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'Wonderful' - Stylist 'Thoroughly addictive. I loved it.' - RUTH HOGAN, author of The Keeper of Lost Things 'Superb' - Louise O'Neill When Eva and Adam fall into bed one Friday night, tired and happy after drinks with friends, they have their whole lives ahead of them. But their story ends on page twelve. That's no reason to stop reading though, because How I Lose You is a story told backwards – and it's all the more warm, tender and moving because we know it is going to be interrupted. It’s a story Eva thought she knew – but as you and she will discover, it’s not just the ending of the story that she got wrong.
Whatever happened to Ernest Hemingway’s missing manuscripts that disappeared in Paris, 1922? Why was he an undercover submarine hunter in the Caribbean during World War II? Why did he and his wife experience two airplane crashes in Africa, 1954? Why was Hemingway so paranoid that FBI agents were following him shortly before his death? Was it ossible he did not commit suicide in 1961, but lived for more than twenty years? And the most important question of all, who is the man with Hemingway’s face? Join detective Cass Gentry for the most exciting adventure of his career in this 1959 tale of revisionist history. The Man With Hemingway’s Face will take Gentry from Canada’s famous Bigwin Inn to the playground of Miami’s Fontainebleau Hotel, to a mysterious island in the Bahamas, where a mixture of modern science and ancient rituals can make the wildest dreams of the rich and famous come true! Follow Gentry, the hero of The Death Merchants, as he joins forces with gangster Frank Palladino and Frank’s beautiful daughter Eleanor, as they attempt to save the life of America’s Nobel prize winning author in The Man With Hemingway’s Face.
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No. 3 of each volume contains the annual report and minutes of the annual meeting.
This volume seeks to offer a new approach to the study of music through the lens of recent works in Science and Technology Studies (STS). Applied to the study of music, this approach enables us to reconcile the human, social, factual, and technological aspects of the musical world, and opens the prospect of new areas of inquiry in musicology and sound studies. Drawing together contributions from a wide range of scholars, the book’s four sections focus on key areas of music study that are impacted by STS: organology, sound studies, music history, and epistemology.
In A Is for Arson, Campbell F. Scribner sifts through two centuries of debris to uncover the conditions that have prompted school vandalism and to explain why attempts at prevention have inevitably failed. Vandalism costs taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars every year, as students, parents, and even teachers wreak havoc on school buildings. Why do they do it? Can anything stop them? Who should pay for the damage? Underlying these questions are long-standing tensions between freedom and authority, and between wantonness and reason. Property destruction is not simply a moral failing, to be addressed with harsher punishments, nor can the problem be solved through more restrictive architec...
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This publication, on the McNaughton families of the Glengarry County area of Ontario A-D and some of their descendants, is the first volume of a 3 volume set of books with an index in each volume, ( about 1200 pages ) which includes some of the families from Soulanges County in Quebec and some from Stormont County in Ont. I am not sure if I have included all the McNaughton families that settled in the Glengarry area but I hope I have found most of them. In some McNaughton families, the descendants have been found across both Canada and the USA.