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Discover the original psychological thriller... Winner of the 1960
Edgar Award for best mystery novel 'A lost masterpiece.' PETER
SWANSON 'A flawless masterclass in tension from the talented Ms
Fremlin.' SARAH HILARY Louise would give anything - anything - for
a good night's sleep. Forget the girls running errant in the garden
and bothering the neighbours. Forget her husband who seems
oblivious to it all. If the baby would just stop crying, everything
would be fine. Or would it? What if Louise's growing fears about
the family's new lodger, who seems to share all of her husband's
interests, are real? What could she do, and would anyone even
believe her? Maybe, if she could get just get some rest, she'd be
able to think straight. In a new edition of this lost classic, The
Hours Before Dawn proves - scarily - as relevant to readers today
as it was when Celia Fremlin first wrote it in the 1950s.
Spectatorship, Embodiment and Physicality in the Contemporary
Mutilation Film explores 'physical spectatorship': the
representation of mutilation on the screen and the physical
responses this evokes. The book is organised around the study of a
series of dynamic engagements that reconfigure the film-viewer
relationship.
Discover a vital source of volunteers for your organization By the
year 2020, there will be 65 million people aged 65 and over living
in the United Statesa new generation of active older adults
expecting to use the expertise, experience, and life skills they've
gained to make valuable contributions to society in their
retirement years. Civic Engagement and the Baby Boomer Generation
presents the latest research findings and evaluation studies that
help promote a thorough understanding of the programs, policies,
and civic opportunities available to people aged 50 and older. This
unique book is an essential resource for nonprofit organizations
seeking to meet their needs with a generation of volunteers eager
to explore new options, work in new capacities, and continue
lifelong learning. More than any previous generation, baby boomers
(born between 1946 and 1964) are defying stereotypes about aging
while seeking new and meaningful lifestyles. Civic Engagement and
the Baby Boomer Generation defines an agenda for future policy,
research, and practice to help reverse the well-documented decline
in civic engagement in the United States, providing older Americans
with opportunities to have an impact in their local, national, and
global communities. The book's contributors focus attention on the
value of civic engagement in creating vital social capital and
social networks. Civic Engagement and the Baby Boomer Generation
examines: current issues and trends in civic engagement results
from senior corps. examinations expanding youth service concepts
lifelong learning institutes the relationship between civic
engagement and leadership issues in elder service and volunteerism
outcomes of a national agenda setting meeting intergenerational
relations and civic engagement Civic Engagement and the Baby Boomer
Generation is an important source of information for anyone working
with nonprofit, government, and corporate organizations concerned
with public policy, community affairs, volunteerism, research,
practice, and education.
Discover a vital source of volunteers for your organization By the
year 2020, there will be 65 million people aged 65 and over living
in the United Statesa new generation of active older adults
expecting to use the expertise, experience, and life skills they've
gained to make valuable contributions to society in their
retirement years. Civic Engagement and the Baby Boomer Generation
presents the latest research findings and evaluation studies that
help promote a thorough understanding of the programs, policies,
and civic opportunities available to people aged 50 and older. This
unique book is an essential resource for nonprofit organizations
seeking to meet their needs with a generation of volunteers eager
to explore new options, work in new capacities, and continue
lifelong learning. More than any previous generation, baby boomers
(born between 1946 and 1964) are defying stereotypes about aging
while seeking new and meaningful lifestyles. Civic Engagement and
the Baby Boomer Generation defines an agenda for future policy,
research, and practice to help reverse the well-documented decline
in civic engagement in the United States, providing older Americans
with opportunities to have an impact in their local, national, and
global communities. The book's contributors focus attention on the
value of civic engagement in creating vital social capital and
social networks. Civic Engagement and the Baby Boomer Generation
examines: current issues and trends in civic engagement results
from senior corps. examinations expanding youth service concepts
lifelong learning institutes the relationship between civic
engagement and leadership issues in elder service and volunteerism
outcomes of a national agenda setting meeting intergenerational
relations and civic engagement Civic Engagement and the Baby Boomer
Generation is an important source of information for anyone working
with nonprofit, government, and corporate organizations concerned
with public policy, community affairs, volunteerism, research,
practice, and education.
