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Southampton Row

Author: Anne Perry

Number of pages: 336

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER In Victorian England, a divisive election is fast approaching. Passions are so enflamed that Thomas Pitt, shrewd mainstay of the London police, has been ordered not to solve a crime but to prevent a national disaster. The aristocratic Tory candidate—and Pitt’s archenemy—is Charles Voisey. The Liberal candidate is Aubrey Serracold, whose wife’s dalliance with spiritualism threatens his chances. Indeed, she is one of the participants in a late-night séance that becomes the swan song of a stylish clairvoyant who is found brutally murdered the next morning in her house on Southampton Row. Meanwhile, Pitt’s wife, Charlotte, and their children are enjoying a country vacation—unaware that they, too, are deeply endangered by the same fanatical forces hovering over the steadfast Pitt.

Style & Splendor

Author: Anne Kjellberg , Susan North

Number of pages: 112

Queen Maud of Norway was renowned for her stylish dress. Daughter of Edward VII and Queen Alexandra, she was born a princess and became Queen of Norway in 1905. She had exemplary taste and a strong interest in fashion, and her royal lifestyle required appropriate dress for every occasion. Her wardrobe includes a range of stunning creations dating from her wedding trousseau of 1896 to the latest Worth designs purchased just months before her death in 1938. Queen Maud's clothes document an extraordinary era of fashion history, from the decorative but elaborate dress of the Victorian era to the streamlined chic of the 1930s: clothes for the modern working monarch. Her wardrobe encompasses the public and private like no other collection, from sumptuous state gowns and elegant evening dresses for official occasions to riding habits, winter sportswear, and simple tailored suits for afternoons in the garden with her grandchildren. Maud engaged with contemporary fashion throughout her long life, and commissioned many of the great designers of the day, notably, Worth, Blancquaert and Morin-Blossier. Her wardrobe illustrates the impeccable standards of couture dressmaking and tailoring of...

The Alice Stories

Author: Jesse Lee Kercheval

Number of pages: 227

A series of interlinked short stories chronicles the world of Alice, a girl raised in Florida, who finds love with the scion of a family of Norwegian-Wisconsin farmers, her beloved Anders, and their family as they confront the joys, sorrows, and challenges of life together in Wisconsin. Winner of the Prairie Schooner Book Prize in Fiction.

Logical Learning Theory

Author: Joseph F. Rychlak

Number of pages: 387

In 1989, B. F. Skinner told Joseph Rychlak that the greatest disappointment resulting from the "cognitive revolution" was the turning of the human organism into a machine. Intrigued by this statement, Rychlak decided that after many years of formulation it was time to present his fundamentally teleological view of the human being, which he calls the "logical learning theory" (LLT). In this new theoretical perspective the author re-presents such concepts as intention, purpose, and free will. Significant aspects of the "mind-body" issue are explored here. Rychlak addresses teleological issues and provides a language for proper conceptualization. He uses experimental findings to support the notion of behavior as self-directed rather than mechanistic. In the process, Rychlak places LLT on the side of teleological explanation, in which concepts like free will, self-choice, purpose and intention are no longer dismissed. Rychlak compares LLT and existing formulations of behavior, including classical and operant conditioning, social learning theory, social constructionism, cognitive science, gestalt theories, and personality theories. Extensive research data and thorough discussions...

Carry the One

Author: Carol Anshaw

Number of pages: 253

When a car of inebriated guests from Carmen's wedding hits and kills a girl on a country road, Carmen and the people involved in the accident connect, disconnect and reconnect throughout 25 subsequent years of marriage, parenthood, holidays and tragedies. By the award-winning author of Aquamarine. 50,000 first printing.

From Time to Time

Author: Jack Finney

Number of pages: 303

Ruben Prien is attempting to prevent World War I, but the man carrying papers to America that might avert the catastrophe is traveling aboard the Titanic

Washing the Stones

Author: Maude Meehan

Number of pages: 217

Maude Meehan's wise and tender poetry chronicles her seventy-five year journey as political activist, wife, mother, and now widow. Rich experiences of liberal politics and love with her husband of fifty-seven years.

