|
Showing 1 - 25 of
35 matches in All Departments
|
Disrupted (Hardcover)
Julie Anderson Love
|
R884
R727
Discovery Miles 7 270
Save R157 (18%)
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
All the lakes of the world are drying up. A direct result of human
dereliction, lakes and waterways on every continent are
disappearing at unprecedented speed. These waterways are our
future, yet they continue to evaporate before our very eyes. If the
climate crisis is not arrested, our planet will wither and die.
Despite this grim possibility, there is no need to spread fear in
the hearts and minds of our children. Rather, we must build hope
for the future -for their future. In this third book of our
Woodpecker series, our bird heroes uphold this sense of hope as
they band together for the sake of a magnificent lake hidden deep
in the forest. They show us that where there is unity, there is
power. And we can't help but smile when they triumph and the lake
is saved. Neither avatars nor wishful thinking will save our
planet. We need to educate our children and ensure they understand
the steps they can and must take in caring for the world.
Birds live in this world right alongside us. We might know the
names of a few species, but they're not cats or dogs. How many of
us really know them well? For children, flying is a miracle unique
to birds. Children are curious about our winged friends, the way
they fly, sometimes over extraordinary distances, the way they eat,
build their nests, and raise their young. In this second book of
our Woodpecker series, our woodpecker friends teach us the meaning
of solidarity. We see how they build a cooperative, a food store
built for the purpose of sharing food with those who need it. We
learn that it is possible to establish a united community deep in
the mysterious world of the forest. Beyond the birds' squeaks and
squawks, Volunteer Woodpeckers takes place in a different space and
shares with children a sense of joy and wonder that adults might
never comprehend.
Through a series of thematic chapters, Julie Anderson explores the
nature of injured and disabled bodies before, during and after the
Second World War. Beginning at the end of the First World War and
finishing with the publication of the Piercy Committee's report in
1956, the book examines medical practice, State support, societal
attitudes and cultural meanings surrounding disabled war veterans
and civilians. The book focuses on the embodied nature of the
rehabilitative process, its gendered nature and the concentration
on bodily fitness during the war. Using a series of case studies,
this wide-ranging book seeks to understand the processes,
methodology and practice of rehabilitation for those injured and
disabled in war, and reflect on its adoption in post-war Britain.
War, disability and rehabilitation in Britain will interest
historians of medicine, war and disability studies. -- .
How is it possible for a tiny little bird to peck a hole in the
trunk of a huge tree? With ten hits per second, and force 100 times
stronger than gravity, woodpeckers are one of the most interesting
and inspiring members of the bird kingdom. They use their
magnificent beaks and amazing strength to hammer holes in trees -
and that's where they make their nests. Woodpecker couples are a
great example of solidarity. Males and females work together to
build a nest and gather food, and males share in the duty of
sitting on their eggs. They provide us with an opportunity to
rethink all that is around us. In this new century, libraries are
full of books containing new ideas and the embracing value of
solidarity. The Woodpeckers' Cooperative is a modern fairy tale
about the danger of failing to prepare for winter-as well as the
importance of community and cooperation. A good children's story
should catch a child's full attention. At Dixi Books, capturing a
child's imagination is our priority and our promise.
What is the one thing you least expect to experience when you wake
up in the morning? Waking up on the kitchen table? Waking up to
find out that you wetted your bed? No, no! Emma's situation is a
little different. One morning, Emma wakes up to find that something
unimaginable has happened to her. There are bumps on both sides of
her head, and soon they grow into antlers like seeds growing into a
plant! She needs to find out how this difference will make her
"cooler." The Girl with Antlers is the story of a child who faces
the thing that makes her different and comes to accept it. At
first, Emma won't leave the house because of the antlers that have
grown on her head. However, her grandpa's wise words make her
change her mind. This is a story that makes us question what is
`normal' and tells us how our differences can transform us into
more colourful and compassionate people.
|
Opera (Paperback)
Julie Anderson
bundle available
|
R253
Discovery Miles 2 530
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
Truth Never Dies. It had been solely personal. Not anymore.
Determined to lay the ghosts of her past, Cassandra Fortune asks a
former head of GCHQ for help, only to receive a message from beyond
the grave. A riddle to puzzle out and a murder to solve. She
revisits an old betrayal in an ancient land, uncovering subterfuge
and treason, but finds that it is linked with her own quest for the
truth.
Contains activities to give your pupils the reinforcement work they
need.
Written for the one- to three-term introductory programming course,
the sixth edition of Java Illuminated provides learners with an
interactive, user-friendly approach to learning the Java
programming language. Comprehensive but accessible, the text takes
a progressive approach to object-oriented programming, allowing
students to build on established skills to develop new and
increasingly complex classes. Java Illuminated follows an
activity-based active learning approach that ensures student
engagement and interest. In addition, the text presents other
topics of interest, including graphical user interfaces (GUI), data
structures, file input and output, and graphical applications.
|
Oracle (Paperback)
Julie Anderson
bundle available
|
R449
Discovery Miles 4 490
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
Justice will be done, but what kind of justice? High on the slopes
of Mount Parnassus, near the ancient Temple of Apollo, a group of
young idealists protest against the despoiling of the planet
outside a European governmental conference. Inside, corporate
business lobbyists mingle with lawmakers, seeking profit and
influence. Then the charismatic leader of the protest goes missing.
