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Meet the unusual and interesting familes of Paula and Thomas
Caulfield. Experience the melding of these diverse characters into
a cohesive clan.
Be an intimate part of their lives, sharing their bedroom
conversations and personal feelings.
The story spans the globe and takes the reader on a journey to
uncommon places to hob-nob with distinctive people.
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Permilia (Hardcover)
Mary Pierce; Illustrated by Shirley Jean Dobler
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R576
Discovery Miles 5 760
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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An Illustrated Children's book set in the Old West. Permilia is a
charming tale of a little girl and her two siblings. Being an
orphan in the 1800's is not easy. Together they face the challenges
of life with courage and cheerfulness. One day, eight year old,
Permilia meets Mr. Amos, a crusty old hermit, who has all but given
up on people and life. Through Permilia's sweet spirit, his heart
rediscovers the beauty and wonder of life. But when Little Tilden
becomes gravely ill, everyone's lives are changed forever.
Marooned in Africa is an exciting adventure set in the wild and
untamed forests of West Africa. A young female biologist is
separated from her group, and is storm-tossed on the Expedition
yacht into a huge tidal basin, alone. Paula goes ashore to explore,
where she is seen and followed by natives, who capture her and take
her far inland to be a trophy wife for their chief. Subjected to
ritual combat for status, she knows mutilation will soon follow if
she does not escape. Once into the forest, she becomes disoriented
and follows the wrong trail, ending up on a hillside full of lion
dens. Unaware that she is being followed and also stalked, she is
confronted by lions and within moments of becoming dinner, is saved
by a lone traveler. The journey back to the cove is enlivened by
animal encounters, and campfire stories that take her back to times
long gone with glimpses into the unknown and savage secrets of
Africa. Along the way a unique relationship develops with the man
who saved her from the lions, but neither one wants to be the first
to express their feelings, until an unexpected decision is made and
changes everything.
This engaging collection of essays considers the cultural
complexities of the Franco-Irish relationship in song and story,
image and cuisine, novels, paintings and poetry. It casts a fresh
eye on public perceptions of the historic bonds between Ireland and
France, revealing a rich variety of contact and influence.
Controversy is not shirked, whether on the subject of Irish
economic decline or reflecting on prominent, contentious
personalities such as Ian Paisley and Michel Houellebecq.
Contrasting ideas of the popular and the intellectual emerge in a
study of Brendan Kennelly; recent Irish tribunals are analysed in
the light of French cultural theory; and familiar renditions of
Franco-Irish links are re-evaluated against the evidence of
newspaper and journal accounts. Drawing on the disciplines of
history, art, economics and literature, and dipping into the good
wines of France and Ireland, the book paints a fascinating picture
of the relationship between the two countries over three dramatic
centuries.
The engaging figure of Irish writer George Moore (1852-1933) comes
to life in this collection of essays on his works and influences.
So often considered as dangerously controversial in his lifetime,
his literary output can now be appreciated as groundbreaking,
artistically sophisticated and particularly significant for the
innovations he introduced into English literature. In this volume,
international Moore scholars venture into previously unexplored
literary, historical and psychological territory as they shine new
light on Moore's diagnoses, and on his presentation of human
quirks. In turn, and in a Moorian spirit, the author is critically
examined for his alleged feminist credentials, his spiritual
understanding, his cultural insights and his literary
experimentation. The analytical focus is sharp; the presence of
Joyce, Yeats, Wilde, Zola and Dujardin is strong; and the
surrounding atmosphere of Revival Ireland is unmistakable, albeit
with a French colouring. This is an entertaining and enlightening
compilation that will engage the reader and provide much relevant
material for specialists across a variety of fields.
This invigorating volume explores the literary worlds inhabited by
the pioneering Irish author George Moore (1852–1933). With an eye
to Moore’s innovative embrace of visual art, feminism and
literary history, and in- the spirit of his feisty resistance to
‘orthodoxy’, it investigates his influences and inventive
strategies in novel, short story and memoir. Amongst the names
emerging from the disparate spheres of impressionism, literary
coteries, the paratextual and the music world are those of Manet,
Mallarmé, Wilde, Héloïse, Elgar and Bourdieu, all with Moorian
links. Contested depictions of religion and nationalism simmer;
France and French influences encompass fin-de-siècle stories and
medieval texts; epistolary details evidence vital parental support;
contemporary authors write back to Moore. These voyages of
discovery enter the fields of feminist scholarship and the New
Woman, life writing and letters, fin-de-siècle aesthetics,
intersections between art, music and literature, and literary
transitions from Victorian to Modern. Valuably, the authors suggest
numerous opportunities for additional research in these areas, as
well as within Moore studies. This collection, with contributions
from an international set of established and new scholars, delivers
fresh and original findings as it builds on the substantial and
ever-growing corpus of Moore studies.
