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Born in 1950s London, Frank Peters was brought up amid the chaos of East End crime and violence, surrounded by severely dysfunctional characters. Growing up, he cracks safes, commits burglary, beats people up and later deals in hard drugs and money laundering. He gets caught up in police and prison corruption, is a central figure in one of the most horrific murders of the last twenty years, has problems with long-term relationships, spends twelve years in prison and fifteen on probation. This is the story of Frank's search for happiness, his failure to find it, the need to keep looking and how, when he hits rock bottom, he discovers what's been missing from his life all along. Love. Michael J Richards brings every shocking, twisted detail to life. It's vivid. It's real. It's as if you're there, travelling through the English underworld with Frank Peters while he tells you of his life, times and crimes.
In social theory and sociology, time and travel in technological cultures is one of the new and challenging research topics in the 'mobilities turn'. Yet surprisingly, contemporary practices of mobility have till now, seen only limited theorization within these disciplines. By analyzing historic and contextualized transit practices, this revealing book argues that travel cannot now simply be reduced to getting from A to B; it is an integrated part of everyday life. In this area, researching how problems can be identified as dilemmas and reformulated as design problems helps create a new vocabulary; one which will not only change the agenda in the debate on mobility problems in the public dom...
Jesus and Muhammad are two of the best known and revered figures in history, each with a billion or more global followers. Now, in this intriguing volume, F.E. Peters offers a clear and compelling analysis of the parallel lives of Jesus and Muhammad, the first such in-depth comparison in print. Like a detective, Peters compiles "dossiers" of what we do and do not know about the lives and portraits of these towering figures, drawing on the views of modern historians and the evidence of the Gospels and the Quran. With erudition and wit, the author nimbly leads the reader through drama and dogma to reveal surprising similarities between the two leaders and their messages. Each had a public care...
This volume assembles Pulitzer Prize-decorated critical reviews from 22 journalists in various fields of the performing arts, containing, among others, the names of these artists: Opera Singers Luciano Pavarotti, Grace Bumbry, Leontyne Price and Placido Domingo; Film Actors Barbara Stanwyck, Jessica Lange, Katharina Hepburn and Tom Cruise; TV Hosts Dean Martin, Matt Lauer, Howard Cosell and David Letterman; Orchestra Conductors George Szell, John Barbirolli, Leonard Slatkin and Seiji Ozawa; Movie Directors Roman Polanski, Federico Fellini, Billy Wilder and Steven Spielberg.
Lou Gorman is best known for having assembled the great but star-crossed Red Sox team of 1986. Few, perhaps, know that he also laid the foundation for the Mets club that clawed past them. Or that he is the only baseball executive involved in the start-up of two teams (the expansion Mariners and Royals), that he won a World Series with the Orioles, or that he has drafted Roger Clemens, signed George Brett, developed Jim Palmer, and traded away Jeff Bagwell. In all, Gorman has spent parts of five decades in the front offices of five major league franchises, directly involved in the development of clubs that won three World Series, five pennants and eight division titles. The stories behind those teams and Gorman's dealings with players, managers, and other of baseball's higher-ups are shared here for the first time.
The School of Journalism at Columbia University has awarded the Pulitzer Prize since 1917. Nowadays there are prizes in 21 categories from the fields of journalism, literature and music. The Pulitzer Prize Archive presentsthe history of this award from its beginnings to the present: In parts A toE the awarding oftheprize in each category is documented, commented and arranged chronologically. Part F covers the history of the prize biographically and bibliographically. Part G provides the background to thedecisions.
In social theory and sociology, time and travel in technological cultures is one of the new and challenging research topics in the 'mobilities turn'. Yet surprisingly, contemporary practices of mobility have till now, seen only limited theorization within these disciplines. By analyzing historic and contextualized transit practices, this revealing book argues that travel cannot now simply be reduced to getting from A to B; it is an integrated part of everyday life. In this area, researching how problems can be identified as dilemmas and reformulated as design problems helps create a new vocabulary; one which will not only change the agenda in the debate on mobility problems in the public dom...
Traces the life of a young Jewish girl who kept a diary during the two years she and her family hid from the Germans in an Amsterdam attic.