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A photo-led coffee-table compendium of 50 buildings and structures that have helped to create the Wales we know today. Written by architectural historians Greg Stevenson and Mark Baker, with images by acclaimed photographer David Wilson, the book explores the idea of identity as expressed through a nation's "bricks and mortar." There are even a couple of buildings outside of Wales, a couple that have been lost, and one that moves every year to a different location.
An introduction to the literary and theological message of Revelation using the topics of evil and suffering as a conceptual organizer, which provides readers an immediate connection between this ancient text and their lives.
The sleepy town of Druid’s Hollow offers fifteen-year-old Jessica Kane a fresh start, but to her that seems like a lot of work. She just wants to keep a low profile and avoid the drama of a new high school. But Jessica quickly learns that adjusting to a new school and a new life is the least of her worries. For something sinister has invaded Druid’s Hollow and it’s set its sights on her. With the help of her newfound friends, Jessica faces the fight of her life, one which threatens everything and everyone she loves. Fortunately, Jessica Kane does not run from a fight.
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An explosion of new ceramic design in the late 1920s and early 1930s introduced vibrant colours and dramatic angular shapes to the breakfast tables of Britain and the world. This book includes information on how to identify and date ceramics at a glance and features all the major designers including Clarice Cliff, Susie Cooper and Charlotte Rhead.
The 1930s home presented an exciting new way of living for the generation that moved out to the suburbs. Young couples who had previously rented accommodation in urban centers found themselves able to afford new-build homes with hot running water, a bathroom indoors, and even aerials for the wireless already installed. Some four million houses were erected, and interest in interior home decoration boomed. This fully illustrated book introduces the homes that people fell in love with in the 1930s, and the fixtures and fittings that went in them. It is not only a practical and valuable companion for people who own or wish to renovate an inter-war house, but will also appeal to all those interested in period design.
This book surveys fundamental current topics in these two areas of research, emphasising the lively interaction between them. Volume 2 focuses on the most recent research.
Highlights the social history of the homes built under the Temporary Housing Programme 1944-49, also 2-storey prefabs such as the British Iron and Steel Corporation houses and Airey homes, and modular homes erected by London County Council. They were symbols of Britain rising from the ashes of war.
This volume presents an elaborated version of lecture notes for two advanced courses: (Re)Emerging methods in Commutative Algebra and Representation Theory and Building Bridges Between Algebra and Topology, held at the CRM in the spring of 2015. Homological algebra is a rich and ubiquitous area; it is both an active field of research and a widespread toolbox for many mathematicians. Together, these notes introduce recent applications and interactions of homological methods in commutative algebra, representation theory and topology, narrowing the gap between specialists from different areas wishing to acquaint themselves with a rapidly growing field. The covered topics range from a fresh introduction to the growing area of support theory for triangulated categories to the striking consequences of the formulation in the homotopy theory of classical concepts in commutative algebra. Moreover, they also include a higher categories view of Hall algebras and an introduction to the use of idempotent functors in algebra and topology.
A bilingual book to accompany the S4C television series broadcast in autumn 2010. With numerous photographs, maps and drawings, it looks at 36 Welsh houses from different periods, and will appeal to house owners, architects, historians and anyone who enjoys traditional buildings and the amazing stories that they tell. Reprint; first published in 2010.