo porque hacia tiempo que no me reía tanto. Tiene Podcast muy buenos y la aplicación funciona bien.
App ligera, eficiente, encuentras rápido tus podcast favoritos. Diseño sencillo y bonito. me gustó.
contenidos frescos e inteligentes
La App va francamente bien y el precio me parece muy justo para pagar a gente que nos da horas y horas de contenido. Espero poder seguir usándola asiduamente.

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