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Memoirs (Paperback)
Jean Eugene Robert-houdin
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R591
Discovery Miles 5 910
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
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Memoirs (Hardcover)
Jean-Eugène Robert-Houdin
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R982
Discovery Miles 9 820
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Since the completion of the original writing in 1978, and the
publication of this Garland edition in 1987, several important
events came to pass which underscored the importance and relevance
of the study of the US foreign trade policy toward steel in the
late seventies. One can read the story of US trade policy toward
steel in 1977-79 as a critical step in the path which has been
moving the US from a policy of organised free trade to one where
increasing scope is allowed to market forces.
Since the completion of the original writing in 1978, and the
publication of this Garland edition in 1987, several important
events came to pass which underscored the importance and relevance
of the study of the US foreign trade policy toward steel in the
late seventies. One can read the story of US trade policy toward
steel in 1977-79 as a critical step in the path which has been
moving the US from a policy of organised free trade to one where
increasing scope is allowed to market forces.
Jean Eugene Robert-Houdin (1805-71) is often called the father of
modern conjuring. His name was later adopted by magician and escape
artist Harry Houdini, whose highly sceptical expose of Victorian
spiritualism is also published in this series. The best-known
magician of his time, Robert-Houdin toured France, England and
Germany, performed for Queen Victoria, and was sent to French
Algeria by Napoleon III to demonstrate the perceived superiority of
French magic to the local shamans. This book, originally published
in 1868, is devoted primarily to coin and card tricks, but
Robert-Houdin also describes many other magical tricks and includes
a history of conjuring. In 1877 the book appeared in this English
translation by Louis Hoffmann (1839-1919). Hoffmann (real name
Angelo John Lewis, a barrister) had published his own guide to
magic in 1876, and both books caused controversy for revealing the
secrets of stage magicians in such unprecedented detail.
'a delightful and funny memoir of her family's crazy life in the
English countryside. Perfect escapist reading for these locked-down
times.' - SALMAN RUSHDIE 'a heartwarming tale of country living' -
SUNDAY EXPRESS 'a charming memoir and a perfect choice for these
unsettling times' - DEVON LIFE 'A total joy... enchanting,
hilarious and vivid... Beautifully written, richly informative...'
- LIZ CALDER 'A gem ... A heart-warming memoir of moving to the
glorious Cornish countryside and taking up farming is the perfect
antidote to city life.' - NIKOLA SCOTT "A love letter to the
British countryside...a wonderfully earthy story of fresh Cornish
air...an adventure from start to finish." - TOWN & COUNTRY "A
light-hearted account of 30 years of trial and error on a Cornish
farm...I loved every minute..." - SAGA Ever dream of packing up and
escaping to a simpler life on the land, just the Cornish landscape
and a few cows and goats rising up to greet you each day? When
Rosanne and her husband left city life for the Cornwall idyll they
knew little of farming, the seasons and milking; but over time they
found their way, rising to each new challenge and embracing all
that the land gave them. Growing Goats and Girls lovingly and
invitingly charts the rural, hardworking and joyfully haphazard
lives of Rosanne and her husband as they escape London to live off
the land. In their tumbled-down farmhouse in Cornwall, they learn
to rear goats, chickens, cows, bees - and two children - get to
grips with unruly machinery and cantankerous farmers, and chart the
changing seasons in glorious countryside over thirty years.
Heart-warming and uplifting in its celebration of the simple
things, this earthy portrait of life on the land taps into our
collective imagination. After all, who hasn't dreamed of new
beginnings, escaping into nature and living more simply. Growing
Goats and Girls reminds us to appreciate the fleeting, timeless
moments of beauty, nature and the simple comforts of family life.
Eight years ago, Jean-Pierre Houdin, a successful French architect,
became obsessed by the age-old mystery of how the Great Pyramid was
built. He renounced his architectural practice, sold his Paris
apartment, and for ten hours a day labored at his computer to
create exquisitely detailed 3-D models of the interior of the Great
Pyramid. After five years of effort, the images rotating on his
computer screen provided irrefutable evidence of an astonishing
secret. Corkscrewing up the inside of the Great Pyramid is a
mile-long ramp, unseen for 4,500 years. The pyramid was built from
the inside. The revelation casts a fresh light on the minds that
founded earth's first civilization. The narration takes place in
two time frames: ancient and modern. The ancient story explains how
a nation of farmers that had only recently emerged from the Stone
Age could construct one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.
To execute something as complex and massive as the Great Pyramid,
Egypt needed architects, mathematicians, boat builders, stone
masons, metallurgists. It took twenty years to build the Great
Pyramid. By the time its capstone was laid in 2560 BC, the
innovations born of the building quest had transformed agrarian
Egypt into the world's most modern, most powerful nation. As we
follow the progress of Hemienu, the innovative architect who
planned, organized and oversaw construction of the Great Pyramid,
we also follow Houdin working to discover how and why the ancient
architect designed the pyramid as he did. Houdin works as a
'forensic' architect, aiming to reconstruct the lessons Hemienu had
learned from construction of three previous pyramids and to
visualise his blueprint for the massive stone building.
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