You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
She had given him her heart. He walked out on her.Lorraine Marshall, age 40, shaken by the loss of her boyfriend to another woman, journeys to the land Down Under to overcome her great sense of emptiness and despair. To her surprise her vacation in Australia transforms her life in unexpected ways. Filled with adventure, suspense, the art world, and sweet romance this is a moving slice of life novel about a woman's attempt to survive an emotional crisis.This book is both women's fiction and literary fiction.
A Guide to Learning Independently 5e describes techniques to help students succeed in formal education. It helps with learning tasks such as writing assignments, reading textbooks, making notes and concentrating when studying, as well as offering a range of suggestions as to how students can meet the requirements of their teachers and courses. It is also designed to help students discover their own learning goals and how they learn best. The text rests on the premise that it is possible for a person to change the way they approach their learning. It is directed to the individual student because it is the individual who must write the essays and reports, pass the exams and organise themselves in order to be successful in the tertiary education system. As well as offering realistic and well-tested study strategies, this Guide focuses on your reasons for study as you balance the demands of study with the rest of your life. It will help you clarify your particular strengths as a learner and develop a repertoire of independent lifelong learning skills. The comprehensive range of study techniques.
A comprehensive guide to help students learn independently, the text is a collection of practical exercises that considers and discuss who a student is and the skills they will need at university. The exercises are designed to help develop study, literacy, and critical thinking skills. Marshall from Murdoch University.
Illustrate a long-lasting connection between Scottish and Canadian literary traditions and illuminates the way Scottish ideas and values still wield surprising power in Canadian politics, education, theology, economics and social mores.
William Sabin was born in Titchfield, Hampshire, England in 1609. His parents were Samuel Sabin and Elizabeth. He married Mary Wright. They emigrated sometime before 1642 and settled in Rehoboth, Massachusetts. They had twelve children. Mary died in 1660. William married Martha Allen in 1663 and they had eight children. William died in 1686. Descendants and relatives lived in Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, Vermont, Nova Scotia and elsewhere.