The next day the body of a local woman is discovered in a temple
building, placed like an offering to the old gods. Attending the
conference Cassandra Fortune, civil servant, former GCHQ
investigator and envoy of the British Prime Minister, is co-opted
onto the case by the Professor, a senior Greek politician. She is
to work alongside Ministerial Security Chief Iraklidis and local
policeman Alex Ganas, who are soon joined by Major Lykaios from
regional police headquarters. But the police do not trust each
other, each fearing that the others are members of a banned,
right-wing organisation, Golden Dawn. And they see no reason to
trust Cassie. Only a day later another corpse is found, bloodied
and broken, at the foot of the cliffs which tower above the Temple,
from which blasphemers once were cast. At the behest of the
Professor Cassie and her interpreter, Helena, begin questioning the
conference goers and quickly discover that some have their own,
hidden agendas and reasons to deceive. As a storm closes in,
strange lights are seen on the mountain. Cassie, meanwhile,
believes that someone is stalking her, watching her every move. She
is followed on the lonely walk to the conference centre at midnight
and high above the Corycian Cave, inhabited since the Bronze Age,
show signs of more recent occupation. Who is the walker in the
mountain mist? When an avalanche isolates the conference centre and
all power is cut, preventing communication with the outside world,
it is up to Cassie and the others to find the killer. Are primal
forces reaching out from the past and will the ancient and brutal
Furies claim their blood vengeance? Or will the forces of law
discover the key lies in a tangled, modern web of tragedy and guilt
as relentless and fatal as in any Greek drama. Like the famously
cryptic Oracle of Delphi, Cassandra Fortune must provide answers
before the conference ends, or fail in her first mission for the
Prime Minister. And Cassie herself has her own furies, or demons,
to face. When the characters in the drama transfer to Athens where
the public inquiry into the deaths takes place, the stage is set to
reveal a story of youthful rebellion, desire and betrayal and there
are further surprises in store for Cassie. Oracle is about justice,
from the brutal, archaic form of blood vengeance prevalent in early
human societies to modern systems of law and jurisprudence, set in
the context of a democracy. This is the law and equality under the
law which allows democracy to thrive and underpins the freedoms and
safeguards for individuals within it. The story is interlinked with
Greece's past, as the ancient cradle of democracy and source of
many of western ideas of government, but also to its more recent
and violent past of military strongmen and authoritarianism in the
twentieth century. Oracle also considers, in the form of a crime
thriller, the politicisation of the police and the justice system
and how that will undermine justice, especially following the
banning of Golden Dawn, the now criminal organisation which wrapped
itself in the mantle of politics. It touches on the new academic
discipline of zemiology, the study of 'crime' through the prism of
the harm it does to people, especially those without power.
|
Plague (Paperback)
Julie Anderson
bundle available
|
R567
Discovery Miles 5 670
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
There are many ways to die. Plague is just one of them. Work on a
London tube line is halted by the discovery of an ancient plague
pit and, within it, a very recent corpse. A day later another body
is found, killed in the same way, also in a plague pit. This victim
is linked to the Palace of Westminster, where rumours swirl around
the Prime Minister and his rivals. As the number of deaths climbs,
the media stokes fear. Government assurances are disbelieved.
Everyone feels threatened. This has to be resolved and fast. The
Westminster connection enables Detective Inspector Andrew Rowlands,
working alone on a series of rapes and murders of vulnerable young
people in central London, to finally persuade his superiors that
there is a pattern. He is assigned to lead the case. Cassandra
Fortune, a disgraced civil servant, is given the uncomfortable task
of investigating the investigation, while joining forces with
Rowlands to find the killers before Parliament rises for recess.
Together they navigate the arcane world of the Palace of
Westminster as the body count grows. But someone is leaking
important details about the case to the press and the media
ratchets up the pressure. Misinformation and malice online feeds
distrust and panic and the Black Death begins to stalk the streets
of London once again. Meanwhile the commercial and political world
focuses on the launch of a huge government Thames-side building
programme worth billions. Powerful forces, in Parliament and the
City, are competing for its spoils. How, if at all, does this link
with the killings? Drawn into the melee, Cassandra Fortune finds
herself the object of the attentions of one of the major players,
wealthy City broker, Lawrence Delahaye. The attraction is mutual.
Fortune and Rowlands discover a shadowy underground network of
influence and power as they race against the clock to prevent the
death of more innocents and the destruction of the Mother of
Parliaments itself. Cassandra will be forced to make a terrible
decision as she faces ruin. Time is running out and it's not clear
what, or who, is going to survive.
|
You may like...
Rolling Back the Years
Chris Barber and His Jazz Band, Acker Bilk and His Paramount Jazz Band, …
CD
R48
R39
Discovery Miles 390
Simply Jazz
Various Producers
CD
R50
Discovery Miles 500
|