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A moving and realistic look at what it was like to care for
children with cancer, particularly leukemia, on night shift in the
Hematology-Oncology unit at one of the nation's top children's
hospitals.
With needles, strangers, and embarrassing situations, hospitals can
be scary places, particularly if you're a teen girl. I can't do
anything about those needles. That's up to your doctor. But I can
tell you how to change those strangers into friends and how to
avoid that embarrassment with skill and tact. That's because I
cared for girls just like you at one of the nation's top children's
hospitals. This book tells you how to make your hospital stay much
more enjoyable.
In 1900 a new writer took England by a storm. Writing intelligently
and well on a wide variety of topics, G. K. Chesterton defied
categorization. Although deeply patriotic, he was one of the few to
oppose the Boer War. A gifted literary critic, he nevertheless
defended 'penny dreadfuls' read by young boys and condemned by
almost everyone else. And in an era of unbridled capitalism and
fashionable socialism, he unleashed telling broadsides against
both. In 1908 his brother Cecil wrote this biography. That book is
now back in print in an enhanced and enlarged 'Centennial Edition'
with numerous notes explaining the context and appendices with both
sides of G. K. Chesterton's famous 1908 debate about socialism with
H. G. Wells and Bernard Shaw, including Chesterton's marvelous "On
Wells and a Glass of Beer."
Writing before, during and just after World War I, G. K. Chesterton
describes what has gone wrong with Germany and warns that, if
Germany is not forced to reform, that war will be followed by
another and more horrible war. In these 111 articles, Chesterton
criticizes militarism and debates the paths to peace being
advocated by pacifists and internationalists. He also harshly
criticizes a then-fashionable form of racism that would later be
adopted by Nazism, making him one of Hitler's first foes. These
articles are extensively commented and footnoted to explain the
context in which Chesterton wrote. In the back are appendices with
articles on war and peace by Thomas Acquinas, Winston Churchill,
Norman Angell, Bernard Shaw, Bertrand Russell, Mahatma Gandhi, and
H. G. Wells
Francis Galton is said to have founded eugenics with an 1864
magazine article. But a single article does not make a movement and
Galton, by his own admission, did little to promote the idea before
1901. This book demonstrates that eugenists have given us an
inaccurate history of their movement, assigning credit to Galton,
the eminent half-cousin of Charles Darwin, when the real credit
belongs to a woman who was perhaps the most radical
nineteenth-century American feminist. That woman was Victoria
Woodhull, the first woman to run for U.S. President and, with her
sister, the first woman stockbroker on Wall Street. This book
contains all her major speeches and writings on eugenics to
demonstrate that she was the first of either sex to take to the
road and, in hundreds of speeches across the U.S., champion the
idea of creating a "perfected humanity" by breeding "perfect
children." She even beat Galton in his own land, moving to England
in 1876 and introducing eugenics there. Woodhull was not a shy
about her role. The title for this book comes from the headline of
a 1912 London newspaper article proclaiming her "Lady Eugenist." In
1927, shortly before she died, the New York Times would carry an
article in which she praised eugenic sterilization and claimed to
have "advocated that fifty years ago in my book Marriage of the
Unfit."
Joseph Pulitzer founded the Pulitzer Prizes and was one of the most
talented publishers in American history. For the last twenty years
of his life, he wanted to transform journalism into a profession
much like medicine and law. In this book, first published by
Columbia University in 1904, Pulitzer explained his vision for
university-level schools of journalism. A classic in the history of
journalism, it is an excellent and thought-stimulating resource for
those wanting to understand just what it means to be a journalist.
Aldous Huxley's Brave New World was fiction. Victoria Woodhull's
Brave New World was to be terrifyingly real. As the first female
Wall Street brokers, Victoria Woodhull and her sister Tennie had
reputations to protect. They fretted about Tennie's well-publicized
remark, "Many of the best men in Wall] Street know my power.
