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A stuffy college sophomore and a teenaged African American prostitute spend a weekend together caught up in cultural misunderstandings.
Can the planets predict economic conditions? In Time and Money, best-selling author Robert Gover links the planets to major economic turning points in US history, going back to Columbus. Using planetary patterns that coincide with past economic hard times and social upheavals, Gover reveals why the 2000-teens are going to be the most horrendous decade in US history.
Americans are loud. Amsterdam equals sex, drugs, and rock & roll. Mexicans are lazy and Germans are boring, but punctual. Paris is romantic, Wuhan infectious, Ukrainians heroic, and New Zealand untouched. This is the way people around the world think about cities, regions and countries and the communities that live there; through cliches and stereotypes. It can be frustrating and hindering trade, diplomacy, investment, tourism, or talent attraction. Many believe that such image problems can be resolved with advertising campaigns, but the classic tourism promotion model is broken and insufficient. This book explains what works and what doesn’t when it comes to improving the reputation of cities, regions, and countries. It does so without the use of jargon and with reference to numerous case-studies. The book primarily aims to inspire readers and offer them a broad overview of an issue in modern society that is of interest and relevance to all of us: the reputation of our communities.
The original version has finally been restored restored. ... Jimmy is a college boy who thinks he knows all about sex-until he meets Kitten. She is dazzled by the hundred-dollar wad he is carrying in his pocket and is prepared to go to any lengths for it. This is the story of a riotous, crazy weekend for two young people from different ends of the American social scale.
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The Westminster parliament is a highly visible political institution, and one of its core functions is approving new laws. Yet Britain's legislative process is often seen as executive-dominated, and parliament as relatively weak. As this book shows, such impressions can be misleading. Drawing on the largest study of its kind for more than forty years, Meg Russell and Daniel Gover cast new light on the political dynamics that shape the legislative process. They provide a fascinating account of the passage of twelve government bills - collectively attracting more than 4000 proposed amendments - through both the House of Commons and House of Lords. These include highly contested changes such as...
'Art and Authority' explores the sources, nature, and limits of artistic freedom. The author draws upon real-world cases and controversies in contemporary visual art to offer a better understanding of artistic authorship and authority. Each chapter focuses on a case of dispute over the rights of an artist with respect to his or her artwork.
Twelve year-old Jane Doyle is escaping an oppressive North Carolina group home. Sixty-three year-old Dick Steel is grieving the death of his beloved wife and coping with insurmountable medical bills. When Dick packs his van for a cross-country drive to California, Jane stows onboard. She threatens to accuse Dick of rape if he turns her over to the police. It's a stalemate until Dick learns that Jane is fleeing people who will sell her into an overseas sex slavery operation. Halfway across America, Dick decides to make a stand. This odd couple from society's demographic fringe must deal with those determined to recapture Jane to save their own skins.
One of Gover's key novels, Poorboy at the Party, runs against the publicly sold and traded American Dream, where a party among privileged kids breaks down into a orgy of sex and destruction. Randy, a social-climbing college kid attends a party populated by a combination of old and new money kids who should be Randy's peers by any definition other than wealth. Even though they share the same educational background, poor boy Randy becomes an immediate outcast in this tight-set, narrow-minded heirs to American power.