|
Showing 1 - 24 of
24 matches in All Departments
A racy account of the London contemporary art scene by celebrated
art critic Matthew Collings, giving a snapshot of the new Bohemia
of the 90s interwoven with episodes from the author's own life in
London. From Francis Bacon to Damien Hirst, specially-commissioned
photographs by documentary film-maker Ian MacMillan brings London's
artists, dealers and critics face to face with the reader.
This collection presents selected papers from the Fourth Annual
Global Conference on Entrepreneurial Research, held in 1994 at
INSEAD, France. Covering a wide selection of themes, methodological
approaches and organization types, the papers cover all aspects of
current entrepreneurship theory in economics, organizational
sociology, marketing, leadership and finance. Other issues
discussed include gender and networking, strategies in
entrepreneurial growth, job satisfaction and franchising. Case
studies highlight specific examples of entrepreneurship around the
world, including the reform of state-owned enterprises in China and
Vietnam, regional business creation in Quebec and the Italian
tannery industry.
Contributors include: Howard Aldrich, Amanda Elam Brickman,
William Bygrave, Richard N. Cardozo, Paul Severn, Anne Sickels,
Gilles Roy, Rita Gunther McGrath, Steven Spinelli, Benoit Leleux,
S. Venkataraman, Luc Vallee.
Poets have grappled with the vexed question of what constitutes
Englishness since time immemorial, and the poetry of the past
century has seen perhaps some of the biggest evolutions in national
identity. Contraflow takes a completely new approach to the subject
of Englishness, and in this stimulating and entertaining anthology
two poetic currents flow against each other, so that different
decades merge, well-known stanzas brushing shoulders with more
neglected verse. What emerges is an extraordinary mosaic of poetic
responses to English history, culture and landscape – satirical,
visionary, lyrical, comic, political, meditative – yet one which
offers a recognisable picture of a land both united and divided
through a hundred years.
Writing is our cultural medium and can be used to enhance
counselling and psychotherapy - just writing in itself can be
therapeutic. The onset of online therapy means that increasing
numbers of therapists need to know about this valuable means of
communication. Writing Cures demonstrates power of expressive and
reflective writing in the context of therapy, whether online or
text-based, enabling the practitioner to undertake writing methods
with clients. It introduces the reader to therapeutic writing in a
range of settings and contexts, and from a range of approaches.
Chapters from an impressive list of contributors include: *
'Ethical and Practical Dimensions of Online Writing Cures' by
Stephen Goss and Kate Anthony * 'Writing by Patients and Therapists
in Cognitive and Analytic Therapy' by Anthony Ryle * 'Reflective
and Therapeutic Writing in Counsellor Training' by Colin Feltham
and Jacquie Daniels. Illustrated throughout from clinical
experience Writing Cures will be of benefit to all counsellors and
psychotherapists.
My sand life, my pebble life. My life measured out in tides, coming
in and going out. My life measured out in games of trying to spot
the sea first. My life measured out in the delicious and indulgent
sadness that comes from leaving a holiday cottage for the last time
and for the first time in several days it isn't raining, but at
least the kids have had a great time and, let's face it, so have
you. Warm and darkly funny, this sublimely crafted book transports
you (in a blue Ford Zephyr, with an AA route map, a granny in the
back and a bingo hall on the horizon) to the world of childhoods by
the sea. Specifically, Ian's memories of childhood: ones we'll all
identify with - endless sunny days on the beach, done to a turn
fish and chips, legendary games of cricket, tea and cakes and
family crammed into a tiny caravan, holiday cottages that live
forever, buckets of shells, a busted fishing net and enough sand to
make a beach, with the tide out, way out... In this nostalgic
collection of reminiscences (with the odd poem thrown in) journey
with Ian as he walks barefoot to the sea to see the sun rise. He is
attacked by seagulls, and midges, and wasps. He eats a lot of fish
and chips and it's always the best yet. He nearly avoids a frisbee.
He searches for jazz in Scarborough. He walks. He even tries to
run. But mostly he savours the sea and our seaside moments and our
seaside dreams. If you want a shot of salty sea air, a tussle with
a seagull and the congenial companionship of someone described as
'relentlessly jolly' (The Guardian), this will be a joyous and
moving read.
Ian McMillan and Tony Husband have worked together for many years.
Their latest collaboration tells a sombre story - in six-line
rhyming stanzas - of a young lad from a Yorkshire pit village who
finds himself caught up in the horrors of the First World War.
Surrounded by terrible slaughter, Walter records the things he sees
around him with only a pencil and some paper.
