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When a dying Daniel Jackson appears at the SGC begging for help, Colonel O'Neill knows there's trouble afoot. Because this is not the Daniel Jackson he knows - he's the product of a rogue NID operation.
'It's the new One Day' FABULOUS 'Delightful, insightful and immersive' KATE EBERLEN 'Invigorating [and] fascinating' GUARDIAN 'Holly's beautiful prose smoulders, crackles and roars' DAISY BUCHANAN 1947. 1967. 1987. When Violet and Albert first meet, they are always twenty. Three decades. Over the years, Violet and Albert's lives collide again and again: beneath Oxford's spires, on the rolling hills around Abergavenny, in stately homes and in feminist squats. And as each decade ends, a new love story begins... Two people. Together, they are electric and the world is glittering with possibility. But against the shifting times of each era, Violet and Albert must overcome differences in class, g...
A remnant of dedicated fans joined in from the stands and surrounding grounds... Those left were there because they had to stay––not because they wanted to. 'Always the loser, never the champ,' Nick mumbled, the scuffed helmet still covering his face. A clump of grass from the final tackle still clung to the bars on the facemask. He kept the headgear well-secured to shroud his watery eyes, still glassy from the result of the night's battle. Looking around, he noticed at least ten others still keeping their helmets on.For thirty nine years, the phrase 'always a loser' echoed in the halls of not only the North Adams football team, but the entire Decatur community. Prognosticators reviewing...
Ben Masterson and his young sister Sophie, move into a Victorian house in Runcorn, Cheshire, England. Ben is a bestselling author, and his move from London to the north west of England is something that Sophie is not very pleased about. Ben purchased the old house because of its history and the stories about it being haunted. Thinking that it would be ideal for his next paranormal bestseller, he has no idea just how perilous his undertaking is.
> Detective Inspector Ron Scott of K Division, Greenock, Police Scotland, and his team are investigating a series of murders committed by a killer they are calling ‘The Gardener.’ > > Curiously, the victims have been murdered by a perpetrator who uses common garden tools as his weapons of choice. In addition, a four-year-old girl has been brazenly abducted from a shopping mall by a man, in full sight of security cameras. > > Greenock police have a lot on their hands, and time is of the essence.
“Like the best filmmakers, Li draws you to the edge of your seat and keeps you there.” —The New York Times Book Review After a long-buried, harrowing incident, a woman whose promising film career was derailed contemplates revenge in this thriller about power, privilege, and justice “that is compelling, courageous, and brutal in the best possible way” (Liz Nugent, author of Little Cruelties). A Hollywood has-been, Sarah Lai’s dreams of success behind the camera have turned to ashes. Now a lecturer at an obscure college, this former producer wants nothing more than to forget those youthful ambitions and push aside any feelings of regret…or guilt. But when a journalist reaches out...
I never thought that I would spend my retirement writing novels. Then again I never planned on hearing a voice, not my own, inside my head. At my age many of my friends think I am going senile, but they are wrong! So this sixty something year old is in front of an old typewriter and waiting. Waiting to hear the rest of this story, but it has been months of silence. I am beginning to believe that it is over and the voice is truly gone. Therefore will not be telling their life story and perhaps that is for the best. Everyone knows that I can't type well and my grammar is terrible! That doesn't matter and what does is letting you know this biography! Perhaps I should just put this old typewrite...
"A Century of Dishonor: A Sketch of the United States Government's Dealings with Some of the Indian Tribes" by Helen Hunt Jackson is a groundbreaking work that exposes the injustices and mistreatment suffered by Native American tribes at the hands of the U.S. government. Jackson's impassioned and well-researched account provides a scathing critique of the policies and actions that led to the displacement and suffering of indigenous peoples. This book serves as a powerful call for reform and social justice, shedding light on the long history of mistreatment and advocating for a more equitable future for Native Americans. "A Century of Dishonor" is a seminal work in the field of Native American history and remains relevant to contemporary discussions of Indigenous rights and sovereignty.
Nursing research has focused on evaluating the effectiveness of clinical supervision, but there remains uncertainty as to what facets of clinical supervision are potent in realising effectiveness. This book reports on an investigation on the practice of clinical supervision in mental health nursing. Incorporating three case studies, it illuminates the reciprocal interactions between clinical supervisor and supervisee. While the book uncovers a number of limitations in the process of clinical supervision and gaps in mental health nurses’ level of competence in interpersonal relations it provides a basis for a more critical approach to this important element of professional development.