The rich association between Ireland and France is embodied in
music, art and creative writing from both countries and this
collection provides a tantalising selection of these interweaving
influences. The book presents a vivid picture of interactions
between composers, performers, poets and novelists on each side of
the Celtic Sea. Surprises abound, with music unexpectedly linking
Ireland and France through George Alexander Osborne and Frederic
Chopin, through Thomas Moore and Jean-Jacques Rousseau, through
Irish-inspired French opera and a French-directed Irish orchestra.
Words and music meet in a Kate O'Brien novel, a musical
interpretation of Verlaine and a selection of Paula Meehan's
poetry, while the encounter between wine and music creates new
possibilities for artistic and cultural expression. Exploring the
works and influence of a wide range of figures including James
Joyce, Marcel Proust, Jacques Derrida, J.M. Synge, Helene Cixous,
Eilean Ni Chuilleanain, Hector Berlioz, Maurice Ravel, Neil Jordan
and John Field, the essays collected here uncover a wealth of
artistic interconnections between France and Ireland.
Embrace Your Inner Mrs. Potato Head! She's so much more real and
full of fun than Barbie ever could be. And she knows how to laugh
like only those who have discovered the humor, heart, and wisdom of
true womanhood can laugh. Give her room to romp with this hilarious
collection of zany, true-life stories by Mary Pierce.If you love to
kick off your shoes and laugh your socks off over the foibles and
absurdities of life, this book is for you. Mrs. Potato Head's
hormones are out of whack. Her memory is held together by sticky
notes. But she's got a sense of humor that just won't quit, and
she's learned to accept and enjoy herself as she is---because God
does.
Is your spiritual life more like a fast-food run than an intimate
dinner for two? Whether it s the busy mother s wish to be Wonder
Woman---minus the metal bra---or battles with an exploding hot
water heater, or fighting the Resolutionary War of New Year s Day,
Mary Pierce understands the dilemmas of being a woman in today s
24/7 world. From disorganized misery to extreme organizational
mania (she used to refer to her children by their household chores:
Cat Box Boy, Dishwasher Girl, and Garbage Can Baby), Pierce deals
with our fumbling attempts to grow closer to God, encouraging us as
she invites us to laugh, cry, love, embrace life, and pray In her
humorous, conversational style, Pierce laughs at her mistakes and
her prayers that seem more like advertising jingles (Lord, I need a
break today, and Can you hear me now, Lord?). In Confessions of a
Prayer Wimp, you ll come to understand that faith is less about
what you are or do or say, and more about who God is---someone who
loves you no matter what you do."
Meet the unusual and interesting familes of Paula and Thomas
Caulfield. Experience the melding of these diverse characters into
a cohesive clan.
Be an intimate part of their lives, sharing their bedroom
conversations and personal feelings.
The story spans the globe and takes the reader on a journey to
uncommon places to hob-nob with distinctive people.
Marooned in Africa is an exciting adventure set in the wild and
untamed forests of West Africa. A young female biologist is
separated from her group, and is storm-tossed on the Expedition
yacht into a huge tidal basin, alone. Paula goes ashore to explore,
where she is seen and followed by natives, who capture her and take
her far inland to be a trophy wife for their chief. Subjected to
ritual combat for status, she knows mutilation will soon follow if
she does not escape. Once into the forest, she becomes disoriented
and follows the wrong trail, ending up on a hillside full of lion
dens. Unaware that she is being followed and also stalked, she is
confronted by lions and within moments of becoming dinner, is saved
by a lone traveler. The journey back to the cove is enlivened by
animal encounters, and campfire stories that take her back to times
long gone with glimpses into the unknown and savage secrets of
Africa. Along the way a unique relationship develops with the man
who saved her from the lions, but neither one wants to be the first
to express their feelings, until an unexpected decision is made and
changes everything.
The formative influences of Paris and France on the Anglo-Irish
writer George Moore (1852-1933) cannot be underestimated. While the
years Moore spent in Paris in the 1870s were seminal for his
artistic awakening and development, the associations and
friendships he formed in French literary and artistic circles
exerted an enduring influence on his creative career. Moore
maintained close ties with France throughout his life and his
numerous contacts extended to social, musical and cultural spheres.
He introduced the Impressionists to a British audience and his
importation of French literary innovation into the English novel
was remarkable. Exploring Moore's early years in Paris and his
ongoing engagement with the experimental modernity of his French
models, these essays offer new insights into this cosmopolitan
writer's work. Moore emerges as a turn-of-the-century European
artist whose eclectic writings reflect the complex evolution of
literature from Naturalism to Modernism through Symbolism and
Decadence.
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