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Showing 1 - 25 of
267 matches in All Departments
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Really David! (Hardcover)
David R. Morgan; Edited by Terrie Sizemore
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R497
R418
Discovery Miles 4 180
Save R79 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Before You Were Born (Hardcover)
Alexandra H Sizemore; Illustrated by Clare Calcote
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R600
R499
Discovery Miles 4 990
Save R101 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Hopalong Hopscotch (Hardcover)
David R. Morgan; Edited by Terrie Sizemore; Illustrated by Anna Semenova
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R428
Discovery Miles 4 280
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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No one will ever be able to predict every twist and turn in the
economy or in the financial markets. But over the medium and long
terms, the economy is surprisingly predictable.
By studying demographics and other key factors, accurate
forecasts can be made for individual industries, real estate
markets, and entire economies. These predictions can be used for
the greater good so that investors, and government entities can
more effectively plan and invest.
In this book, Discover what really drives the economy Use
demographic forecasting to better your life, business, and
investments Profit during times of inflation and deflation
Understand the significance of immigration and domestic migration
Examine opportunities in foreign markets And much more Despite the
ups and downs in the business cycle, it is possible to cut down
economics to its core. Learn what really matters with a book that
provides the necessary tools so that everyone can ask the right
questions to understand the system.
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The Bookshop Cats (Hardcover)
David R. Morgan; Edited by Terrie Sizemore; Illustrated by Alexandra Maslova
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R428
Discovery Miles 4 280
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Runaway Ragtime (Hardcover)
David R. Morgan; Edited by Terrie Sizemore; Illustrated by Denise Prado
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R428
Discovery Miles 4 280
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Women face different psychological issues at different ages. But
these issues and the experience of confronting them depend on
cultural contexts. Literary works represent these psychological and
social conflicts, but the manner of representation varies according
to the culture of the author. This book brings together feminism,
postcolonial theory, and developmental psychology to analyze how
traditional literary forms are transformed by women writing in
different cultures. The volume discusses works by such well known
authors as Margaret Atwood, Nadine Gordimer, Keri Hulme, and Doris
Lessing, along with fiction by less studied writers such as Barbara
Burford, Joan Riley, and Jessica Anderson.
By juxtaposing novels from different cultures, the volume
highlights the new ways in which women renegotiate their identities
at different ages and writers reconfigure novelistic forms. The
first chapter looks at the search for adulthood in Tsitsi
Dangarembga's "Nervous Conditions, " set in Zimbabwe, and in
Margaret Atwood's "Cat's Eye, " set in Canada. The second, on the
seach for intimacy, analyzes how Barbara Burford's lesbian novella
The Threshing Floor and Keri Hulme's evocation of Maori
commensalism in "The Bone People" undo the traditional romance
plot. Later chapters offer similar examinations of how various life
stages, such as the searches for place, space, and integrity, are
treated in other works.
In November of 1891, at the age of twenty-five, John MacDonald
Blackstock Hawley arrived in Fort Worth, Texas. A civil engineer
from Minnesota, Hawley "hung out his shingle" in 1894 and began a
tradition of engineering in Texas that his successors in the firm
of Freese and Nichols have continued for one hundred years.
This history of Freese and Nichols focuses on the firm's
contributions, design innovations, and "firsts" in water supply,
water treatment, and wastewater engineering; transportation design
for roads, bridges, and airports; city and regional planning;
environmental science; and general civil and environmental
engineering. A personal as well as professional account, A Century
in the Works offers anecdotes about John Hawley's battle-ax punch
and eccentric scientific experiments, Simon Freese's penchant for
practical jokes, and Marvin Nichols's "water fights" and
genealogical shakeups of his family tree.
The Freese and Nichols story will interest urban and environmental
historians, professional engineers, and those working in related
fields of hydraulic engineering, municipal and industrial water and
sanitary systems, water quality, dam safety, waste management,
transportation systems, and urban development.
