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We are not alone on this planet of ours. Creatures that we
considered fantasy were in fact real and living under our very
noses and had been since the beginning of humanity. Michael was
hungry, his body and his powers were weak, he needed to eat. He had
long since forgotten how far he had come or how long he had been
walking. Michael knew he was almost where he needed to be, he could
smell it in the air...it felt familiar.
This book, first published in 1994, explores the impact of work and
gender roles on union activism, and identifies factors that support
and hinder women's representation in trade unions. These issues are
discussed in terms of gender role, work-related and union-related
factors. The author details what trade unionists are doing to
challenge inequalities that still exist, and identifies factors
that divide and unite men and women within trade unions. The author
shows the impact that feminism has had on the trade union movement
and explores the extent to which men and women have similar
priorities for collective bargaining.
This book, first published in 1994, explores the impact of work and
gender roles on union activism, and identifies factors that support
and hinder women's representation in trade unions. These issues are
discussed in terms of gender role, work-related and union-related
factors. The author details what trade unionists are doing to
challenge inequalities that still exist, and identifies factors
that divide and unite men and women within trade unions. The author
shows the impact that feminism has had on the trade union movement
and explores the extent to which men and women have similar
priorities for collective bargaining.
As readers and critics around the country agree, any new book by
the renowned garden writer Elizabeth Lawrence is like finding a
buried treasure. "A Rock Garden in the South" will not disappoint.
Released posthumously, this book is not only a welcome addition to
the Lawrence canon, but fills an important gap in the garden
literature on the middle South.
Lawrence, in her usual exquisite prose, deals with the full range
of rock gardening topics in this work. She addresses the unique
problem of cultivating rock gardens in the South, where the growing
season is prolonged and humidity and heat are not conducive to such
planting. She describes her own experiences in making a rock
garden, with excellent advice on placing stones, constructing
steps, ordering plants, and making cuttings.
At the same time, what she writes about here is in large part of
interest to gardeners everywhere and for gardens with or without
rocks. As always, she thoroughly discusses the plants she has
tried--recommending bulbs and other perennials of all sorts,
annuals, and woody plants--with poetic descriptions of the plants
themselves as well as specific and useful cultural advice. "A Rock
Garden in the South" includes an encyclopedia of plants
alphabetized by genus and species and divided into two parts: wood
and non-woody plants.
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The Black Fish (Paperback)
Suzanne Wilson; Illustrated by Ariana Elizabeth Lawrence; Ariana Elizabeth Lawrence
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R216
Discovery Miles 2 160
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone
The author believes gardening in the middle South, where seasons
have no definite boundaries but merge imperceptibly, could and
should be a year-round pleasure. She takes us through the cycle of
seasons, telling which plants are most suitable to which season.
The book includes tables giving blooming dates of over eight
hundred varieties of plants which were recorded over a period of
years.
Colorful, festive, and filled with imaginative ideas, this superb Christmas cookbook features cakes, cookies, and other holiday favorites, plus full-course menus, great gift ideas, and much more.
Full color photographs and B & W illustrations throughout
Elizabeth Lawrence occupies a secure place in the pantheon of
twentieth-century gardening writers that includes Gertrude Jekyll
and Vita Sackville-West of Great Britain and Katherine S. White of
the United States. Her books, such as A Southern Garden (1942) and
The Little Bulbs (1957), remain in print, continuing to win praise
from criticis and to delight an ever-widening circle of readers. In
Gardening for Love, Lawrence reveals another world of garden
writing, the world of the rural women of the South with whom she
corresponded extensively from the late 1950s into the mid-1970s in
responce to their advertisements for herbs and ornamental
perennials in several market bulletins (published by state
departments of agriculture for the benefit of farmers). It was
Eudora Welty who awakened Elizabeth Lawrence's interest in this
fascinating topic by putting her name on the mailing list of The
Mississippi Market Bulletin, a twice-monthly collection of
classified advertisements founded in 1928 and still published
today. Lawrence soon discovered market bulletins from the Carolinas
and other Southern states, as well as similar bulletins published
privately in the North. She began ordering plants from the
bulletins, and there ensued a lively exchange of letters wit the
women who sold them. Gardening for Love is Lawrence's exploration
of this little-known side of American horticulture and her
affectionate tribute to country people who shared her passion for
plants. Drawing on the letters she received, sometimes a great many
of them from the same persons over many years, she delves into
traditional plant lore, herbal remedies, odd and often highly
poetic vernacular plant names peculiar to particular regions of the
South, and the herb collectors of the mountains of the Carolinas
and Georgia. She focuses primarily on the Southeast and the Deep
South, but her wide knowledge of both literature and botany gives
Gardening for Love a dimension that transcends the category of
regional writing.
Elizabeth Lawrence (1904-85) is recognized as one of America's most
important gardeners and garden writers. In 1957, Lawrence began a
weekly column for the "Charlotte Observer," blending gardening lore
and horticultural expertise gained from her own gardens in Raleigh
and Charlotte, North Carolina, and from her many gardener friends.
This book presents 132 of her beloved columns. Never before
published in book form, they were chosen from the more than 700
pieces that she wrote for the "Observer" over fourteen years.
Lawrence exchanged plants and gardening tips with everyone from
southern "farm ladies" trading bulbs in garden bulletins to
prominent regional gardeners. She corresponded with nursery owners,
everyday backyard gardeners, and literary luminaries such as
Katharine White and Eudora Welty. Her books, including "A Southern
Garden," "The Little Bulbs," and "Gardens in Winter," inspired
several generations of gardeners in the South and beyond.
The columns in this volume cover specific plants, such as sweet
peas, hellebores, peonies, and the bamboo growing outside her
living-room window, as well as broader topics including the
usefulness of vines, the importance of daily pruning, and organic
gardening. Like all of Lawrence's writing, these columns are
peppered with references to conversations with neighbors and
quotations from poetry, mythology, and correspondence. They brim
with knowledge gained from a lifetime of experimenting in her
gardens, from her visits to other gardens, and from her extensive
reading.
Lawrence once wrote, "Dirty fingernails are not the only
requirement for growing plants. One must be as willing to study as
to dig, for a knowledge of plants is acquired as much from books as
from experience." As inspiring today as when they first appeared in
the "Charlotte Observer," the columns collected in "Beautiful at
All Seasons" showcase not only Lawrence's vast knowledge but also
her intimate, conversational writing style and her lifelong
celebration of gardens and gardening.
"A beautifully written book."--"The Garden Journal"
"A few garden writers offer prose that goes beyond how to spade
and spray to convey the experience and pleasures of gardening. The
late Elizabeth Lawrence was such a writer."--"Southern Living"
"First published in 1957 and out-of-print for many years, this
is a delightfully written and enormously informative introduction
to the fascinating variety of little bulbs available to the
gardener. The author discusses a wide variety of plants, both
familiar and little-known, including crocuses, species daffodils,
hardy cyclamen and lily-family members such as "Brodiaea, Bessera,
" and "Calochortus."--American Horticulturist"
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