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A masterclass in espionage thriller fiction from the heir to John le Carre for fans of Mick Herron, Charles Cumming and David McCloskey. Meet 'a female agent for our times', disgraced MI5 operative Slim Parsons.
Slim Parsons is all but burned.
Her last deep cover job for MI5 ended with a life-and-death struggle on a private jet that caused her to go on the run from both the deadly target and her angry bosses in the Security Service. They say that violence comes too easily to her; that she's bordering on delinquent and unsuitable for the roll of an MI5 operative.
Yet she is recalled and asked to infiltrate a news website that's causing alarm in the highest circles. It is staffed by a group descended from wartime codebreakers operating from an unassuming office block near Bletchley Park. Operation Linesman looks like a come down, the curtain on a brilliant career in the shadows. However, she accepts the assignment on condition that the Security Service searches for her missing brother.
Linesman turns out to be anything but simple. Her personal loss, her previous deep cover role, and a threat to MI5 itself from her original target come together in a three-way collision.
And all the while she is watched by someone even deeper in the shadows than she is.
Citizens are asked to buy, and asked to consider to buy, goods of
all sizes and all prices, nearly all of the time. Appeals to
political decision-making are less common. In The Consumer Citizen,
Ethan Porter investigates how the techniques of everyday consumer
experiences can shape political behavior. Drawing on more than a
dozen original studies, he shows that the casual conflation of
consumer and political decisions has profound implications for how
Americans think about politics. Indeed, Porter explains that
consumer habits can affect citizens' attitudes about their
government, their taxes, their politicians, and even whether they
purchase government-sponsored health insurance. The consumer
citizen approaches government as if it were just an ordinary firm.
Of course, government is not an ordinary firm--far from it--and the
disjunction between what government is, and the consumer apparatus
that citizens bring to bear on their evaluations of it, offers
insight into several long-unanswered questions in political
behavior and public opinion. How do many Americans make sense of
the political world? The Consumer Citizen offers a novel answer: By
relying on the habits and tools that they learn as consumers.
This book reviews advances in understanding of the past ca. two
million years of Earth history - the Quaternary Period - in the
United States. It begins with sections on ice and water - as
glaciers, permafrost, oceans, rivers, lakes, and aquifers. Six
chapters are devoted to the high-latitude Pleistocene ice sheets,
to mountain glaciations of the western United States, and to
permafrost studies. Other chapters discuss ice-age lakes, caves,
sea-level fluctuations, and riverine landscapes. With a chapter on
landscape evolution models, the book turns to essays on geologic
processes. Two chapters discuss soils and their responses to
climate, and wind-blown sediments. Two more describe volcanoes and
earthquakes, and the use of Quaternary geology to understand the
hazards they pose. The next part of the book is on plants and
animals. Five chapters consider the Quaternary history of
vegetation in the United States. Other chapters treat forcing
functions and vegetation response at different spatial and temporal
scales, the role of fire as a catalyst of vegetation change during
rapid climate shifts, and the use of tree rings in inferring age
and past hydroclimatic conditions. Three chapters address
vertebrate paleontology and the extinctions of large mammals at the
end of the last glaciation, beetle assemblages and the inferences
they permit about past conditions, and the peopling of North
America. A final chapter addresses the numerical modeling of
Quaternary climates, and the role paleoclimatic studies and
climatic modeling has in predicting future response of the Earth's
climate system to the changes we have wrought.
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The Last Act (DVD)
Kyra Sedgwick, Dylan Baker, Al Pacino, Dianne Wiest, Dan Hedaya, …
1
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R38
Discovery Miles 380
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Ships in 10 - 20 working days
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Al Pacino and Greta Gerwig star in this comedy drama adapted from
Philip Roth's novel 'The Humbling'. Ageing actor Simon Axler
(Pacino) is suffering from mental health problems and, with his
once-successful career in decline, he considers suicide. He finds a
new lease of life when he encounters Pegeen (Gerwig), a much
younger gay woman who is the daughter of his friends, and the two
embark on an unlikely affair. As their relationship develops Axler
is given the opportunity to return to the stage, but can he
successfully revive his career?
Loose remake of the 1980 horror film. Brittany Snow stars as Donna
Keppel, a troubled girl who is preparing to celebrate her senior
prom. A few years earlier Donna's parents were murdered by Richard
Fenton, one of her old teachers who had developed a dangerous
obsession with her. Donna survived and three years later she is
willing to put her past behind her and look to the future with
optimism. Unfortunately, the man she thought had gone forever has
escaped from prison and is willing to kill anyone who attempts to
stop him from reuniting with his one and only Donna.
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Miracle On 34th Street (DVD)
Edmund Gwenn, Maureen O'Hara, John Payne, Gene Lockhart, Natalie Wood, …
3
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R59
Discovery Miles 590
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Ships in 10 - 20 working days
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Doris Walker (Maureen O'Hara), an executive at Macy's department
store, believes in taking a common-sense approach to life and is
consequently raising her daughter Susan (Natalie Wood) not to
believe in Santa Claus. This year however, the convictions of both
mother and child are challenged when the kindly old man (Edmund
Gwenn) hired as the store Santa insists that he is in fact the real
thing. No one believes him, some even think he's insane, but he is
willing to go to court to prove his case. Oscars were won by Edmund
Gwenn (Best Supporting Actor) and George Seaton (Best Screenplay)
and the film was remade in 1994 with Richard Attenborough in the
lead.
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The Thick and the Lean
Chana Porter
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R452
R424
Discovery Miles 4 240
Save R28 (6%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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