Around the Coast in 80 Days is an indispensable guide to the very
best of Britain's diverse coastline. Whether you have just an
afternoon, a whole day, a free weekend, or a whole week to explore
our wonderful country, this book will guide you to 80 of the most
interesting, fun and picturesque seaside spots our coast has to
offer. Starting at Liverpool, one of the most fashionable tourist
destinations in Europe, the book travels clockwise up to Scotland,
down the east coast, across the southern shores, up through Wales
and back to the northwest of England. It calls in at exciting
seaside towns like Blackpool, Brighton and Newquay, and also
invites you to explore the more tranquil coastal stretches, such as
Balnakeil, Gower Peninsula and the Lizard. Covering nine coastal
regions of Britain, chapters provide insights into the history,
culture and key features of each place, how to get to there, where
to eat - including the best places for fish and chips, and where to
stay. Accompanied by beautiful photography and a handy map, and
introduced with an entertaining and evocative Foreword by Ian
McMillan, the book will delight families, couples and solo
explorers of all ages and with all budgets. We all know there's so
much more to explore and enjoy in our beautiful country - this book
will help you do just that.
Ian McMillan is among Britain's most treasured living poets. His
books of poems, stories and non-fiction have delighted audiences
for almost forty years. To Fold the Evening Star gathers work from
eight key collections, distilling an essence of McMillan's
diversiform poetry and short prose. Hilarity and tenderness,
gravity and light, are interwoven into a bountiful poetic fibre.
Brought up to date by a series of new and previously unpublished
work, To Fold the Evening Star will satisy both the curious
newcomer and the familiar reader alike, providing an ample, lively
assortment of the work.
I'm going to define the essence of this sprawling place as best I
can. I'm going to start here, in this village, and radiate out like
a ripple in a pond. I don't want to go to the obvious places,
either; I want to be like a bus driver on my first morning on the
job, getting gloriously lost, turning up where I shouldn't. I'm
going to confirm or deny the cliches, holding them up to see where
the light gets in. Yorkshire people are tight. Yorkshire people are
arrogant. Yorkshire people eat a Yorkshire pudding before every
meal. Yorkshire people solder a t' before every word they use... If
there were such a thing as a professional Yorkshireman, Ian
McMillan would be it. He's regularly consulted as a home-grown
expert, and southerners comment archly on his 'fruity Yorkshire
brogue'. But he has been keeping a secret. His dad was from
Lanarkshire, Scotland, making him, as he puts it, only 'half tyke'.
So Ian is worried; is he Yorkshire enough? To try to understand
what this means Ian embarks on a journey around the county,
starting in the village has lived in his entire life. With
contributions from the Cudworth Probus Club, a kazoo playing train
guard, Mad Geoff the barber and four Saddleworth council workers
looking for a mattress, Ian tries to discover what lies at the
heart of Britain's most distinct county and its people, as well as
finding out whether the Yorkshire Pudding is worthy of becoming a
UNESCO Intangible Heritage Site, if Harrogate is really, really, in
Yorkshire and, of course, who knocks up the knocker up?
A mixture of stories, poems and autobiography: the donkey survives
the fire, and the poet survives in a northern world where the sun
does not shine equally or often on all and where Postman Pat pens a
suicide note, maddened by his theme tune, but keeps on driving all
the same. Ian McMillan is a regular radio and television presenter
and contributor to "NMW" and other magazines.
This pamphlet is more than the sum of its parts. The parts are:
history, memory, family, landscape, language, overheard
conversations, popular songs, dreams and the grey shambling farce
of growing old in the same house you've lived in for 25 years.
Hopefully the sum will add up; hopefully to more than its parts.
Writing is our cultural medium and can be used to enhance
counselling and psychotherapy - just writing in itself can be
therapeutic. The onset of online therapy means that increasing
numbers of therapists need to know about this valuable means of
communication.
Writing Cures demonstrates power of expressive and reflective
writing in the context of therapy, whether online or text-based,
enabling the practitioner to undertake writing methods with
clients. It introduces the reader to therapeutic writing in a range
of settings and contexts, and from a range of approaches. Chapters
from an impressive list of
contributors include:
OCo 'Ethical and Practical Dimensions of Online Writing Cures'
by Stephen Goss and Kate Anthony
OCo 'Writing by Patients and Therapists in Cognitive and Analytic
Therapy' by Anthony Ryle
OCo 'Reflective and Therapeutic Writing in Counsellor Training' by
Colin Feltham and Jacquie Daniels.
Illustrated throughout from clinical experience Writing Cures
will be of benefit to all counsellors and
psychotherapists.
"
|
|