Robert Dunsmuir

Author: Lynne Bowen

Number of pages: 177

Though he came to the wilds of colonial Vancouver Island as an indentured coal miner, Robert Dunsmuir became a mine owner, a railway builder, and the richest man in British Columbia.

The Drowning Pool

Author: Ross Macdonald

Number of pages: 244

Out of print since 1988, here is a classic Lew Archer thriller by Mystery Writers of America Grand Master Ross Macdonald. When an iron-willed matriarch with an oil field in her backyard is found floating in the pool, Lew Archer ventures into the bizarre world of her family. Previous publisher: Bantam. Copyright © Libri GmbH. All rights reserved.

The Art of the Scythians

Author: Esther Jacobson

Number of pages: 305

This volume offers a detailed consideration of the style, technology, and iconographic implications of the art of the Scythians, organized by object typology and chronology, and considered against a broader historical, expressive, and technical background; that of the Scythians' Eurasian sources, of earlier and contemporary West Asian cultures, and of the Hellenic culture which emerged beside that of the Scythians in the northern littoral of the Black Sea.

The Artist as Alice

Author: Darcy Cummings

Number of pages: 86

Poetry. "This lyric sequence derives its allusive resonance from parallels in its protagonist's early life with the biography of Alice Liddell, the young Oxford cleric's daughter who inspired the Lewis Carroll classic... This Alice, however... transforms into the woman the historical Alice might have become had she married younger, moved with a cold and unsympathetic professor husband to Boston, given birth to daughters and lost a son to diphtheria, then become a photographer and artist after her husband's death, writing with light the same intricate interweavings as those which subtly coil the reader in the poet's web of words"--Carolyne Wright. "Darcy Cummings has invented a new, very different, historical fiction about Alice, one that imagines Lewis Carroll's Alice through the eyes of her older cousin, Maude.... This book clarifies while it bewitches--not only with Alice, but with the process of reading itself"--Jeanne Murray Walker.

The Grass Harp

Author: Truman Capote

Number of pages: 216

The protagonists of these nine short stories learn to accept the harsh loneliness of life

Christina Rossetti in Context

Author: Antony H. Harrison

Number of pages: 231

Applying the methodologies of the new historicism, reception theory, and feminist criticism, Harrison provides striking interpretations of Christina Rossetti's poetry. He examines her work in relation to the traditions of medieval and Renaissance love poetry, Romanticism, Tractarianism, and Aestheticism; establishes her place among the pre-Raphaelites; relates her writing to devotional Victorian poetry; and shows how her secular love poetry reflects Dante and Petrarch. Originally published in 1988. A UNC Press Enduring Edition -- UNC Press Enduring Editions use the latest in digital technology to make available again books from our distinguished backlist that were previously out of print. These editions are published unaltered from the original, and are presented in affordable paperback formats, bringing readers both historical and cultural value.

The Fireman's Fair

Author: Josephine Humphreys

Number of pages: 272

In the aftermath of the storm of the century, Rob Wyatt, a thirty-two-year-old Charleston bachelor, finds himself assessing his life as well as his property damage. Life changes culminate at the annual Volunteer Fire Department Fair, as Rob's past and future collide in what could either be catastrophe or salvation.

A Black Physician's Struggle for Civil Rights

Author: Florence Ridlon

Number of pages: 391

Biography of Edward Mazique, respected physician, contemporary of Martin Luther King, Jr., and influential Civil Rights activist in Washington, D.C.

Weird Women, Wired Women

Author: Kit Reed

Number of pages: 214

A collection of stories examining women's roles from unusual angles includes "The Wait," "The New You," "In Behalf of the Product," "The Weremother," and "The Mothers of Shark Island"

The Shabunin Affair

Author: Walter Boardman Kerr

Number of pages: 205

Recounts Leo Tolstoy's role as the defense counsel for Private Vasili Shabunin, court marshalled for striking an officer, and its effects on Tolstoy's social thought and literary career

Iraq in World War I

Author: Mohammad Gholi Majd

Number of pages: 438

Drawing primarily from US State Department archives and the four volumes of the official British history of World War I in Mesopotamia (published during 1923-1927), Majd reconstructs the political and military history of Iraq in World War I, a period that began with fierce Iraqi resistance against the British and ended with the consolidation of British control under the mandate system. In addition to documenting the military ebb and flow of Britain's colonial project in Iraq, Majd also presents two chapters considering the aftermath of the war in terms of Iraq's commercial decline and the impact of disease.

