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A gripping near-future thriller in a world turned upside-down . . . for fans of Suzanne Collins, Emily St John Mandel, Bong Joon-ho's Snowpiercer.
Welcome to the Arcadia. Once a luxurious cruise ship, now it is home to the stranded. For forty years, they have lived, and died, on the water. A place of extreme haves and have-nots, gangs and make-shift shelters, its people are tyrannized by a country they can see but can't get to. A country that says it doesn't want them.
Esther is a loyal citizen, working flat-out for a rare chance to live a life on land. Nik is a rebel, intent on liberating the Arcadia once and for all. Together, they will change the future . . .
Complete with love triangles, betrayals and fights for freedom - this is the unmissable YA debut of 2022
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The Exiled (Paperback)
Sarah Daniels
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R245
R192
Discovery Miles 1 920
Save R53 (22%)
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Ships in 5 - 10 working days
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Trust no one. It is six months since the Arcadia set sail for the
first time in forty years. But this wasn't the freedom the
inhabitants were hoping for. Esther Crossland did what she had to
do, but it has left a trail of destruction in her wake. Now the
wrecked ship is abandoned. Its inhabitants are in exile, trapped in
sprawling make-shift shelters made up of warehouse, tents, shipping
containers. Esther and Nik, architects of the rebellion, are on the
run. Esther is in hiding, desperate to do something to help her
people, and Nik seems to have abandoned all hope, on a journey
taking him further and further from home. And neither of them want
to face up to their true feelings about one another . . . Not only
that, there is a new villain in town. With the fall of Commander
Hadley, it's left to the ruthless Admiral Janek to deal with the
traitors, and her own past is beginning to catch-up with her. Then
the shaky ceasefire negotiated by General Lall, Nik's mum, falls
apart. Nik and Esther find themselves in a world of betrayals and
double crossings - a game of power, with no one to trust but
themselves. It's time for the final showdown.
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Jaleen (Hardcover)
D'Sarah Daniel
bundle available
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R644
Discovery Miles 6 440
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Jaleen Cole is hesitant to move on with her life. The break up of
her parents' marriage and the failure of her own relationships has
made her uncertain about love. After spending Christmas with her
grandparents, her baby brother, Brad and his wife, Selecia and
their baby daughter, Alaine, she believes she is ready to move on.
She wants to be happy and she wants to feel whole and safe again.
Jaleen hopes that the New Year will be her year for love. Will it
happen? Can she trust her heart once again to another? Will it work
out? Only time will tell. She must, however, be willing to take a
chance on love in order to find out.
Attachment theory posits that the need for attachment is a
life-long phenomenon that becomes especially relevant in times of
crisis or trauma. When adults experience illness, accidents,
assaults, psychological difficulties or losses, their
attachment-behavioural systems are activated, motivating them to
seek help and support from family and friends and/or from helping
professionals. However, the resulting request for help is affected
and shaped by earlier experiences regarding the support and
trustworthiness of attachment figures. Can others be trusted? Is it
safe to show vulnerability? How should one behave to increase the
likelihood of receiving the help needed? Adult Attachment Patterns
in a Treatment Context provides an integrated introduction to the
subject of adult attachment. Research into adult attachment
patterns offers professional helpers a theoretically sound insight
into the dynamics underlying a range of client behaviours,
including some of the more puzzling and frustrating behaviours such
as denying obvious pain or continually pushing the professional for
more personal involvement. Sarah Daniel shows how applying
knowledge of attachment patterns to treatment settings will improve
the way in which professionals engage with clients and the
organization of treatments. This book will be relevant to a range
of helping professionals such as psychotherapists, psychologists
and social workers, both in practice and in training.
Elliot, a young eco-warrior, has fallen from a tree-top during a
protest and now lies comatose in a hospital bed. When he fell, he
slipped into the past, meeting Lucy, a troubled servant-girl and
suffragette from 1913. Elliot saves Lucy's life and, by doing so,
is pushed back to consciousness, but he continues to call out, in
anguish, for Lucy. Alana, excluded from school for selling drugs,
passionately follows all Elliot's TV news coverage and, by strange
coincidence, it becomes evident that it was Alana's
great-grandmother that Elliot had saved. She is able to assist
Elliot's recovery as well as using the past to find peace for
herself. This remarkable and timely one-act play, from the author
of The Gut Girls, was specially commissioned for the BT National
Connections scheme for young people in 1999.
