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The darkly comic new novel from the bestselling, Women's Prize
shortlisted author of The Portable Veblen 'Even funnier, even more
romantic than McKenzie's wonderful last' Karen Joy Fowler Penny
Rush has problems. Freshly divorced from her mobile knife-sharpener
husband, she has returned home to Santa Barbara to deal with her
grandfather, who is being moved into a retirement home by his cruel
second wife. Her grandmother, meanwhile, has been found in
possession of a sinister sounding weapon called 'the scintilltor'
and something even worse in her woodshed. Penny's parents have been
missing in the Australian outback for many years now, and so Penny
must deal with this spiralling family crisis alone. Enter The Dog
of The North. The Dog of the North is a borrowed van, replete with
yellow gingham curtains, wood panelling, a futon, a pinata, clunky
brakes and difficult steering. It is also Penny's getaway car from
a failed marriage, a family in crisis and an uncertain future. This
darkly, dryly comic novel follows Penny as she sets out in The Dog
to find a way through the curveballs life has thrown at her and in
doing so, find a way back to herself.
Mindful Teaching and Learning: Developing a Pedagogy of Well-Being
features a community of scholar-practitioners from across
disciplines, methodologies, and ideological perspectives exploring
and examining contexts that support mindful teaching, mindful
learning, and a pedagogy of well-being. Collectively, these
chapters document and analyze the opportunities and challenges
within pedagogical sites and discuss how the disposition of
mindfulness can be nurtured and sustained in educational practice
and praxis. Bolstered by the positive evidence-based standards
emanating from clinical settings, mindfulness based training has
spread into a variety of other fields like psychology, healthcare,
and more recently, education. Within pedagogical environments, an
emergent secular conception of mindfulness, under the auspices of
educational psychologists like Langer (1987; 1997), Goleman,
(2008), Lantieri (2008), Roeser, Skinner, Beers, and Jennings,
(2012), and Schonert-Reichl and Lawlor (2010), is making headway.
Consequently, Mindfulness Training (MT) resources have been applied
to educational contexts in order to maximize the academic,
emotional, physical, and psychological benefits provided by this
mind-body approach to well-being. Acknowledging the increasing
evidence base for the efficacy of mindfulness interventions as well
as the elevated stress levels reported by many educators and their
students, this book discusses how mindful practices, praxis, and
research can inform and support pedagogy, curriculum, and
leadership initiatives in higher education in the twenty-first
century. Alongside the multitude of recent studies in the area of
Mindfulness, contributors discuss their own experiences using
Self-study, Contemplative pedagogy, Living Educational Theory, and
Curriculum Inquiry. The content of this book examines ways in which
to develop habits of mind and courses of action, as well as a
curriculum of study that can support educators as they cultivate
competencies for thriving and coping with the modern demands of
being a teacher.
Mindful Teaching and Learning: Developing a Pedagogy of Well-Being
features a community of scholar-practitioners from across
disciplines, methodologies, and ideological perspectives exploring
and examining contexts that support mindful teaching, mindful
learning, and a pedagogy of well-being. Collectively, these
chapters document and analyze the opportunities and challenges
within pedagogical sites and discuss how the disposition of
mindfulness can be nurtured and sustained in educational practice
and praxis. Bolstered by the positive evidence-based standards
emanating from clinical settings, mindfulness based training has
spread into a variety of other fields like psychology, healthcare,
and more recently, education. Within pedagogical environments, an
emergent secular conception of mindfulness, under the auspices of
educational psychologists like Langer (1987; 1997), Goleman,
(2008), Lantieri (2008), Roeser, Skinner, Beers, and Jennings,
(2012), and Schonert-Reichl and Lawlor (2010), is making headway.
Consequently, Mindfulness Training (MT) resources have been applied
to educational contexts in order to maximize the academic,
emotional, physical, and psychological benefits provided by this
mind-body approach to well-being. Acknowledging the increasing
evidence base for the efficacy of mindfulness interventions as well
as the elevated stress levels reported by many educators and their
students, this book discusses how mindful practices, praxis, and
research can inform and support pedagogy, curriculum, and
leadership initiatives in higher education in the twenty-first
century. Alongside the multitude of recent studies in the area of
Mindfulness, contributors discuss their own experiences using
Self-study, Contemplative pedagogy, Living Educational Theory, and
Curriculum Inquiry. The content of this book examines ways in which
to develop habits of mind and courses of action, as well as a
curriculum of study that can support educators as they cultivate
competencies for thriving and coping with the modern demands of
being a teacher.
