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Bonnie and Clyde were responsible for multiple murders and
countless robberies. But they did not act alone. In 1933, during
their infamous run from the law, Bonnie and Clyde were joined by
Clyde's brother Buck Barrow and his wife Blanche. Of these four
accomplices, only one--Blanche Caldwell Barrow--lived beyond early
adulthood and only Blanche left behind a written account of their
escapades. Edited by outlaw expert John Neal Phillips, Blanche's
previously unknown memoir is here available for the first time.
Blanche wrote her memoir between 1933 and 1939, while serving
time at the Missouri State Penitentiary. Following her death,
Blanche's good friend and the executor of her will, Esther L.
Weiser, found the memoir wrapped in a large unused Christmas card.
Later she entrusted it to Phillips, who had interviewed Blanche
several times before her death. Drawing from these interviews, and
from extensive research into Depression-era outlaw history,
Phillips supplements the memoir with helpful notes and with
biographical information about Blanche and her accomplices.
The 'Exeter Ordinale' is a huge ordinal issued by John de
Grandisson, bishop of Exeter 1327-69], in 1337; it is edited on the
basis of manuscripts that belonged to, and were annotated by, the
bishop himself. The compilation marked an important point in
medieval study of the liturgy, and the 'Legenda' liturgical
readings for saints' days] which it contains are regarded as one of
the most important sources for the study of English medieval
hagiography, particularly for saints of English origin.
The 50-mile stretch of the River Tamar forms a unique county
boundary between the counties of Devon and Cornwall. The Tamar's
source is East Youlstone near Bude less than 4 miles from the north
Cornish coast. But instead of flowing northward into the Atlantic
Ocean it flows slowly south. through reed-fringed mudscapes passing
the towns of Launceston, Gunnislake, and Saltash before widening
out and eventually meeting the English Channel at Plymouth Sound.
In the sound the river merges with the rivers Tavy, Plym and Lynher
to form the Tamar Valley, an area of outstanding natural beauty.
The river has some 20 road crossings, including some medieval stone
bridges, and the famous Tamar Bridge, opened in 1961 which carries
the A38 and the Royal Albert Bridge built in 1859 by Brunel ,to
carry the railway from Devon into Cornwall. The natural wonders of
the environment contrast sharply with the manmade industrial relics
which are strewn along the middle reaches of the river. The cries
of the raven and the peregrine falcon echo around the site of
abandoned mines in which men toiled for more than two centuries.
The Tamar has always played an important role in the region's
economy with mineral extraction a key industry in the Tamar valley.
The Tamar has also served naval interests since 1691, when William
of Orange commissioned a new dockyard at the mouth of the river in
Devon.
The Exeter Ordinale is a huge ordinal issued by John de Grandisson,
bishop of Exeter (1327-69), in 1337; it is edited on the basis of
manuscripts that belonged to, and were annotated by, the bishop
himself. The compilation marked an important point in medieval
study of the liturgy, and the Legenda (liturgical readings for
saints' days) which it contains are regarded as one of the most
important sources for the study of English medieval hagiography,
particularly for saints of English origin.
The second of three volumes of John Neal's collected works.
"Ancient metrology - once the playground of Newton, but now largely
ignored even by archaeologists - ought to cease to be a pariah
subject and regain its place at the centre of the study of
antiquity. In the past, the widely attested variations in ancient
linear measurements have been put down to sloppiness on the part of
our ancestors. But Neal is able to show that such variations belong
to a logical, elegant and cohesive system partially based on
divisions of the Earth's surface at different points on the
longitudinal meridian." Professor Michael Vickers, University of
Oxford, review of Neal's work in Nature: International Weekly
Journal of Science. 2001.
The first of three volumes of John Neal's collected works. "Not
only is the megalithic system largely ignored by archaeologists, it
is opposed - even by the numerate among their ranks. This position
is now untenable, as it can be shown that the megalithic yard
shared an origin with the Sumerian cubit. And the foot-measure used
in England - equivalent to a Greek foot - proves to have played a
pivotal role in the whole metrological system. It is ironic that
just as it is being thrown on the scrap heap of history, its
historical importance is beginning to be recognised." Professor
Michael Vickers, University of Oxford, review of Neal's work in
Nature: International Weekly Journal of Science. 2001.
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