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Keep and Other Stories
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 141

Keep and Other Stories

Emerging writer Peter Biles offers his first anthology of short stories. Composed with experimental boldness, the stories extend from the hilarious to the grim, from urban disillusionment to rural desperation, from fantasy to gritty realism, and from frustrated longing to quiet hope. With creative debts owed to the likes of Raymond Carver, Flannery O’Connor, and Anton Chekhov, Keep and Other Stories explores human life and relations in a world where utility and power are all that matters. “Keep,” the penultimate story about two teenage lovers in a dying Colorado lumber town, seeks to unify the anthology into a thematic whole with its tender treatment of characters who are at a crossroads with each other, the dispassionate way of the world, and their own conflicted hearts.

Maggie’s Trust
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 265

Maggie’s Trust

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2010-07-22
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  • Publisher: AuthorHouse

Maggie doesn't trust men. Losing her father when just an infant, she grew up with a stepfather that didn't particularly care if she were around or not. Then one day Jake McCormick arrives in her life. Already adoring his young son, she nevertheless endeavors to resist the ambiguous advances of his father. Jake has vowed to never to trust another woman after his disastrous first marriage. Leaving his young son with his parents to raise he pursues his dream of leading wagon trains west to Oregon. But on one return he finds he is sorely tempted by redheaded Maggie Davis. His son already adores her, and he finds himself drawn to her against his better judgment. Both find their worlds turned upside down as they struggle to uncover the true meaning of love and trust as God has designed it. Maybe then they'll be able to embrace fulfillment with each other.

I Will Go the Distance
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 288

I Will Go the Distance

None

Nuclear Logics
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 421

Nuclear Logics

Nuclear Logics examines why some states seek nuclear weapons while others renounce them. Looking closely at nine cases in East Asia and the Middle East, Etel Solingen finds two distinct regional patterns. In East Asia, the norm since the late 1960s has been to forswear nuclear weapons, and North Korea, which makes no secret of its nuclear ambitions, is the anomaly. In the Middle East the opposite is the case, with Iran, Iraq, Israel, and Libya suspected of pursuing nuclear-weapons capabilities, with Egypt as the anomaly in recent decades. Identifying the domestic conditions underlying these divergent paths, Solingen argues that there are clear differences between states whose leaders advocat...

shell-shocked civilians under siege in mogadishu
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 119

shell-shocked civilians under siege in mogadishu

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State Failure and State Weakness in a Time of Terror
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 374

State Failure and State Weakness in a Time of Terror

The threat of terror, which flares in Africa and Indonesia, has given the problem of failed states an unprecedented immediacy and importance. In the past, failure had a primarily humanitarian dimension, with fewer implications for peace and security. Now nation-states that fail, or may do so, pose dangers to themselves, to their neighbors, and to people around the globe: preventing their failure, and reviving those that do fail, has become a strategic as well as a moral imperative. State Failure and State Weakness in a Time of Terror develops an innovative theory of state failure that classifies and categorizes states along a continuum from weak to failed to collapsed. By understanding the mechanisms and identifying the tell-tale indicators of state failure, it is possible to develop strategies to arrest the fatal slide from weakness to collapse. This state failure paradigm is illustrated through detailed case studies of states that have failed and collapsed (the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Sierra Leone, the Sudan, Somalia), states that are dangerously weak (Colombia, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Tajikistan), and states that are weak but safe (Fiji, Haiti, Lebanon).

Climate Change and National Security
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 322

Climate Change and National Security

In this unique and innovative contribution to environmental security, an international team of scholars explore and estimate the intermediate-term security risks that climate change may pose for the United States, its allies and partners, and for regional and global order through the year 2030. In profiles of forty-two key countries and regions, each contributor considers the problems that climate change will pose for existing institutions and practices. By focusing on the conduct of individual states or groups of nations, the results add new precision to our understanding of the way environmental stress may be translated into political, social, economic, and military challenges in the future. Countries and regions covered in the book include China, Vietnam, The Philippines, Indonesia, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Central Asia, the European Union, the Persian Gulf, Egypt, Turkey, the Maghreb, West Africa, Southern Africa, the Northern Andes, and Brazil.

Clausewitz and African War
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 374

Clausewitz and African War

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2004-09-30
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  • Publisher: Routledge

This book shows that wars that have hitherto been mainly interpreted as driven by economic, resource, ethnic or clan interests (such as the conflicts in Liberia and Somalia in the early 1990s) do have an overriding political rationale, which revalidates Carl von Clausewitz’s nineteenth-century understanding of war.

Africa Report
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 222

Africa Report

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1995
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Performing Whitely in the Postcolony
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 267

Performing Whitely in the Postcolony

What does it mean to perform whiteness in the postcolonial era? To answer this question—crucial for understanding the changing meanings of race in the twenty-first century—Megan Lewis examines the ways that members of South Africa’s Afrikaner minority have performed themselves into, around, and out of power from the colonial period to the postcolony. The nation’s first European settlers and in the twentieth century the architects of apartheid, since 1994 Afrikaners have been citizens of a multicultural, multilingual democracy. How have they enacted their whiteness in the past, and how do they do so now when their privilege has been deflated? ​ Performing Whitely examines the multip...