What Travels With Us

Author: Darnell Arnoult

Number of pages: 72

With a storyteller's timing and the emotional range of a singer, Darnell Arnoult in her debut collection offers readers a stirring string of poems about the people of Fieldale, Virginia. A planned community founded in the Virginia foothills by Marshall Fields in the early 1900s to support his textile mill, Fieldale was populated by transplanted Appalachian mountain folk. Arnoult herself grew up there, a third-generation resident and among the first generation to go to college. She took away with her the oral history of her home, and in What Travels With Us she captures in poetic form the townspeople's voices, both remembered and imagined. Personal, poignant, and witty, Arnoult's poems look back as they move forward, demonstrating how we are always creating ourselves anew from the experiences we carry with us. Pearly Rakes complained that on long winter nights Gracie and Charlie kept the parlor lamp burning too long, burning up her kerosene. Pearly claimed she courted and married the same man twice and never burned up nearly so much. Charlie scratched his head. Told Pearly, You musta done most of your courting in the dark. -- from "Boarding House"

Louis Robert

Author: Louis-Rémy Robert , Baudoin Lebon (Gallery : Paris, France)

Number of pages: 147

Tragedy, Modernity and Mourning

Author: Olga Taxidou

Number of pages: 215

Reassesses the Greek tragic form in relation to Athenian democracy, and to both civic and private forms of mourning.

Restavec

Author: Jean-Robert Cadet

Number of pages: 182

African slaves in Haiti emancipated themselves from French rule in 1804 and created the first independent black republic in the Western Hemisphere. But they reinstituted slavery for the most vulnerable members of Haitian society—the children of the poor—by using them as unpaid servants to the wealthy. These children were—and still are—restavecs, a French term whose literal meaning of "staying with" disguises the unremitting labor, abuse, and denial of education that characterizes the children's lives. In this memoir, Jean-Robert Cadet recounts the harrowing story of his youth as a restavec, as well as his inspiring climb to middle-class American life. He vividly describes what it was like to be an unwanted illegitimate child "staying with" a well-to-do family whose physical and emotional abuse was sanctioned by Haitian society. He also details his subsequent life in the United States, where, despite American racism, he put himself through college and found success in the Army, in business, and finally in teaching.

Ideology and Everyday Life

Author: Director of Cultural Analysis Steve Barnett , Steve Barnett , Martin G. Silverman

Number of pages: 179

Leo Tolstoy, an Annotated Bibliography of English Language Sources to 1978

Author: David R. Egan , Melinda A. Egan

Number of pages: 267

Archie Bunker's America

Author: Josh Ozersky , Harry Mark Petrakis

Number of pages: 194

From the political comedy of All in the Family and Maude and the liberal hilarity of Taxi, Soap, and Saturday Night Live to the post-1960s frolics of Three's Company and apolitical programs like Happy Days and Fantasy Island, Ozersky describes the range and power of television as it echoed the larger schemes of American life.".

A Special Providence

Author: Richard Yates

Number of pages: 352

In a story set in postwar America, eighteen-year-old Robert Prentice struggles with a soul damaged by war, while his fifty-three-year-old mother endures thwarted dreams of prosperity. By the author of Revolutionary Road. Reprint.

Creating Groups

Author: Harvey J. Bertcher , Frank F. Maple

Number of pages: 94

Considers the issue of group effectiveness from the standpoint of group composition. The authors assert that the effectiveness of any group is at least partially determined by the particular attributes which each individual brings to it. Drawing from studies in small group theory as well as from research pertaining to group psychotherapy, the programme outlined in this convenient sourcebook should help individuals to better understand and influence the composition of groups involved in all types of community work.

Lucy

Author: Jamaica Kincaid

Number of pages: 163

Lucy, a teenage girl from the West Indies, comes to work as an au pair for a wealthy American couple, discovering the dark side behind their facade of happiness as she also awakens to her own sexuality

Postwar Productivity Trends in the United States, 1948-1969

Author: John W. Kendrick , Maude Remey Pech

Number of pages: 369

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