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Dear Mr. G (Hardcover)
Christine Evans; Illustrated by Gracey Zhang
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R382
R316
Discovery Miles 3 160
Save R66 (17%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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A gentle and moving story about an intergenerational friendship
between a young child and their neighbor told through a series of
letters, for fans of Ida, Always. When Jackson’s soccer
ball accidentally lands in his neighbor’s rose bush, he thinks
he’s ruined Mr. Graham’s roses forever. So he quickly writes a
letter to Mr. Graham that blossoms into a marvelous friendship.
Jackson writes letters, highlighting the everyday moments to make
them feel larger than life, and Mr. G keeps writing back until the
very end of his life, encouraging Jackson to live each day to the
fullest.   This breathtakingly beautiful
epistolary story shows the strength of letter-writing and
intergenerational bonds. The text is accompanied by tender and
evocative artwork to remind us that even as seasons change, our
loved ones always stay in our hearts.Â
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Together Forever, 3 (Hardcover)
Christine Evans; Illustrated by Patrick Corrigan
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R386
R253
Discovery Miles 2 530
Save R133 (34%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Past and present violently collide when Lotte, an English tourist
who repairs dolls, is captured while on a tour of current-day Troy
and flung back into the ancient camp of Euripides' Trojan
Women.Part contemporary drama, part homage to Euripides' Trojan
Women, Trojan Barbie recasts the legendary fall of the city of Troy
against the vivid reality of modern warfare. Poetic, compassionate,
and tinged with great warmth and humor, Trojan Barbie is an epic
war story with a most unlik
This book addresses two questions. One, how do the managerial and organizational practices of new, state-of-the-art manufacturing plants contribute to competitive advantage and two, how do firm-level competitive advantage help to define regional advantage. It examines these issues through original case studies of management practices in a sample of 48 Japanese and domestic startup factories in the United States. The field research findings are backed by the analysis of a national data on new manufacturing plants.
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Nadia
Christine Evans
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R495
R427
Discovery Miles 4 270
Save R68 (14%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Nadia moves between the competing perspectives of two
survivors of the 1990s Balkan Wars who have escaped to London, only
to discover that the war has followed them there. Nadia is a
young refugee who just wants to forget the past—until Iggy starts
temping at her London office. Afraid he may be a sniper from the
war she fled, Nadia starts seeing threats everywhere, alongside
unsettling visions of her lost girlfriend, Sanja. As her volatile
connection with Iggy unravels, Nadia is forced to face the shaky,
ethical choices she made to escape the war, her survivor guilt, and
her disavowed queer sexuality. Nadia takes us to
the recent past of a war that broke apart a European country and
that presciently foreshadowed the rise of ethno-nationalism in the
West. Tense, suspenseful, and mordantly funny,
Nadia tracks the complex ways in which a past marked by
political violence can shadow and disrupt the present.
Back in 1881, when Evelyn Cheesman was born, English girls were
expected to be clean and dressed in frilly dresses. But Evelyn
crawled in dirt and collected glow worms in jars. When girls grew
up they were expected to marry and look after children. But Evelyn
took charge of the London Zoo insect house, filling it with
crawling and fluttering specimens and breathing life back into the
dusty exhibits. In the early 1920s, women were expected to stay
home, but Evelyn embarked on eight solo expeditions to distant
islands. She collected over 70,000 insect specimens, discovered new
species, had tangles with sticky spider webs, and tumbled from a
cliff. Inspire children to believe in their dreams and blaze their
own trail with the story of Evelyn's amazing life!
Ageing, change, the environment, and the position of women are
Evans' subjects in this remarkable third collection. At the center
are a group of poems that explore the world of darkness, the land
'between wakings.' These are the work of a gifted insomniac!