Internationally acclaimed for his portraits of powerful and
accomplished people and women of great beauty, Richard Avedon was
one of the twentieth century's greatest photographers—but perhaps
not the most obvious choice to create a portrait of ordinary people
of the American West. Yet in 1979, the Amon Carter Museum of Fort
Worth, Texas, daringly commissioned him to do just that. The
resulting 1985 exhibition and book, In the American West, was a
milestone in American photography and Avedon's most important body
of work. His unflinching portraits of oilfield and slaughterhouse
workers, miners, waitresses, drifters, mental patients, teenagers,
and others captured the unknown and often-ignored people who work
at hard, uncelebrated jobs. Making no apologies for shattering
stereotypes of the West and Westerners, Avedon said, "I'm looking
for a new definition of a photographic portrait. I'm looking for
people who are surprising—heartbreaking—or beautiful in a
terrifying way. Beauty that might scare you to death until you
acknowledge it as part of yourself." Photographer Laura Wilson
worked with Avedon during the six years he was making In the
American West. In Avedon at Work, she presents a unique
photographic record of his creation of this masterwork—the first
time a major photographer has been documented in great depth over
an extended period of time. She combines images she made during the
photographic sessions with entries from her journal to show
Avedon's working methods, his choice of subjects, his creative
process, and even his experiments and failures. Also included are a
number of Avedon's finished portraits, as well as his own comments
and letters from some of the subjects. Avedon at Work adds a new
dimension to our understanding of one of the twentieth century's
most significant series of portraits. For everyone interested in
the creative process it confirms that, in Laura Wilson's words,
"much as all these photographs may appear to be moments that just
occurred, they are finally, in varying degrees, works of the
imagination."
Spectatorship, Embodiment and Physicality in the Contemporary
Mutilation Film explores 'physical spectatorship': the
representation of mutilation on the screen and the physical
responses this evokes. The book is organised around the study of a
series of dynamic engagements that reconfigure the film-viewer
relationship.
Intimate photo essays of thirty-eight important writers, including
Margaret Atwood, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Zadie Smith, and Colm
Toibin "We've all seen writers on the dust jackets of their books.
These portraits, it seemed to me, generally failed to convey either
character or personality. Writers deserve better. I wanted to make
compelling pictures that would stick in the mind's eye."-Laura
Wilson Inspired by the classic photo essays that once appeared in
Life magazine, renowned photographer Laura Wilson presents dynamic
portraits of thirty-eight internationally acclaimed writers.
Through her photos and accompanying texts, she gives us vivid,
revealing glimpses into the everyday lives of such luminaries as
Rachel Cusk, Edwidge Danticat, David McCullough, Haruki Murakami,
and the late Carlos Fuentes and Seamus Heaney, among others.
Margaret Atwood works in her garden. Tim O'Brien performs magic
tricks for his family. And Louise Erdrich, who contributes an
introduction, speaks with customers in her Minneapolis bookstore.
At once inviting and poignant, the book reflects on writing and
photography's shared concerns with invention, transformation,
memory, and preservation. With 220 duotone images, The Writers:
Portraits will appeal to fans of literature and photography alike.
Published in association with the Harry Ransom Center at The
University of Texas at Austin Exhibition Schedule: Harry Ransom
Center at The University of Texas at Austin August 26, 2022-January
1, 2023
Achieve your survey goals by empowering your survey respondents.
Too often, surveys are designed for the analyst, rather than the
respondent. This book challenges the status quo by putting
respondents' needs at the heart of survey development. It
encourages you to stop, listen, and then design to improve response
rates and collect high quality data. Drawing on their experience at
the UK Office for National Statistics, the authors: Show you how to
design better surveys by combining social research and user
experience best practice. Equip you with the tools to design
inclusive and accessible surveys. Enable you to overcome practical
research problems, including managing participant recruitment, and
working to any budget. Provide links to helpful web material and
further reading as part of the book's online resources. Promoting a
new way to conceptualise and conduct survey design, this book
expands your theoretical thinking and shows you, step-by-step, how
to put it into practice.
Achieve your survey goals by empowering your survey respondents.
Too often, surveys are designed for the analyst, rather than the
respondent. This book challenges the status quo by putting
respondents' needs at the heart of survey development. It
encourages you to stop, listen, and then design to improve response
rates and collect high quality data. Drawing on their experience at
the UK Office for National Statistics, the authors: Show you how to
design better surveys by combining social research and user
experience best practice. Equip you with the tools to design
inclusive and accessible surveys. Enable you to overcome practical
research problems, including managing participant recruitment, and
working to any budget. Provide links to helpful web material and
further reading as part of the book's online resources. Promoting a
new way to conceptualise and conduct survey design, this book
expands your theoretical thinking and shows you, step-by-step, how
to put it into practice.
'Brilliant twisty dark farce' ERIN KELLY 'A nail bitingly tense and
original book' SHARON BOLTON 'Compulsive, horrifying and
irresistibly funny' VAL MCDERMID Shortly after Christmas, a message
arrives at Sophie's house, scrawled across her own round robin
newsletter: HE'S GOING TO LEAVE YOU. LET'S SEE HOW SMUG YOU ARE
THEN, YOU STUPID BITCH. Perhaps she should ignore it, but she
ignored the last one. And the one before that. Now it's time to
take action. But when a simple plan to identify and confront the
other woman goes drastically and violently wrong, Sophie must go to
extreme lengths to keep her life and her family together - while
never letting on her devastating secret.