Commodore Vanderbilt knows my power." She had meant her skill as a
fortune teller, but the press quite rightly picked up hints the
attractive pair traded sexual favors for assistance in their
business. To make matters worse, in their magazine the sisters had
published articles promoting free love, while distancing themselves
from what was said. Taking the offensive, Victoria moved, step by
step, until in a speech on November 20, 1871, she boldly
proclaimed: "And to those who denounce me for this I reply: 'Yes, I
am a Free Lover. I have an inalienable, constitutional, and natural
right to love whom I may, to love as long or as short a period as I
can; to change that love every day if I please, and with that right
neither you nor any law can frame any right to interfere.'" Having
come out of the closet, she had to defend that lifestyle from those
who warned that it meant social ruin. In speeches across the
country, she championed a new society that, in its
nineteenth-century context, was remarkable similar to Huxley's 1932
classic, Brave New World. Babies were not grown in bottles, but
pregnant women were to be treated as "laboring for society," "paid
the highest wages," and once the baby was weaned, "the fruit of her
labor will of right belong to society and she return to her common
industrial pursuits." To critics who warned that free love meant
children growing upwithout parents, she replied that, "not more
than one in ten" mothers was competent, and that parents should be
replaced by the State because, "It is but one step beyond
compulsory education to the complete charge of children." In her
Brave New World, you could have all the sex you could attract, but
it would be impossible to be a genuine parent.
This book unites under one cover G. K. Chesterton's first three
books of poetry: Greybeards at Play (1900), The Wild Knight and
Other Poems (1900) and The Ballad of the White Horse (1911). All
text and illustrations are based on the first UK editions. Poet W.
H. Auden noted that the first book "contains some of the best pure
nonsense verse in English."
J. R. R. Tolkien said that his writing was inspired by William
Morris. This book includes two of William Morris' most popular
tales in one inexpensive, wide-format, two-column edition.
J. R. R. Tolkien, author of The Lord of the Rings, said that his
writing was inspired and influenced by the books of William Morris.
This book contains two of Morris's best loved books: The House of
the Wolfings and The Roots of the Mountains.
Here is the book Tolkien fans have needed for 50 years--a detailed
chronologyof Tolkien's complex tale.
J. R. R. Tolkien was inspired in the writing of The Lord of the
Rings by this tale of a magical coat of mail and the temptation to
use its protection in a war between the Rohan-like Wolfings and the
enslaving armies of Rome.
J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings was influenced by this
tale of a romance that unites two long-ago peoples and of the
battle to defend their freedom against invading Huns.
In 1890, two American college graduates set out to travel around
the world on a then-new invention, the modern bicycle. In 1893 they
returned, have covered over 15,000 miles, at that time the "longest
continuous land journey ever made around the world." This is their
account their trip across Turkey, Persia, Turkestan and northern
China. It described their adventures traveling along through
regions few outsiders ever visited. Out of print over a century,
this book is now back in print with additional notes and maps.
This is a reprint of the bestselling 1922 classic on birth-control
and women's rights with new chapters by George Bernard Shaw, H.G.
Wells, and articles culled from the "New York Times."
Now back in print, the bestselling 1913 classic on the character of
Jesus Christ organized for 12 weeks of daily devotional reading.
This is a collection of quotes selected by Chesterton himself from
material the ever-popular Chesterton wrote between 1901 and 1911.
Editorial comments have been added to explain details dimmed by the
passage of time. A bibliography describes the sources.
Fourteen of Hans Christian Andersen's best loved tales for girls,
lovingly adapted for twenty-first century children. Includes The
Little Mermaid, The Princess and the Pea, The Little Match Girl,
The Ugly Duckling, The Snow Queen and Thumbelina.
A newly typeset edition of the classic 1853 biography of Toussaint
L'Ouverture, the brilliant military leader who defeated Napoleon's
generals and liberated the slaves of Haiti.
Chilling details from the American Seventh Army report about the
liberation of prisoners from Dachau's death camps, with diary
entries and eyewitness accounts.
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Paperback
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R391
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Discovery Miles 3 620
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