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The masterful, Pulitzer Prize-winning literary epic about the painful
and complex realities of slave life on a Southern plantation. An
utterly original exploration of race, trust and the cruel truths of
human nature, this is a landmark in modern American literature.
Henry Townsend, previously enslaved and now a farmer and bootmaker, is
one of the few Black masters in the South. Mentored by William Robbins,
one of the most powerful men in Manchester County, Virginia, Townsend
has built his plantation with ambition and discipline, while grappling
with his place in a society defined by racial oppression.
When Townsend dies unexpectedly, the established order falls into
disarray. As disruption reverberates throughout the community, a series
of events uncovers an intricate web of relationships, power imbalances
and betrayals.
An astonishing literary epic exploring race, trust and the cruel truths
of human nature, Edward P. Jones ’ Pulitzer Prize winning novel The
Known World is a landmark in modern American literature
One puzzling mystery. Several slippery suspects. Endless
possibilities! Welcome to Haventry, a town where the ordinary and
extraordinary collide! With ghosts, werewolves and zombies living
side by side, trouble is always brewing. And when a fiendish crime
is committed, YOU are the detective in charge of the case. All
aboard the Transylvanian Express! YOU and your yeti boss Klaus are
headed to Castle Ursprung, home of the infamous vampire Count
Fledermaus. But before you get there, you have a mystery to solve:
Night Mayor Franklefink has vanished from the train. Someone
onboard must have played a role in his disappearance but who has
the strongest motive? Could it be Franklefink’s archnemesis
Bramwell Stoker? Or is Sandra Rigmarole, elf District Governor and
colleague of the Night Mayor, a more likely suspect? Or perhaps
Franklefink’s monster wife has suddenly turned against him? YOU
decide! With hundreds of paths to choose from and no dead ends,
you’ll solve the mystery every time! A fantastically imaginative
detective story for readers looking for an interactive adventure.
Three years after the publication of his much-heralded, Pulitzer
Prize-winning novel, "The Known World," Edward P. Jones returned
with an elegiac, luminous masterpiece, "All Aunt Hagar's Children."
In these fourteen sweeping and sublime stories, Jones resurrects
the minor characters in his first award-winning story collection,
"Lost in the City." The result is vintage Jones: powerful,
magisterial tales that showcase his ability to probe the
complexities and tenaciousness of the human spirit.
"All Aunt Hagar's Children" is filled with people who call
Washington, D.C., home. Yet it is the city's ordinary citizens, not
its power brokers, who most concern Jones. Here, everyday people
who thought the values of the South would sustain them in the North
find "that the cohesion born and nurtured in the south would be but
memory in less than two generations."
In recent years, there has been an increased urgency and appeal to
examine the impacts of systemic racism in all parts of society, and
the field of library and information science is no exception. To
actively combat enabling and perpetuating structural racism and
white supremacy, libraries across the globe are addressing justice,
equity, diversity, and inclusion (JEDI) by investing resources,
creating initiatives, and engaging in reflection and deep
questioning. Perspectives on Justice, Equity, Diversity, and
Inclusion in Libraries examines how JEDI initiatives and actions
have been incorporated into all aspects of librarianship and
various types of libraries. The book serves as a collection of
exemplary cases across all settings of librarianship to showcase
how this work is being implemented and to provide commentary on
implications and future opportunities for growth. Covering key
topics such as community, ethics, and inclusive spaces, this
premier reference source is ideal for administrators, policymakers,
academicians, researchers, scholars, practitioners, librarians,
instructors, and students.
The 2004 Pulitzer Prize Winner for Fiction returns with a
collection of 14 short stories, rife with characters who will stay
with you well beyond the last page Edward P. Jones, the bestselling
and prize-winning author of 'The Known World', returns to the form
that first inspired him - the short story In this collection, Jones
returns to the city that inspired his first book, 'Lost in the
City'. This is the story of Washington DC, a city full of bustling
life, bursting forth from the banks of the swampy Potomac. These
are the stories of the city's ordinary inhabitants, its labourers
and lawyers, sailors and nuns, children and pensioners - people who
in Jones's masterful hands emerge as fully human and morally
complex. Casting his net wide, Jones explores the American Dream on
an epic canvas, from the dawn of the twentieth century until modern
times. His memorable cast of characters find themselves caught
between the old ways of the agricultural America of their past and
the temptations of the big city, struggling against the inequities
locked within slavery's legacy. Both witty and poignant, touching
and shocking, this collection is sure to make a lasting impression
and further confirm Jones as one of the masters of the genre.
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Money (Hardcover)
John P Jones
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R1,197
Discovery Miles 11 970
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Who are we? We are hardworking and focused. We are winners or
defeaters. We fall in and out of love. Some of us own nice cars
while others take the bus. We are immensely rich or exceedingly
broke. We're not in tabloids or on covers of magazines. "We're
common, "Everyday Folks.""
"Everyday Folks: Short Stories on the Common People" takes a
glimpse into the lives of people whose life stories would probably
go unnoticed. The short stories warm our hearts or challenge our
nerves. They chronicle the realities and complexities that many of
us face on a day-to-day basis. Set in Miami, Florida, "Everyday
Folks" gives the rest of the world a chance to see beneath the
fleshy surface of people who build their lives around love, pain,
and the inevitable.
This book is dedicated to you...not to many but a small
few...for the things you do in lieu of what you do...
For it is derived from the essence of you.
It captures the heart with episodes that only the common people
will understand.
Systemic Entrepreneurship focuses on creating an awareness of
systemic entrepreneurship and illustrates the fact that one needs
to approach entrepreneurial support activities from many different
angles.
This textbook offers a practical approach for designing and
implementing assessment for learning in the drama classroom.
Assessment in the Drama Classroom begins with a theoretical
overview that covers the purpose of assessment with
student-centered, culturally responsive methods. The following
chapters present an in-depth analysis of how to organize drama
curriculum, develop measurable learning objectives, and implement a
backwards planning approach to summative assessment. Models and
tools for generating diagnostic, formative, and summative
assessments for various grade levels invite the reader to adapt
these approaches to their classrooms. Ideal for drama education and
pedagogy courses, this book is an accessible tool for drama
educators to engage in critical reflection on assessment. Drama
educators will find methods and suggestions for reimagining their
assessment practices and be empowered to meet the learning needs of
their students.
Lee Robert Jackson's ability to detect spoken lies by the odor
emitting from the speaker brings a rush of federal agents to
Farmers Mill in an effort to hire the young farmer or to prevent
him from being used against their agencies. Seedy characters mingle
with FBI agents and CIA operatives in a battle of wits.
Fear of lie detecting creates conspiracies from the White House
to Congress. Bureaucrats fear the orderly function of their
activities hangs in the balance.
Jackson must earn money to regain Four Oaks, Lucy Crabtree's
family farm before the fiery redhead will agree to marry him. CIA's
beautiful McCoy twins set a trap for him as Sherry, the judge's
daughter initiates a campaign of her own to acquire Four Oaks for
herself.
Marxist thinking can offer a critical understanding of education in
an international context. Jones tackles these issues from a variety
of angles and perspectives, taking advantage of recent theoretical
innovations in Marxist analysis as well as the personal experiences
of educational practitioners with Marxist commitments. With a
specific focus on pedagogical practices as cultural practices, this
book combines detailed case studies of local situations with broad,
critical overviews of global development and challenges.
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