The Routledge Reader in Politics and Performance brings together for the first time a comprehensive collection of extracts from key writings on politics, ideology, and performance. Taking an interdisciplinary approach to the subject, and including new writings from leading scholars, the book provides material on: * post-coloniality and performance theory and practice * critical theories and performance * intercultural perspectives * power, politics and the theatre * sexuality in performance * live arts and the media * theatre games.
The Routledge Reader in Politics and Performance brings together
for the first time a comprehensive collection of extracts from key
writings on politics, ideology, and performance.
Taking an interdisciplinary approach to the subject, and including
new writings from leading scholars, the book provides material on:
* post-coloniality and performance theory and practice
* critical theories and performance
* intercultural perspectives
* power, politics and the theatre
* sexuality in performance
* live arts and the media
* theatre games.
"Neaptide races from domestic trauma to staff-room banter ... it
bursts with provocative ideas and disturbing questions about human
relationships. Most important, it shows that the facade of
liberalism and emancipation is merely a translucent gloss." Jewish
Chronicle Claire is a history teacher at a local school where two
teenage girls have come out. Their principal, Bea Grimble, is none
too impressed, and aims to have them expelled. Claire, who had been
hiding the fact that she is homosexual, speaks up on behalf of the
girls: this in spite of the fact that she is fighting her
ex-husband Lawrence for custody of their daughter, the precocious
and happy Poppy. All around Claire hardened attitudes are
challenged - and confirmed - as she must decide whether to try to
maintain a position of honesty, and battle hypocrisy, from within
the bounds of the law, or without. A modern story of custody
battles, sexual identity and gender politics, framed around the
ancient myth of Demeter and her daughter Persephone. Neaptide was
the winner of the 1982 George Devine Award and became the first
play by a living female writer to be performed at the National
Theatre, London, in 1986. This Modern Classics edition feature a
new introduction by Dr Carina Bartleet.
Attachment theory posits that the need for attachment is a
life-long phenomenon that becomes especially relevant in times of
crisis or trauma. When adults experience illness, accidents,
assaults, psychological difficulties or losses, their
attachment-behavioural systems are activated, motivating them to
seek help and support from family and friends and/or from helping
professionals. However, the resulting request for help is affected
and shaped by earlier experiences regarding the support and
trustworthiness of attachment figures. Can others be trusted? Is it
safe to show vulnerability? How should one behave to increase the
likelihood of receiving the help needed? Adult Attachment Patterns
in a Treatment Context provides an integrated introduction to the
subject of adult attachment. Research into adult attachment
patterns offers professional helpers a theoretically sound insight
into the dynamics underlying a range of client behaviours,
including some of the more puzzling and frustrating behaviours such
as denying obvious pain or continually pushing the professional for
more personal involvement. Sarah Daniel shows how applying
knowledge of attachment patterns to treatment settings will improve
the way in which professionals engage with clients and the
organization of treatments. This book will be relevant to a range
of helping professionals such as psychotherapists, psychologists
and social workers, both in practice and in training.
Clean Break is a British theatre company set up in 1979 by two
women in prison. It exists to tell the stories of women with
experience of the criminal justice system and to transform women's
lives through theatre. Over 40 years, Clean Break has commissioned
some of the most progressive and brilliant women writers to write
ground-breaking plays, alongside developing the writing skills of
the women they work with in its London studios and in prisons. This
is a collection of monologues from this canon. Rebel Voices:
Monologues for Women by Women celebrates the opportunities inherent
when women represent themselves. Offering female performers a
diverse set of monologues reflecting a range of characters in age,
ethnicity and lived experience, the material is drawn from a mix of
published and unpublished works. This book is for any performer who
does not see themselves represented in mainstream plays, for lovers
of radical women's theatre and for rebels everywhere who believe
that the act of speaking and being heard can create change.
Premiered at London's Albany Empire in 1988 and set in Deptford at
the turn of the century this play traces the lives of the girls who
work in the gutting sheds of the Cattle Market and how their lives
are changed when the sheds are closed down. Although the girls are
unwilling participants in a club founded by Lady Helena to find
alternative employment the results are not without tragic
consequences.11 women, 6 men
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