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The Wooing of Beppo Tate is a lively and popular account of life in Kendal, a small village in Jamaica, similar to the author's own childhood home.
This revised edition includes new supplementary material including chapter summaries, an exploration of the book's major themes and post-reading comprehension activities.
This revised edition includes new supplementary material including chapter summaries, an exploration of the book's major themes and post-reading comprehension activities.
This revised edition includes new supplementary material including chapter summaries, an exploration of the book's major themes and post-reading comprehension activities.
Kendal was just an ordinary Jamaican village until Doc Bitteroot came into town. It was wartime and Nathan Berwick was the acknowledged leader of the community. But he couldn't stand Doc Bitteroot. He recognized him at once for the charlatan he was. By the author of Baba and Mr Big.
Set in Jamaica, Mike drives home after being away five years. He only wants his truck and work carrying sugar cane. What he finds is the whole village under one haulage business. The final battle of the private war is in the courtroom.
This is the last book in the trilogy of the Johnson saga. The story is told by Donna Rae Johnson, Ramis wife, and a teacher. Jake has long left Kendal, but he returnsin a way. Once again, Jakes plans are left in ruins as he fails to make the comeback he hoped for.
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Following the American Revolution, the majority of Connecticut's religious societies tore down their boxy eighteenth-century meetinghouses and replaced them with something totally different: spired churches with an elaborate entrance portico on one of the shorter facades. These new buildings signaled a change in how these Christians conceptualized worship space, and in their fundamental understanding of the relationship between the spiritual and material aspects of their lives. Because these new churches evoked a much-beloved myth of tightly-bound communities sharing democratic values and faith in God, they have often been romanticized as emblems of a bygone era of pastoral serenity. Yet, Ne...