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A version of "The Women's Room," "Ella Price's Journal" presented a re-entry woman before the term was even invented.
Ava is just an average high school senior until one night changes everything ... Her world is turned upside down overnight and nothing would ever be the same. Taken from her family and her home, she is forced into a world she never imagined existed. Malakai, her maker, is an unforgiving, ruthless pack leader who considers a bitten wolf, like Ava, a black mark on his pack. Ava knows she can't go home for fear of harming the ones she loves but she fears if she stays in the pack, she won't survive. She makes friends and creates enemies as she fights for a place among a pack that despises what she is. She struggles as she tries to fit into this unforgiving, new world that threatens to destroy her.
To which is prefixed a concise history of English and American Short horns, compiled from the best authorities.
Includes the decisions of the Supreme Courts of Missouri, Arkansas, Tennessee, and Texas, and Court of Appeals of Kentucky; Aug./Dec. 1886-May/Aug. 1892, Court of Appeals of Texas; Aug. 1892/Feb. 1893-Jan./Feb. 1928, Courts of Civil and Criminal Appeals of Texas; Apr./June 1896-Aug./Nov. 1907, Court of Appeals of Indian Territory; May/June 1927-Jan./Feb. 1928, Courts of Appeals of Missouri and Commission of Appeals of Texas.
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The feminist fiction movement of the 1960s-1980s was and is as significant a movement as Modernism, Greene argues here. Focusing on the metafiction of Doris Lessing, Margaret Drabble, Margaret Atwood, and Margaret Laurence, she traces the roots of this feminist literary explosion to the second women's movement and places these writers within a sociohistorical matrix, and at the same time creates a new literary canon. Greene also speculates on the future of feminist fiction in the current regressive period of edition (unseen), $17.50. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR