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This book is about continuity and change in early
nineteenth-century Britain. Against the background of an emerging
industrial state, the popularization of liberal laissez-faire
principles and the rise of a class-based society, it examines the
revival of traditional paternal ideals and considers their
influence upon the development of social policy. The poor laws,
social distress, child labour and factory reform provide a focus
for the analysis. The implications of the revival for the emergence
of the collective or welfare state is an important theme.
Sometimes dreams change...and sometimes it takes a dream reader to
make it happen. When Jaden Wilde's girlfriend turns down his
marriage proposal just months before he receives his master's in
counseling, he's convinced that it's cold feet. Until he learns
that her no came at the advice of a new age "dream reader." But
Arsula's hardly the woo-woo hippie his scholarly mind imagined.
She's charming, smart, and uncannily perceptive. And before long,
he's drawn to her-despite his ongoing skepticism for how her
practice works. Arsula's intuitions led her to Birch Bay not to
guide Jaden's girlfriend-but to guide him to his best life
possible. As the odd one out in an unsupportive family, Arsula can
relate to the struggle to find one's path, and she wants to see
Jaden with the woman of his dreams. Although she's cautious of
being the rebound girl, what she's starting to feel for him is too
real to ignore. When Jaden's own volatile family issues come to a
head and his doubts are made resoundingly clear, Arsula worries
she's misread the signs. Maybe they're all wrong for each other.
Maybe he should be with his ex. She's supported him, but if he
can't believe in her, how will they ever find out if they're truly
meant to be?
Construction tip #1: Never anger a hot-tempered woman who knows how
to wield a sledgehammer. And right now, Jill Sadler is spitting
mad. Her company is competing on the wildly popular show Texas
Dream Home, and she intends to give it her all. The opposition: We
Nail It Contractors, helmed by the man who once married her...and
walked out twenty-four hours later. Jill can't let Cal Reynolds
take this round. Not when she has her foster sisters and years of
righteous resentment spurring her on. Winning the contest would do
wonders for Cal's firm. Getting under Jill's skin is just a bonus.
She paints him as a villain, though Cal had no choice but to leave.
Yet being around Jill again-fiery on the outside, vulnerable and
warm underneath-is setting off sparks that can't be blamed on
faulty wiring. And the only way to fix the Jill-size hole in his
heart is to risk everything and see if this love is built to
last...
Heather Lindsay loves falling in love-even though her blueprint for
romance has failed her time and time (and time) again. But now that
she's signed on to design an outdoor-wedding venue for her friend's
home renovation show, Heather's found a new focus: her career. Only
it's not long before she's being distracted-by the hunkiest man who
ever swaggered down the streets of Red Oak Falls. The show's new
ranch manager, Waylon Peterson, a.k.a. Prince Harry in a cowboy
hat, has every woman swooning. He's also got a bad-boy rep that's
made him the hottest mess in town. In other words, he's catnip for
Heather, the Texan queen of bad choices. That's why she's steering
clear-even with Waylon's charm going full throttle. Waylon is
determined to trade one night stands for true love, but convincing
Heather may be an impossible task. He's ready to settle down, but
can she get past her fear of settling and give love one more shot?
This book is about continuity and change in early
nineteenth-century Britain. Against the background of an emerging
industrial state, the popularization of liberal laissez-faire
principles and the rise of a class-based society, it examines the
revival of traditional paternal ideals and considers their
influence upon the development of social policy. The poor laws,
social distress, child labour and factory reform provide a focus
for the analysis. The implications of the revival for the emergence
of the collective or welfare state is an important theme.
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