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Showing 1 - 25 of
25 matches in All Departments
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Death Canyon (Paperback)
David Riley Bertsch
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R446
R381
Discovery Miles 3 810
Save R65 (15%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The debut novel--"a true thrill ride" ("Suspense" magazine)--in the
series featuring prosecutor-turned-Wyoming-fishing-guide Jake
Trent: "a twisting, turning, murderous tale that thriller readers
will love" ("New York Times" bestselling author Michael McGarrity).
It's early summer in Jackson, Wyoming, where former prosecutor Jake
Trent has left the law behind to pursue his dream: becoming a
fishing guide and opening a small bed-and-breakfast in the West.
Now three seemingly unrelated deaths have occurred in one
day--unheard of in the scenic valley of Jackson Hole--disrupting
Jake's idyllic new life.
A skier perishes in a freak late-season avalanche. A French couple
is discovered mutilated on a remote trail--presumably by a bear.
And on the Snake River, Jake stumbles across the body of an
expensively attired fisherman. Meanwhile, a series of small
earthquakes--not to mention a bitter dispute between land
developers and environmentalists--has left the townspeople uneasy.
Before long, the plausible explanations for each death dissolve.
Could there be a sinister connection among them? When fresh
evidence points to Jake as a suspect, he goes on the defensive. Is
someone out to frame him? Jake teams up with beautiful park ranger
Noelle Klimpton to get to the bottom of this series of disturbing
events. The trail leads right to the region's crown-jewel
attraction: Yellowstone. With "all the elements of a successful
thriller" ("Pittsburgh Post-Gazette"), "Death Canyon" features
"evocative Rocky Mountain themes, a spot-on sense of place,
brilliant fly-fishing scenes and characters you just want to root
for" ("New York Times "bestselling author C.J. Box).
How do personal networks evolve and what roles do they play for
parents, and for the development of children? Can these ties with
relatives, neighbours, and friends provide stability for family
members during periods of disruption caused by divorce,
unemployment, geographic dislocation or serious illness? How do
networks change over time? To what extent are network members
interchangeable; can unrelated friends take the place of close
relatives? These are among the questions addressed in Extending
Families, a ground-breaking study about how personal networks
evolve, and what roles they play for parents and for the
development of children. The volume is an outgrowth of a ten-year
cooperative research effort carried out by the authors as part of
the Comparative Ecology of Human Development Project at Cornell
University. In this comprehensive and integrated volume, Moncrieff
Cochran and his colleagues document and compare the roles network
members play in the lives of African-American and Caucasian parents
in the United States, and parents in Sweden, Wales and West
Germany.
How do personal networks evolve and what roles do they play for
parents, and for the development of children? Can these ties with
relatives, neighbours, and friends provide stability for family
members during periods of disruption caused by divorce,
unemployment, geographic dislocation or serious illness? How do
networks change over time? To what extent are network members
interchangeable; can unrelated friends take the place of close
relatives? These are among the questions addressed in Extending
Families, a ground-breaking study about how personal networks
evolve, and what roles they play for parents and for the
development of children. The volume is an outgrowth of a ten-year
cooperative research effort carried out by the authors as part of
the Comparative Ecology of Human Development Project at Cornell
University. In this comprehensive and integrated volume, Moncrieff
Cochran and his colleagues document and compare the roles network
members play in the lives of African-American and Caucasian parents
in the United States, and parents in Sweden, Wales and West
Germany.
Through examples and analogies, Computational Thinking for the
Modern Problem Solver introduces computational thinking as part of
an introductory computing course and shows how computer science
concepts are applicable to other fields. It keeps the material
accessible and relevant to noncomputer science majors. With
numerous color figures, this classroom-tested book focuses on both
foundational computer science concepts and engineering topics. It
covers abstraction, algorithms, logic, graph theory, social issues
of software, and numeric modeling as well as execution control,
problem-solving strategies, testing, and data encoding and
organizing. The text also discusses fundamental concepts of
programming, including variables and assignment, sequential
execution, selection, repetition, control abstraction, data
organization, and concurrency. The authors present the algorithms
using language-independent notation.
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Roman Reigns
David Riley
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R463
Discovery Miles 4 630
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Sister Carrie (Paperback)
William H. Coles; Illustrated by David Riley
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R247
R208
Discovery Miles 2 080
Save R39 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Sister Carrie (Hardcover)
William H. Coles; Illustrated by David Riley
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R498
R419
Discovery Miles 4 190
Save R79 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Practical Grammar is the comprehensive new three-level course that
presents essential grammar in a user-friendly format. An integrated
approach and contextualised content ensure that students learn
usage as well as the form of each grammatical structure.
No other description available.
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Jordan Peele
Blu-ray disc
R132
Discovery Miles 1 320
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