The darkly comic new novel from the bestselling, Women's Prize
shortlisted author of The Portable Veblen 'Even funnier, even more
romantic than McKenzie's wonderful last' Karen Joy Fowler Penny
Rush has problems. Freshly divorced from her mobile knife-sharpener
husband, she has returned home to Santa Barbara to deal with her
grandfather, who is being moved into a retirement home by his cruel
second wife. Her grandmother, meanwhile, has been found in
possession of a sinister sounding weapon called 'the scintilltor'
and something even worse in her woodshed. Penny's parents have been
missing in the Australian outback for many years now, and so Penny
must deal with this spiralling family crisis alone. Enter The Dog
of The North. The Dog of the North is a borrowed van, replete with
yellow gingham curtains, wood panelling, a futon, a pinata, clunky
brakes and difficult steering. It is also Penny's getaway car from
a failed marriage, a family in crisis and an uncertain future. This
darkly, dryly comic novel follows Penny as she sets out in The Dog
to find a way through the curveballs life has thrown at her and in
doing so, find a way back to herself.
A laugh-out-loud love story with big ideas - and squirrels
SHORTLISTED FOR THE BAILEYS WOMEN'S PRIZE FOR FICTION 2016 Can
squirrels speak? Do snails scream? Will a young couple, newly
engaged, make it to their wedding day? Will their dysfunctional
families ruin everything? Will they be undone by the advances of a
very sexy, very unscrupulous heiress to a pharmaceuticals
corporation? Is getting married even a remotely reasonable idea in
the twenty-first century? And what in the world is a ‘Veblen’
anyway? ‘Raw and weird and hilarious’ Guardian ‘A touching,
wildly funny and peculiarly elegant look at the travails of love of
all kinds’ Sunday Express ‘Elizabeth McKenzie is clearly some
sort of genius’ Paul Murray ‘I can’t remember a book I
enjoyed more’ Nina Stibbe ‘Seriously funny and extraordinarily
well written’ Jonathan Franzen, Guardian books of the year
The highly acclaimed author of "Stop That Girl "delivers a
masterfully plotted debut novel-at once a mystery of identity, sly
literary satire, and coming-of age story-capturing a young man's
impossible and heroic first love.
Twenty-two-year-old MacGregor West, orphaned as a boy, is on a
quest: to understand the circumstances of his mother's untimely
death. On a foggy San Francisco evening, guided by an old stack of
envelopes, Mac finds himself at the mansion of cultural icon
Charles Ware, where he encounters the writer's beautiful and
enigmatic daughter, Carolyn, trapped in a fold-up bed. Upon freeing
her, Mac plunges headlong into the world of the eccentric Ware
family and a love affair with a woman whose murky history may be
closely linked to his own.
"MacGregor Tells the World" is a poignant and often hilarious ride
through present-day San Francisco, a city brimming with memorable
characters who help Mac discover just what story is his to tell.
Praise for Elizabeth McKenzie's "Stop That Girl"
"Elizabeth McKenzie is an accomplished humorist and a developed
stylist, and she wastes no time dazzling the reader with her clean
direct language, her simple but searing use of metaphor and her
unflinching eye."
"-The New York Times Book Review"
"Single-handedly reinvigorate[s] the coming-of-age genre. . . .
Here is a writer to watch, and a book to breeze through with
glee."
"-San Francisco Chronicle"
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The Communist (Paperback, Main)
Elizabeth McKenzie, Frederika Randall, Guido Morselli
1
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R506
R412
Discovery Miles 4 120
Save R94 (19%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Featuring work by: C. Wade Bentley * Jill Birdsall * Christopher
Buckley * Peyton Burgess * Harmony Button * John Byrne * Yoon Choi
* Colette * Jordan J. Coriza * Philippe Desportes * Willer de
Oliveira * celeste doaks * Thomas A. Dodson * Ali Eteraz * Anthony
Feggans * Peter Ferry * Sierra Golden * Rumi Hara * Joseph Holt *
Bryn Homuth * Matthew Huff * Ryan Michael Johnson * Samantha
Killmeyer * Thomas Lee * Ilya Leybovich * Cathleen Maza * Joao Melo
* Jacqueline Michaud * Michael Milburn * Dan Moreau * Renee Morel *
Carrie Mullins * Jacob Newberry * Naomi O'Hara * Claire Harlan Orsi
* Ed Pavlic * Lara Pawson * Zack Rogow * Mary Doria Russell *
Natalie Solmer * Kenny Tanemura * Jon Veinberg * Luisa Venturini *
Paul Verlaine * Katherine Vondy * Christina Yu
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