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He didn’t expect to fall in love. He didn’t expect to find his constituents and farm animals dying and he certainly didn’t expect to find the cause was a local laboratory experimenting with gene-editing. She didn’t expect to start an affair in Barcelona. She didn’t expect her husband to embrace ‘the boring North’ and she didn’t expect her biggest client to be her husband’s biggest enemy. But something is certainly happening ‘up there’. When Andrew Eastwood quits his city job to become West Lincolnshire’s MP, the unexpected happens. It’s 2018 and in the next two years prime ministers will come and go, scientists will make medical breakthroughs and Covid will strike the world. Andrew and his wife must make the biggest decisions of their lives. Will love overcome the forces that threaten the Eastwood family and will the world ever be the same after this? Nothing Happens Up There is not only a fast-moving thriller that explores the rapid development of gene-editing but also a modern love story of a couple torn between choosing a career and a home life in a world beset by self-serving politicians and businessmen who will stop at nothing to make their fortune.
The magazine that helps career moms balance their personal and professional lives.
What was it like to be a soldier's wife in Canada during the First World War? More than 80,000 Canadian women were married to men who left home to fight in the war, and its effects on their lives were transformative and often traumatic. Yet the everyday struggles of Canadian war wives, lived far from the battlefields of France, have remained in the shadows of historical memory. Anxious Days and Tearful Nights highlights how Canadian women's experiences of wartime marital separation resembled and differed from those of their European counterparts. Drawing on the letters of married couples separated by wartime service and the military service records of hundreds of Canadian soldiers, Martha Ha...
"The Imaginators is the story of three children and the power of imagination. Anne and Tim have just moved to a new town. Anne refuses to play with her little brother, Tim, fearing that kids at her new school will see them and make fun of her. Then they meet the girl from next door, the fabulous Nina Frances Elizabeth Vanderhelden. Using moving boxes and other objects found in the garage, Nina takes an eager Tim and a reluctant Anne on a great make-believe adventure. The three battle the child-eating monster, the Mooklecratz. The children discover their own strengths, the value of cooperation, and the unlimited power of their imaginations as they figure out how to defeat the beast."--back cover.
The magazine that helps career moms balance their personal and professional lives.
Phoenix, Arizona, is our nation's fifth largest city as of 2016 it's population of 1.6 million people was spreed out over 517.6 square miles. Its police department is currently made up of seven patrol precincts with 2,900 sworn officers. (Don't do the math of officers per square mile; it will scare you.) At the heart of all this remains a beat patrolled by a street cop. The author served twentyaEUR"fiveaEUR"plus years with the Phoenix Police department. This story attempts to take you down dark places with often funny outcomes. It's all true; you can't make this stuff up. A picture of routine days interrupted with emergency calls and sometimes pranks played. The story will have you rocketing...
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In America, more money is spent from all sources on K-12 education than on the U.S. Department of Defense. Why then are so many children suffering what amounts to educational malpractice? Why are they crippled for life with a substandard education and a life-altering vision of themselves as 'incapable'? Betrayed is a passionate, well-researched and frank accounting of how a failing public-education system continues to be forced on teachers and students, despite its nearly complete lack of supporting research or successful student outcomes. Betrayed roots out the self-styled 'stakeholders' whose personal, professional and financial interests are served by this failing system. It sympathizes with teachers_many of whom aren't allowed to do their jobs, yet are constantly threatened with removal for 'ineffectiveness' or 'insubordination.' Betrayed is an expose, but it's also a beacon of commonsense and hope. Through the 'Square of Effective Learning,' Betrayed offers practical methods for teachers, parents, advocates and legislators to stand up against this broken system, to effect positive change, and to ensure a good-quality education for all of our children.
The magazine that helps career moms balance their personal and professional lives.
A collection of 22 stories by Texas women writers that weave a story of their own: the story of women's writing in the Lone Star State, from 1865 to the present. Authors include Berverly Lowry, Carolyn Osborn, Annette Sanford, Denise Chavez, Katherine Anne Porter, Judy Alter and Joyce Gibson Roach.