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THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO OWNING, MAINTAINING, AND ENJOYING HORSES. The Whole Horse Catalog, the definitive horse guide, is now completely revised and updated to include everything from advances in nutritional thinking to sources on the World Wide Web. With hundreds of illustrations and a detailed, easy-to-understand text, this new edition of The Whole Horse Catalog is the one-stop book for all your equestrian needs. - Where to look for a horse
- How to select a horse
- How to choose stable construction and furnishings
- Horse health care, feeding, and grooming
- Tack: from bits, bridles, and saddles to halters and harnesses
- Apparel and new equipment advances for riders
- Equestrian sports for participants and spectators alike, including ideas for "holidays on horseback"
- Equestrian magazines, organizations, and Web locations
Filled with advice and contacts, The Whole Horse Catalog is a complete resource guide for the novice and experienced equestrian alike.
Louise von Francois (1817-1893) was a German writer of realist
fiction and a contemporary of Fontane, Storm and Meyer. Her most
famous novel, 'Die letzte Reckenburgerin' (1871), was regarded as
one of the most innovative novels of the nineteenth century and
attracted significant critical attention. Francois's novels and
novellas are notable for their strong story lines, rich prose and
psychological realism. Endorsing the values of honour and duty as
prerequisites for the creation of a more equitable society,
Francois shared with other literary figures of the period an
antipathy toward class prejudice and religious intolerance. Despite
Francois's didactic focus, however, her writing lacks neither wit
nor suspense, and a firm grasp of narrative technique is her
mainstay. Her talent for originality of construction results in
highly readable stories that stand the test of time. 'Phosphorus
Hollunder' focuses on the development of a male protagonist who is
refined through suffering, relinquishing vanity and dilettantism
for moral rectitude and responsibility, while also addressing the
nineteenth-century social tensions resulting from class distinction
and the decline of the nobility. It is a tale of unrequited love
and betrayal which retains the reader's interest by challenging
rather than capitulating to sentimental romantic stereotypes. 'Der
Posten der Frau' is set against the backdrop of the Seven Years'
War, and portrays the struggle of a disenchanted young woman to
find an appropriate wartime role. Without glamorising her function,
Francois elevates the woman's status from that of passive and
powerless observer to authoritative sustainer of domestic and
social stability. The novella offers a subtle exploration of the
ambiguous distinction between the categories of friend and foe, and
implies a challenge to traditional feminine identity. Barbara Burns
is a senior lecturer in the German Department at the University of
Glasgow.
Louise von Francois (1817-1893) was a German realist writer whose
work appeared in several editions during her lifetime and was
translated abroad. Her most famous novel, Die letzte
Reckenburgerin, attracted significant critical attention from her
contemporaries and was regarded as one of the most innovative
novels of the century. Her other prose fiction, however, is less
well known. In the context of the ongoing re-assessment of
nineteenth-century women writers, this book evaluates the thematic
preoccupations and narrative technique of Francois's creative work
as a whole. Through a study of ten representative texts, most of
which have not been subject to detailed literary analysis in the
past, the author considers Francois's powerful portrayals of female
self-reliance, and seeks to elucidate aspects of her most cherished
convictions, which centred on values of honour and duty, and on a
vision of a more equitable and decent society.
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