The student of Texas history will find much of interest here as
well. In many ways, the history of Freese and Nichols parallels
that of the state for the past one hundred years.
The firm has had a pivotal role in developing Texas water resources
since Hawley arrived in the state. And it will be the rare Texas
reader who has never gone boating or picnicking at one of the over
a hundred Texas lakes engineered by the firm in the intervening
century.
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Seasons (Hardcover)
Sizemore Sauer Gay Sizemore Sauer
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R598
R503
Discovery Miles 5 030
Save R95 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Seasons by author Gay Sizemore Sauer is a collection of poignant
and wistful short stories and poems that explores the lives, loves,
and quiet dignity of the elderly and infirm. In this work, this
marginalized and forgotten segment of society finds its metaphor in
the form of an incapacitated old woman whose mind is sharp but
whose body is wanting. Short on physical stature, she makes up for
it with quiet wisdom to spare. We follow her through a year of her
life as she deals with memory, reminiscence, wheelchairs, and the
infirmities of aging with dignity, humanity, and grace. Along the
way author Sauer sprinkles in a tender poem to underscore the drama
and complete the emotional moment. Written in masterful, poetic
prose, Sauer has delivered a collection of short stories that
pushes all the right buttons for fiction fans, while building
multi-dimensional characters and flawless emotional moments that
will keep any reader spell-bound. This is short fiction that ranks
right up there with the best in the genre, and will surely please
short story fans, or anyone who just loves good stories well told.
Seasons is one page-turner best read with a hanky.
Tom Sizemore has been called many things. Brilliant. Brutal.
Fiercely talented. Angry. Drug addicted. In reality, he's all of
them. He's a survivor of the Detroit ghetto, the fifty-year-old
father of twin boys, and a veteran of dozens of movies. He's also
now sober, after his addiction took his life just about as far down
as any human being could go.
Through screen-stealing performances in the 1990s movies True
Romance, Heat, and Natural Born Killers, Sizemore was so in demand
that even when it was widely known that he had a drug problem,
directors like Steven Spielberg were offering him roles and begging
him to stay sober for them. Robert De Niro personally recruited him
for the role of Michael
Cheritto in Heat after asking him to dinner and expressing his
admiration. Jack Nicholson, Robert Downey, Jr., and Johnny Depp
each went out of their way to befriend him. But this same man went
from romancing Elizabeth Hurley and Juliette Lewis to being accused
of domestic violence by the world's most famous madam, and moved
from a Beverly Hills mansion to a solitary-confinement cell at
Chino State Prison and later a desolate, abandoned cabin in a town
best known for being where Charles Manson hid Rosemary LaBianca's
wallet.
For years, Sizemore's days were filled with overdoses, suicide
attempts, and homelessness. The simple fact is that people don't
come back from where Tom Sizemore landed--yet miraculously, he did.
By Some Miracle I Made It Out of There is a harrowing journey into
the heart of addiction, told in riveting and often shocking
detail--a terrifying cautionary tale for anyone who's peered over
the abyss of drug abuse. By turns gritty and heartbreaking, it is
also one man's look at a particular moment in entertainment
history--a window into the drug-fueled spotlight that sent Robert
Downey, Jr., to jail and killed River Phoenix, Heath Ledger, and
Chris Farley and many others far before their time.
***
"I CAN'T TELL YOU WHAT I'D GIVE TO BE THE GUY YOU DIDN'T KNOW
ANYTHING ABOUT. . . .
I'VE DONE A LOT OF THINGS THAT WOULD MAKE THAT IMPOSSIBLE, AND I
KNOW THAT TELLING YOU ALL ABOUT THEM WON'T HELP ME TO BECOME
AMERICA'S FAVORITE SON.
BUT IT MAY HELP YOU TO UNDERSTAND HOW EVERYTHING HAPPENED THE WAY
IT DID. . . ."
--TOM SIZEMORE
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