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"You know when a song gets stuck in your head? Round and round ...
over and over. I've got that right now ... only it's not a piece of
music ... it's not a tune ... it's a phrase: home is where the
heart is ... home is where the heart is." A coastline erodes, a
house falls into the sea. A mysterious brother and sister arrive
looking for answers. Marnie clings to her camera, taking
photographs of strangers and places. She has come to say goodbye to
a life she never knew whilst her brother Linus is keen to make a
fresh start. But when they find Simon and daughter Kelly, reeling
in the wake of tragedy, all four lives are to become inextricably
linked under the weight of the past.
1939: fascism spreads across Europe, Franco marches on Barcelona
and two German chemists discover the processes of atomic fission.
In Berkeley, California, theoretical physicists recognise the
horrendous potential of this new science: a weapon that draws its
power from the very building blocks of the universe. Struggling to
cast off his radical past and thrust into a position of power and
authority, the charismatic J Robert Oppenheimer races to win the
'battle of the laboratories' and create a weapon so devastating
that it would bring about an end not just to the Second World War
but to all war. Tom Morton-Smith's new play takes us into the heart
of the Manhattan Project, revealing the personal cost of making
history.
Title: The Revised Statutes of the Territory of Minnesota, Passed
at the Second Session of the Legislative Assembly, Commencing
January 1, 1851: Printed and Published Pursuant to Law.Author:
Morton Smith WilkinsonPublisher: Gale, Making of Modern Law
Description: The Making of Modern Law: Primary Sources, 1620-1926
contains a virtual goldmine of information for researchers of
American legal history --- an archive of the published records of
the American colonies, documents published by state constitutional
conventions, state codes, city charters, law dictionaries, digests
and more.++++The below data was compiled from various
identification fields in the bibliographic record of this title.
This data is provided as an additional tool in helping to insure
edition identification: ++++SourceLibrary: Yale Law
LibraryDocumentID: LPSY0109601SecondaryDocType: State
CodesSourceBibCitation: The Making of Modern Law: Primary Sources,
1620-1926PublicationPlace: United StatesImprintFull: St. Paul:
James M. Goodhue, Territorial Printer, 1851ImprintYear:
1851Collation: xvi, 734 p.; 26 cm
Title: Amendments to The Revised Statutes of the Territory of
Minnesota, Passed at the Third Session of the Legislative Assembly,
Commencing January 6, 1852.Author: Morton Smith WilkinsonPublisher:
Gale, Making of Modern Law Description: The Making of Modern Law:
Primary Sources, 1620-1926 contains a virtual goldmine of
information for researchers of American legal history --- an
archive of the published records of the American colonies,
documents published by state constitutional conventions, state
codes, city charters, law dictionaries, digests and more.++++The
below data was compiled from various identification fields in the
bibliographic record of this title. This data is provided as an
additional tool in helping to insure edition identification:
++++SourceLibrary: Yale Law LibraryDocumentID:
LPSY0109602SecondaryDocType: State CodesSourceBibCitation: The
Making of Modern Law: Primary Sources, 1620-1926PublicationPlace:
United StatesImprintFull: St. Paul: Owens & Moore, Printers,
1852ImprintYear: 1852Collation: xvi, 734 p.; 26 cm
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
PublishingA AcentsAcentsa A-Acentsa Acentss Legacy Reprint Series.
Due to its age, it may contain imperfections such as marks,
notations, marginalia and flawed pages. Because we believe this
work is culturally important, we have made it available as part of
our commitment to protecting, preserving, and promoting the world's
literature. Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of
thousands of rare and hard-to-find books with something of intere
Considerations more political than practical left Idaho strange in
shape-like a pregnant capital L, as one observer said. With the
state's southeastern residents oriented toward Salt Lake City,
Utah, and residents of the Idaho panhandle oriented toward Spokane,
Washington, often it has seemed that only the capital at Boise and
the Snake River system have held the state together. More than half
of Idaho is owned by an outsider-the federal government-and the
rest has never been densely populated. From Lewis and Clark on,
early travelers to the region found its deserts and mountains
forbiddingly inhospitable. But the mountains have yielded timber
and rich mineral mines. The deserts have become productive farms
through reclamation and irrigation projects of enormous magnitude.
A kind of "irrigation democracy" also has won attention for the
state beyond its borders, as has the awe-inspiring beauty that
makes Idaho an attractive place to live.
The authors were asked not for comprehensive chronicles, nor for
research monographs or new data for scholars. Bibliographies and
footnotes are minimal. Each author was asked for a summing
up-interpretive, sensitive, thoughtful, individual, even
personal-of what seems significant about his or her state's
history. What distinguishes it? What has mattered about it, to its
own people and to the rest of the nation? What has it come to now?
-James Morton Smith, General Editor
Reykjavik, 1972. All eyes are on Iceland ahead of ‘the Match of
the Century’: Boris Spassky vs. Bobby Fischer. For the two
contenders, the stakes have never been higher – the world title,
unprecedented prize money, and stratospheric fame are all on the
table.
"I don't think we'll get to Mars... not really...not normal people.
Scientists might... it'll end up a scientific outpost like
Antarctica... but it won't be for people like you and me." Maggie
has found a warm patch of ground on Horsell Common. She believes
something is buried in the dirt. This is the site of the Martian
invasion in H G Wells' The War of the Worlds and she sneaks out of
the house in the dead of night and dances on the warm spot. Here
she meets Behrooz, an amateur astronomer who spends his nights
mapping the surface of Mars. Cartographer John is remapping the
streets of Woking. He's about to become a father and is terrified
by the thought. He finds an ally in Corinne, Maggie's mother - a
woman struggling to keep her sex life separate and secret from her
daughter. Kiph, who everyone thinks is gay, is madly in love with
Maggie, his best-friend. He attends a book signing to meet his
hero, Richard Bleakman - star of cult 80s sci-fi show John Carter
of Mars. Richard has problems of his own. A stunning new play about
fantasy and sexuality, and about the blurry and indistinct
linesbetween reality and desire.
In this series of provocative essays, nine specialists in early
American history examine some of the more important aspects of the
seventeenth-century colonial experience, presenting an impressive
sampling of modern historical research on such topics as colonists
and Indians, people and society, church and state, and history and
historians.
Originally published 1959.
A UNC Press Enduring Edition -- UNC Press Enduring Editions use the
latest in digital technology to make available again books from our
distinguished backlist that were previously out of print. These
editions are published unaltered from the original, and are
presented in affordable paperback formats, bringing readers both
historical and cultural value.
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