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Snow Day in May - 1 (Hardcover)
Christine Evans; Illustrated by Patrick Corrigan
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R384
R251
Discovery Miles 2 510
Save R133 (35%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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In this evaluation of the international legal standing of the right
to reparation and its practical implementation at the national
level, Christine Evans outlines State responsibility and examines
the jurisprudence of the International Court of Justice, the
Articles on State Responsibility of the International Law
Commission and the convergence of norms in different branches of
international law, notably human rights law, humanitarian law and
international criminal law. Case studies of countries in which the
United Nations has played a significant role in peace negotiations
and post-conflict processes allow her to analyse to what extent
transitional justice measures have promoted State responsibility
for reparations, interacted with human rights mechanisms and
prompted subsequent elaboration of domestic legislation and
reparations policies. In conclusion, she argues for an emerging
customary right for individuals to receive reparations for serious
violations of human rights and a corresponding responsibility of
States.
In this evaluation of the international legal standing of the right
to reparation and its practical implementation at the national
level, Christine Evans outlines State responsibility and examines
the jurisprudence of the International Court of Justice, the
Articles on State Responsibility of the International Law
Commission and the convergence of norms in different branches of
international law, notably human rights law, humanitarian law and
international criminal law. Case studies of countries in which the
United Nations has played a significant role in peace negotiations
and post-conflict processes allow her to analyse to what extent
transitional justice measures have promoted State responsibility
for reparations, interacted with human rights mechanisms and
prompted subsequent elaboration of domestic legislation and
reparations policies. In conclusion, she argues for an emerging
customary right for individuals to receive reparations for serious
violations of human rights and a corresponding responsibility of
States.
The role of a genetic counsellor is to mediate between the rapid
advances in molecular medicine and an individual??'s ability to
understand and manage the risks of their inheritance. Counsellors
therefore need to be fully in command of the psychological impact
of their communications. Written by a psychiatrist who later became
a psychotherapist, this manual is essential reading for counsellors
of all disciplines. It examines the psychological processes and
explains why people approach and respond differently. Effective
genetic counselling requires a knowledge of attachment behaviour
and non-directiveness, and an in-depth understanding of empathy in
order to help individuals contain anxiety and process grief and so
facilitate their decision-making or help with the effects of
reviewing a test result. Along with an up-to-date discussion of
similar approaches in family therapy and psychoanalysis, the effect
of counselling on the counsellor is also examined creatively in
order to enrich the interview with clients.
WAR PLAYS by Christine Evans collects for the first time three of
this US-based, UK-Australian playwright's remarkable plays about
war and aftermath: Trojan Barbie, Mothergun and Slow Falling Bird.
With an introduction by esteemed filmmaker Peter Davis, this
collection is a terrific introduction to Evans' astute theatrical
voice.
Out of Place & Time, Vol. 2, is an anthology of plays by six
members of the Women's Project Lab. It's a snapshot of some of the
most ambitious work incubating in New York and a diverse
compilation of plays for directors and actors seeking exciting
contemporary work to explore. With a hilarious and biting intro by
Theresa Rebeck that challenges the American theater to celebrate
and produce its women playwrights, Vol. 2 showcases writers whose
voices sing our world with wit, passion and daring. Bekah
Brunsetter's Le Fou teases out the destructive dance between love
and vanity. Kara Manning's Sleeping Rough forms a blues ballad for
souls displaced between lives. Alexis Clements' Conversation
cleverly interrogates the science of speech, while Nadia Davids' At
Her Feet plays out another kind of linguistic music, that of six
very different Muslim women from Cape Town. Carla Ching's TBA plays
with the power of naming, and Andrea Thome's Undone offers a
polyphonic love poem to a city crowded with the living and dead.
Out of Place & Time, Volume 1, is an anthology of plays by five
members of the Women's Project Playwrights Lab. It's a snapshot of
some of the most ambitious work incubating right now in New York
and a diverse compilation of plays for directors and actors seeking
exciting contemporary work to explore. Featuring a hilarious and
biting preface by Theresa Rebeck that challenges the American
theater to celebrate and produce its women playwrights, Volume 1
showcases writers that engage our troubled times with wit, passion
and daring. Lynn Rosen's Back From The Front and Christine Evans'
Weightless both take comic approaches to shattering
subjects-respectively, war and the future of a crumbling 21st
century Manhattan. Crystal Skillman's provocative The Vigil or The
Guided Cradle interrogates torture across six centuries. Charity
Henson-Ballard's lyrical and sweeping The Quiver of Children and
Laura Eason's tautly focused Rewind each chart the attempt to
outwit fate through artful means.
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