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James Augustus Dopeyworth wants nothing more than to become a
detective, just like his father and his hero Sherlock Holmes. He
loves solving mysteries and can often be found with a magnifying
glass in one hand and a chocolate eclair in the other. Poor old
Jim, as he likes to be known, doesnt seem to have much luck.
Nothing ever seems to go his way and it doesn't help that he is
extremely clumsy and is always getting into the most unlikely
scrapes. But one day an advert appears in the local paper that
changes everything. Will Jim become the famous detective that he
always dreamed of being or will it all end up as one big messy
disaster? Detective Dopeyworth is a story about never giving up on
your dreams, no matter what obstacles are put in your way.
This beautifully illustrated book tells the stories behind 60
remarkable buildings chosen from the many thousands at National
Trust properties across England, Wales and Northern Ireland.
Spanning 900 years of history, this selection of 60 remarkable
buildings in the care of the National Trust ranges from a
13th-century tithe barn in Oxfordshire to a 20th-century suburban
semi in Liverpool; from a medieval guildhall in Suffolk to a
Victorian lighthouse in Tyne and Wear; from an Arts and Crafts
village in County Antrim to an atomic research facility in East
Anglia. The book has an introduction by George Clarke and concludes
with a useful illustrated glossary of terms and architectural
features.
A heartening and uproariously funny novel of high hopes, bad
choices, book love, and one woman's best-and worst-intentions.
Without question, Fawn Birchill knows that her used bookstore is
the heart of West Philadelphia, a cornerstone of culture for a
community that, for the past twenty years, has found the quirkiness
absolutely charming. When an amicable young indie bookseller
invades her block, Fawn is convinced that his cushy couches,
impressive selection, coffee bar, and knowledgeable staff are a
neighborhood blight. Misguided yet blindly resilient, Fawn readies
for battle. But as she wages her war, Fawn is forced to reflect on
a few unavoidable truths: the tribulations of online dating, a
strained relationship with her family, and a devoted if not always
law-abiding intern-not to mention what to do about a pen pal with
whom she hasn't been entirely honest and the litany of repairs her
aging store requires. Through emails, journal entries, combative
online reviews, texts, and tweets, Fawn plans her next move. Now
it's time for her to dig deep and use every trick at her disposal
if she's to reclaim her beloved business-and her life.
This beautifully illustrated book tells the stories behind 60
remarkable buildings chosen from the many thousands at National
Trust properties across England, Wales and Northern Ireland
Spanning 900 years of history, this selection of 60 remarkable
buildings in the care of the National Trust ranges from a
13th-century tithe barn in Oxfordshire to a 20th-century suburban
semi in Liverpool; from a medieval guildhall in Suffolk to a
Victorian lighthouse in Tyne and Wear; from an Arts and Crafts
village in County Antrim to an atomic research facility in East
Anglia. The book has an introduction by George Clarke and concludes
with a useful illustrated glossary of terms and architectural
features.
The Delivery Sustainable Infrastructure series is a new series of
practical handbooks which provide engineers with an understanding
of sustainability principles and solutions. Sustainability concepts
are set within well-known engineering management processes of
planning, designing and delivering infrastructure. Sustainable
Buildings considers universal principles of sustainable buildings,
and moves on to explain the main building physics principles. It
looks at applicable technologies, then goes on to discuss
important, international case studies.
Understories is an exploration of things visible mostly to the
inner eye and memory, things below the surface. The book began as a
riff on Mark Strand's brilliant title, "Planet of the Lost Things,"
and it is an exploration of loss, but also of recovery through
memory and language. The first part, "A Perfect Afternoon" follows
an unfulfilled romance through significant moments and years to
elegy for what never was and for the loved one himself. The romance
is juxtaposed with epiphanic moments of reflection, joy and dismay,
perceptive growth points. The second section, "Functional
Families," considers the theme of family, especially mothers, and
moves through varying visions of family to a sort of resolution
though the poet's mothering of her own son. The third section,
"Going the Distance for Poetry," focuses on poetry and art, some of
the connections that make the poetic quest possible, literary,
artistic and natural (looking at mountains, listening to trees).
The final section, "Lost Cities," looks at New York, Toronto,
Florence, ancient Rome, Mayan Mexico through the lens of history
and memory, alternating sorrow for loss with belief in the power of
poetry to preserve. Once of the themes of Understories is "where
does the story end?" and the book takes the long view, writing
beyond the apparent ending.
James Augustus Dopeyworth wants nothing more than to become a
detective, just like his father and his hero Sherlock Holmes. He
loves solving mysteries and can often be found with a magnifying
glass in one hand and a chocolate eclair in the other. Poor old
Jim, as he likes to be known, doesnt seem to have much luck.
Nothing ever seems to go his way and it doesn't help that he is
extremely clumsy and is always getting into the most unlikely
scrapes. But one day an advert appears in the local paper that
changes everything. Will Jim become the famous detective that he
always dreamed of being or will it all end up as one big messy
disaster? Detective Dopeyworth is a story about never giving up on
your dreams, no matter what obstacles are put in your way.
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Sylva (Hardcover)
Elizabeth Green Crane
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R817
Discovery Miles 8 170
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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