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A twisty fairy tale romp with a Princess Bride tone about a girl
who strikes out on a quest to find her rightful family, because the
one she's been stuck with all these years is most definitely wrong.
Wanda hates her little brother, Zane. But don't judge her for
it--Zane is an absolute terror, and her parents blame Wanda for his
monstrous behavior. On her eleventh birthday, Wanda makes a wish:
to find her true family, because she knows deep down that this one
can't be hers. She gets a surprise visit from a talking bluebird
named Voltaire who seems wise and confirms her suspicion that
someone has been meddling with her life. He knows the secret . . .
he just can't remember what it is right now. Together they venture
into the Scary Wood, where they encounter many magical creatures as
they search for the truth. None of these adversaries prepares her
for the biggest one: a witch named Raymunda, who has put her and
her family under a spell. Will Wanda succeed in breaking it, or
will she be stuck in the wrong life forever?
Due to the nature of agricultural commodities as carriers of exotic
pests, importing countries have employed varying methods of pest
control for postharvest products. Thermal treatments are emerging
as effective, environmentally-friendly alternatives to traditional
methods, eliminating chemical residues and minimizing damage to
produce. This book provides comprehensive information of these
increasingly important treatments, covering temperature
measurement, heat transfer, physiological responses of plants,
insects and pathogens to heat, and an introduction to current and
potential quarantine treatments based on hot air, hot water, and
radio frequency energy.
During the 1980s much of the work of feminist theory aimed to fully
account for issues of class, race, and sexuality that previously
had been overlooked. Susan Lurie argues that this work tended to
privilege questions of race and class at the expense of gender, and
frequently, if inadvertently, left patriarchal power unquestioned.
Developing a feminist model that keeps multiple political forces in
view, Lurie returns to three literary feminists from earlier parts
of the century: Ellen Glasgow, Zora Neale Hurston, and Elizabeth
Bishop. As Lurie argues, each of these women shows that both
resistance to male domination and alliances between different
oppositional politics rely on recognizing how power regulates a
subject's multiple beliefs.
In her analysis, Lurie traces each author's strategies for
revealing and challenging the ways that patriarchal gender ideology
profits from what is always plural and contested female
subjectivity. Only such an inquiry, Lurie demonstrates, can explain
the impasses that have steered poststructuralist feminism away from
gender as a category of analysis and can point toward the models
necessary for a more complete feminist critique of patriarchal
power.
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