You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
A history of the Depass/Holland family beginning with Jacob De Paz (1716-1776) and his wife Rebecca (?) (1703-1781).
Doug Holland is an Advanced Integrative reflexologist who breaks down how to perform reflexology to the feet professionally, as well as how to conduct yourself for becoming a reflexologist as a career.He walks the reader through the Holland Method of Advanced Reflexology (Dominant Theory) through charts and many photo depictions. This book was the textbook and basis for his state-registered career college late in the first decade of the millennium in Northeast Ohio, USA.As a bonus: You will learn how to avoid the mistakes many reflexologists make starting their own reflexology business
What happens when big-city boy leaves the city for the first time to meet small-town girl? THE YEAR IS 1968: the year Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King are murdered-- campus protests-- the height of the Vietnam War. DOUGLAS HOLLAND is the only son of a lower-class Jewish family in sprawling, frenetic Los Angeles, and a recent college graduate. Doug has no trouble getting dates, but the ultra-sophisticated L.A. women repel him. He longs for a beautiful, sunny, more conservative girl. Doug Holland has never been in love. SO HE IMPULSIVELY GRABS a rural college scholarship, in a last ditch attempt to escape the madness of Los Angles and the shallowness of L.A. women. But he never imagined w...
The Sunday Times number one bestseller Chosen as a Waterstones Politics Paperback of the Year, 2018 The Strange Death of Europe is a highly personal account of a continent and culture caught in the act of suicide. Declining birth-rates, mass immigration and cultivated self-distrust and self-hatred have come together to make Europeans unable to argue for themselves and incapable of resisting their own comprehensive change as a society. This book is not only an analysis of demographic and political realities, but also an eyewitness account of a continent in self-destruct mode. It includes reporting from across the entire continent, from the places where migrants land to the places they end up,...
Nestled in the beautiful Piney Woods of East Texas, Tyler is known as the "Rose Capital of America." While the moniker is well-deserved given the local rose industry, the Rose Festival, and its claim to America's largest municipal rose garden, Tyler's history is just as colorful as any rose. From the days when it hosted the largest Confederate prisoner-of-war camp west of the Mississippi River, through the years when cotton, fruit trees, and then roses became the local cash crops, to the time when the East Texas oil field was discovered and launched a new economy, Tyler boasts a fascinating past.