Brazil’s Best-Selling Paulo Coelho Posts Novels on Web for Free

Paulo Coelho, Brazilian author Publishing House HarperCollins has declared 2008 the year of Brazilian best-selling novelist Paulo Coelho. To celebrate the year-long event, the company is featuring Coelho's novels in its Browse Inside Full Access program.

Each month a different novel will be posted and readers will be able to enjoy it online for free by visiting the Harpercollins website.

Right now the New York Times bestseller The Alchemist, which just celebrated 20 years of its release in Portuguese, is the offering. And as a bonus, readers can also have a sneak peek of an excerpt from Brida, a novel by Coelho that has never before been published in English. Brida will only be available in stores on June 24.

The Alchemist is a simple tale of a young Spanish shepherd boy seeking a treasure in the pyramids of Egypt. Along the way, he learns to follow his dreams, listen to his heart, live in the present, and risk everything he has to pursue his destiny.

To celebrate the 20th anniversary of the book Harvey Weinstein has just announced that he intends to produce a film based on The Alchemist with Laurence Fishburne slated to direct and star. Production is set to begin in late Spring 2009.

Brida is a story of love, passion, mystery, and spirituality. Coelho wrote Brida right after The Alchemist, and it launched his career as an international novelist. It has never been published in English – until now.

With sales of over 85 million copies worldwide, Paulo Coelho's books have been translated into 63 languages and published in 150 countries.

The Brazilian author is the recipient of numerous prestigious international awards and was inducted into the Brazilian Academy of Letters in 2002. Mr. Coelho also writes throughout the world a syndicate weekly column.

Service

www.hapercollins.com

Tags:

You May Also Like

Just-Discovered Subterranean River Under the Amazon Might Be the World’s Largest

In Brazil, a group of scientists say they have found signs of a huge ...

Brazilian Indians Get Land, But Can’t Use It

On March 29, the bounds of the À‘ande Ru Marangatu indigenous land, located in ...

UK Reverts Course on Imposing Visa Restrictions on Brazilians

Plans to impose visa restrictions on tourists from Brazil have been put on hold ...

Brazil’s US$ 2 Billion Nigerian Investment Starts to Bear Oil

Brazil's state-controlled oil multinational Petrobras started production of oil in Agbami field, in Nigeria. ...

Bullish Brazil Gets Record High Stocks and Lowest Dollar in 9 Years

The Brazilian stock exchange (Bovespa), this Friday, May 2, in its first trading session ...

Brazil’s Trade Surplus Keeps Bulls Busy

Latin American stocks were mixed, with Brazilian stocks posting modest gains amid positive trade ...

A Brazilian bishop takes a picture of the pope

Pope Pans in Brazil Media and Aggressive Proselytism of Evangelical Sects

World's most catholic country finally got its own saint. Pope Benedict XVI canonized, Friday, ...

Brazil’s TAM and Gol Sell Air Tickets to Be Paid in 48 Months

Brazil's Gol and TAM airlines, which between them account for close to 90% of ...

Haiti Getting Candy and Water from Brazil

Sugar mill owners and business leaders in the states of Paraí­ba and Pernambuco, Brazil, have ...

Arabs and Brazilians Should Have One Voice, Says Brazil

The Brazilian minister of Foreign Relations, Celso Amorim, stated yesterday, March 22, during an ...