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Do true heroes wait for Fate? King Morden rules the land of Kern
with an iron fist. Having invaded the peaceful nation of Meneday,
the people of Kern have been locked in war for years. But in the
village of Bulbannon, a prophecy has been uncovered, speaking of
the one who will overthrow the king and bring peace back to the
land. This one will be the Windborn. The prophecy, however, only
mentioned one with the legendary magick, not three...
With moves towards greater integration of health and social care
services, there is a need for improved understanding of the
importance and benefits of a person-centred, holistic approach to
work in these fields. This accessible text, the product of a
collaborative venture between older people's groups and academics,
provides students, academics and practitioners across a wide range
of health and social care professions with a guide to understanding
the value of this approach. Health, well-being and older people:
provides an overview of relevant research and service development
literature; presents and discusses a range of issues that are
important to the health of older people including attitudes and
ageism, the body, the environment, family and community, sexuality
and having fun; draws on material developed and, in some cases,
written by older people themselves; integrates theory and empirical
evidence with practice experience; offers models of best practice.
Designed with the needs of students in mind, each chapter has
helpful aids to understanding including: key learning points;
models for case studies; summaries and exercises; glossaries and
recommended texts. Throughout, rea
In bunkhouses or rodeo arenas, on the trail or around the campfire,
cowboys have been creating and reciting poetry since the 1870s. In
this comprehensive overview, folklorists, scholars, and cowboy
poets join forces to explore the 125-year history and development
of cowboy poetry and to celebrate those who sustain it. Centered
around six areas of focus, from historical background to
biographical profiles to creative process, Cowboy Poets and Cowboy
Poetry approaches the tradition of occupational folk poetry from a
variety of perspectives. Contributors trace its history as an
extension of the Homeric tradition of storytelling in verse and
discuss such topics as the way a text evolves in retelling, how it
becomes linked to a tune, and how poetic content fuses with form to
generate narrative tension and humor. Personal and telling
portraits of cowboy poets and reciters--including D. J. O'Malley,
Henry Herbert Knibbs, and a number of contemporary cowboy
poets--illuminate the creative process through which individual
poets work within a long community tradition, while comparative
studies examine poetry by women, Mexican-American vaqueros,
loggers, Argentine gauchos, and Australian bush poets. Cowboy Poets
and Cowboy Poetry offers the first in-depth examination of a
distinctive and community-based tradition rich with
larger-than-life heroes, vivid occupational language, humor, and
unblinking encounters with birth, death, nature, and animals.
Throughout, the collection shows that cowboy poetry interweaves two
thematic strands: a fierce defense of an endangered way of life and
a dynamic celebration of organic wholeness, camaraderie, and
individualism.
With moves towards greater integration of health and social care
services, there is a need for improved understanding of the
importance and benefits of a person-centred, holistic approach to
work in these fields. This accessible text, the product of a
collaborative venture between older people's groups and academics,
provides students, academics and practitioners across a wide range
of health and social care professions with a guide to understanding
the value of this approach. Health, well-being and older people:
provides an overview of relevant research and service development
literature; presents and discusses a range of issues that are
important to the health of older people including attitudes and
ageism, the body, the environment, family and community, sexuality
and having fun; draws on material developed and, in some cases,
written by older people themselves; integrates theory and empirical
evidence with practice experience; offers models of best practice.
Designed with the needs of students in mind, each chapter has
helpful aids to understanding including: key learning points;
models for case studies; summaries and exercises; glossaries and
recommended texts. Throughout, readers are encouraged to think
through the implications of the material in respect of their own
service settings. Health, well-being and older people is essential
reading for students and staff on qualifying and post-qualifying
programmes in nursing, social work, social care, social policy,
gerontology and related courses. It is also recommended reading for
practitioners who will want to engage with the ideas for best
practice presented in the book.
In 1870, sixteen-year-old Frank Maynard left his home in Iowa and
arrived in Towanda, Kansas, where he soon took a job helping to
trail a small herd of cattle from Missouri to Colorado. Thus began
his adventures as an open-range cowboy, a ten-year career that
coincided with the peak of the great trail-drive era. Among the
highlights of Maynard's time on the range were brushes with outlaws
and encounters with famous lawmen, such as Bill Tilghman and Bat
and Ed Masterson (he was in Dodge City when Ed was shot). On one
drive Maynard was set upon and chased by irate German homesteaders;
on another he narrowly escaped being killed by a man known as
Slusher while driving horses from Kansas to Texas. But Maynard's
most enduring contribution sprang from overhearing a version of an
old Irish ballad in 1876 and reworking it as "The Cowboy's Lament,"
the standard most recognize today as "The Streets of Laredo." His
role in adapting the song and his other colorful experiences on the
trail have come to light with the recent discovery of his
unpublished memoir. Now, alongside the frontier recollections of
Charlie Siringo and Charles Colchord, Maynard's personal account
offers a rare and revealing glimpse of the true Old West.
Stanley's Values-Based Leadership in Healthcare proposes a bold new
theory of leadership to help drive positive change in healthcare
organisations. The theory of 'Congruent Leadership' is defined and
presented through a series of corporate and clinical case studies
and examples, which guide the reader through the possibilities for
using their own values to inform best practice. Parallels are drawn
between iconic historical figures and events, to show that
healthcare professionals can be courageous leaders by following
their values and learning from great leaders past and present. To
aid understanding each chapter includes scenarios and reflective
exercises to help readers grasp the application of theory to
practice. By using an accessible frame of reference, Stanley
outlines a refreshing alternative to existing theories of
leadership and thoughtfully encourages practitioners to act in
ethically-informed ways.
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The Bag (Paperback)
David Stanley
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R359
R305
Discovery Miles 3 050
Save R54 (15%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Shaun, 54, leads a perfectly normal life, thank you very much.
Sure, it is a life that has been boring recently, and mired in
depression after the collapse of his second marriage, but he is
coping with getting through life on a day-to-day basis. But one
day, while walking his dog, Shaun comes across a mysterious bag,
filled with money and diamonds, and most worryingly - a dead body
nearby. In the spur of the moment, Shaun makes the decision to take
the bag home. Suddenly, Shaun has a new lease on life, as he works
to avoid both the police and the criminals looking for the bag so
that he can hold on to this fortune that could change his life for
the better. When he meets a lovely woman, while spending some of
his ill-gotten gains, he feels that everything is finally coming
together for him. But the Bag is not finished with him yet...
This is a book about 12 mischievous monkeys and their adventures.
This is the first book of Multiple Monkey stories.
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