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"Spelling Bee includes instructions for 100 letter, number, punctuation and picture blocks in two sizes PLUS 18 quilt projects."--Amazon.
She’s a special forces operator for crying out loud. If he orders her to bring him one more cup of coffee, she’s going to spit in it! He’s in charge of military security for the Winter Olympics and can’t afford to have a girl wannabe mess up his Games. If he can break her, he will. Small problem: he can’t stop thinking about what it would be like to take a woman as strong and fit..and dangerous…as her to bed. Sparks explode between them as they play a smoking hot game of cat-and-mouse. But who’s the cat and who’s the mouse when she’s as lethal as he is? Then they find out a terrorist attack is imminent, and they’ll have to work together—closely—to stop it. It’s a ra...
Emma Holt has been happily married for many years to the gardener of the local Quaker school. Headmaster Philip Manners, on the other hand, has been unhappily married to the Bishop's daughter for just as long. When Philip finds Emma in the school library, he can't help but be intrigued by her. Emma, dealing with her two eldest sons going off to war, is overloading herself with work to keep her mind focused. Philip, meanwhile, is trying to understand how his students could enlist when he teaches them pacifism, but is also struggling with his conscience: is he really falling in love with another man's wife? When conscription finally arrives and all the eligible men are called up, Emma and Phil...
The book commences with a discussion of the policy issues as to whether Australia needed submarines and then the decision to buy AE1 and AE2. It then goes through their coming to Australia, the tragic loss of AE1 in New Guinea on 14 September 1914 and the bravery and daring of the AE2 crew in penetrating the Dardanelles on Anzac Day in 1915. The history then goes on to deal with the J-Class submarines that came to Australia in 1919, the first Oxley and Otway (which went to the RN in the Depression in 1931), and the fact that in World War Two, Australia had no submarines except for the Dutch K IX whose career ended with a battery explosion in 1944. Then the period of the RN Fourth Submarine S...