1958: Notting Hill is sweltering in a heatwave. It's DI Stratton's
new manor and a powder keg of racial tension. A rent collector is
stabbed and a series of street fights between teddy boys and
Caribbean immigrants sparks further unrest. Young runaway Irene, on
the verge of prostitution, finds her loyalties lie on both sides of
the fight. A race riot breaks out - the worst Britain has ever
seen. Stratton must tread a path through the violence and prejudice
to find the killer and save Irene before Notting Hill explodes.
"Rather than the proverbial melting pot, Wilson asks us to
recognize a West that is at least a place where, against a backdrop
of aridity and expansive space, diverse lives can and do coexist."
-John Rohrbach Renowned photographer Laura Wilson has captured the
majesty, as well as the tragedy, of her home region of Texas and
the wider West for more than three decades. A former assistant to
Richard Avedon, she has published her work to wide acclaim over the
past twenty-five years. As seen in this extraordinary book,
Wilson's subjects range from legendary West Texas cattle ranches to
impoverished Plains Indian reservations to lavish border-town
cotillions. Also featured are compelling portraits of artists who
are associated with the region, including Donald Judd, Ed Ruscha,
and Sam Shepard. The unforgettable images in That Day, most of
which are previously unpublished, tell sharply drawn stories of the
people and places that have shaped, and continue to shape, the
nation's most dynamic and unyielding land. Text from Wilson's
journals accompanies the photographs, recalling her personal
experiences behind the camera at the moment when a particular image
was captured. With her incisive eye, Wilson casts a fresh light on
the West-a topic of enduring fascination. Published in association
with the Clements Center for Southwest Studies at Southern
Methodist University Exhibition Schedule: Amon Carter Museum of
American Art (09/05/15-02/14/16)
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The Wrong Girl (Paperback)
Laura Wilson
1
bundle available
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R303
R248
Discovery Miles 2 480
Save R55 (18%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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A sudden death exposes three generations of family secrets in this
gripping, atmospheric psychological thriller for fans of Clare
Mackintosh, Belinda Bauer and B A Paris. Janice Keaton is living a
quiet, easy life when a longed-for reunion with the daughter she
gave up for adoption several decades earlier drags her into a
lethal confrontation with her past. Did her brother, Dan, die a
natural death? Is Joe, her former lover, really an acid casualty,
or was there another reason for his abrupt withdrawal from public
life? And what is her granddaughter, Molly, hiding? As she
struggles to come to terms with a series of shocks, Janice realises
that her recollections of the past hold a sinister secret - one
with deadly consequences. And then Molly disappears...
This incredibly easy-to-follow diet allows you to eat five meals a
day without restricting calories, and create the best health you've
ever had Written by ultra-marathoner and health coach Laura Wilson,
who has used these principles to turn her own health around, this
diet is easy to stick to, provides all your macro and
micro-nutrient needs, and supports bodily regeneration and healing
without the use of medical interventions. Discover a simple,
practical way to eat, that will help you to heal health problems
including:
- weight issues / obesity
- bad skin / premature aging
- low energy / chronic fatigue
- poor sleep / insomnia
- stress and depression
- poor concentration
- mood swings
- bladder or kidney problems
- dull skin, eczema, acne or psoriasis
- brittle hair and nails
- frequent infections, colds, yeast infections
- allergies
- type 2 Diabetes
- high cholesterol
- heart disease
By following Laura's easy-to-learn protocol, you will be eating
naturally alkaline foods that support your body and promote optimum
health. The meals you will be eating take very little time to
prepare each day, making this diet convenient no matter what your
day-to-day routine is like. Laura shares her own inspiring story
and the fantastic results that thousands of people following her
eating plan have achieved. Full of helpful information, advice and
delicious recipes, this is a comprehensive resource for anyone
wishing to turn their health around.
In the spring and summer of 1952, fifteen Soviet Jews, including
five prominent Yiddish writers and poets, were secretly tried and
convicted; multiple executions soon followed in the basement of
Moscow's Lubyanka prison. The defendants were falsely charged with
treason and espionage because of their involvement in the Jewish
Anti-Fascist Committee, and because of their heartfelt response as
Jews to Nazi atrocities on occupied Soviet territory. Stalin had
created the committee to rally support for the Soviet Union during
World War II, but he then disbanded it after the war as his
paranoia mounted about Soviet Jews. For many years, a host of myths
surrounded the case against the committee. Now this book, which
presents an abridged version of the long-suppressed transcript of
the trial, reveals the Kremlin's machinery of destruction. Joshua
Rubenstein provides annotations about the players and events
surrounding the case. In a long introduction, drawing on newly
released documents in Moscow archives and on interviews with
relatives of the defendants in Israel, Russia, and the United
States, Rubenstein also sets the trial in historical and political
context and offers a vivid account of Stalin's anti-Semitic
campaign. Published in association with the United States Holocaust
Memorial Museum
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