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J. Hewitson, Painter, 53 Main Street, Westboro', Mass
  • Language: en

J. Hewitson, Painter, 53 Main Street, Westboro', Mass

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1880
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

JamesTheGeordieTheJourney
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 330

JamesTheGeordieTheJourney

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2019-05-12
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  • Publisher: Unknown

The second part of my life includes my adventures in Cambridge. I had made the move down southish and had finally been able to achieve my career goal and be someone at last. The story of the people I met and befriended. Best friends and deception. Bullying colleagues great personalities and new experiences. Mental health and how mine took a dive into the depths of hell. My ongoing relationship failure. Why I left and came back. My first flight and my first holiday abroad.The continuation of my story, from then until just about now.

Does Anyone Like Midges?
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 269

Does Anyone Like Midges?

Humorous, informative and oddly intriguing Scottish questions are answered. After the success of the internationally bestselling "Does Anything Eat Wasps?", here are all the particularly Scottish questions people never knew they wanted answered, like: Is it true that most Scottish fishermen can't swim? How do you go about proving your claim to the throne of Scotland? Where in Scotland is the wettest place in Europe? Are Aberdonians really the dourest of the dour and meanest of the mean? Was Scotland really named after a bunch of Irish pirates? Was high-rise housing such a bad idea? Are half the children in Scotland now born to unmarried parents? What makes Scots angry? And has anyone ever been killed by Highland midges? A wheen of queries about Scotland and the Scots, this is a miscellany of the unlikely but true in one of the strangest wee countries in the world. With one hundred questions handily arranged by category, "Does Anyone Like Midges?" is a compendium of the most perplexing and timeless Scottish questions, big and not-so-big, that have somehow escaped answer until now, each one authoritatively dealt with in a manner sure to illuminate and flabbergast in equal measure.

Dead Weird
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 246

Dead Weird

In Dead Weird, Jim Hewitson is let loose on the ultimate taboo and finds that death can be fun for all the family, a good day out or the perfect excuse for a booze up or a fight. Executions, grizzly murders, raising the dead, battlefield carnage, clean-in-between-the-sheets death, traditions, proverbs, omens, anthems and premature burials - they're all here to give us a new perspective on life's greatest certainty: DEATH!

Scottish Miscellany
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 142

Scottish Miscellany

Ever wondered what some of the weirdest productions of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe have been? Has it crossed your mind that you don't actually know which Scottish city has the honour of being twinned with the Russian town of Piskov (mind you don't drop that , now)? If so, then this is the book for you. Crammed fuller than a haggis, Jim Hewiston's Scottish Miscellany is jam-packed with lists, tables, top tens, recipes and bizarre phenomena relating to oor braw wee country. But there's more! Did you know, for example, that our ludicrous saying 'A midge is as big as a mountain, amaist' is possibly outdone in terms of ridiculousness by Bulgaria's 'Dry pants catch no fish'?

Skull & Saltire
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 265

Skull & Saltire

Pirates! The word is enough to send a shiver through your timbers. A nation such as the Scots, with its seafaring tradition, inevitably has a history of lawlessness at sea. From the earliest times, shrewd sailors realised that, by branching out as government agents, privateers or freelance plunderers, they could make more than just a living. Nautical Scots played a part in the Golden Age of Piracy, in the seventeenth century, most notably in the Caribbean and the Indian Ocean. But the story of Scottish piracy probably stretches back to Roman times and reaches up to the present day. In this exploration of a little-known aspect of Scottish seafaring, Jim Hewitson hauls up the anchor, hoists the Jolly Roger and takes us into some unexpected waters to meet characters such as: Kirkcudbright-born John Paul Jones, founder of the US navy, hero to the Americans, rogue pirate to the British; Sweyn Asleifsson, an Orkney-based pirate who spent half the year as a peaceful farmer and the other as a wild sea raider; and Greenock?s Captain Kidd, the notorious piratical stereotype, who turns out to be more of a naive fall guy than a swashbuckling adventurer.

Far Off in Sunlit Places
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 320

Far Off in Sunlit Places

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2010
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  • Publisher: OTCEditions

Following his acclaimed chronicle of the Scots in America, Jim Hewitson has now turned his attention to the second great area of Scottish migration, Australia and New Zealand. From the first grim penal colony in Botany Bay in 1788 to the glamorous story of Duntocher-born 1930s speedway ace Ron Johnston, Scots have played a role at every level in

James TheGeordieTheJourney
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 126

James TheGeordieTheJourney

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2019-07-10
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  • Publisher: Unknown

What is mental illness ? How does it affect our lives ? Starting a new venture. The ins and outs of relationships! Lies and truths, so what is the difference?

Macrophage Plasticity in Sterile and Pathogen-Induced Inflammation
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 245
Tam Blake & Co
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 309

Tam Blake & Co

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2010-04
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  • Publisher: OTCEditions

In 1540 Tam Blake, mercenary and adventurer, became the first recorded Scot in the New World. Since then, American-Scots have played an important part in all areas of American history, even among the Indian nations. This volume highlights the special qualities and heritage they have imparted to the world's most-powerful nation.