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"Easy, affordable and insanely delicious meals, even your teens will love to cook and eat. A compilation of Sandi's best and easiest meal recipes from her entire collection (with a twist). They have been updated, revised and retested to meet a very high standard for flavor, speed, ease and affordability (and all are around 500 calories). In this edition, Sandi focuses on young adults and teens living at home. Families are busier than ever and can't always cook together so she's created a new At-a-Glance system so that they are able to be cooking together or apart. If you have a family, Anyone Can Cook Dinner will become the new family classic for getting to the table during your busy work week"--Provided by publisher.
This well-established textbook offers an in-depth view of law for students of estate and land management, commencing with the english legal system, the law of contract, the law of tort, and land law, leading to closing sections on the law of landlord and tenant and planning law, taking into account recent statutory provisions on the way. These include the Human Rights Act 1998, the Contract (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999, and the Land Registration Act 2002.
Ringil, the hero of the bloody slaughter at Gallows Gap is a legend to all who don't know him and a twisted degenerate to those that do. A veteran of the wars against the lizards he makes a living from telling credulous travellers of his exploits. Until one day he is pulled away from his life and into the depths of the Empire's slave trade. Where he will discover a secret infinitely more frightening than the trade in lives. Archeth - pragmatist, cynic and engineer, the last of her race - is called from her work at the whim of the most powerful man in the Empire and sent to its farthest reaches to investigate a demonic incursion against the Empire's borders. Egar Dragonbane, steppe-nomad, one...
Richard Reed built Innocent Drinks from a smoothie stall on a street corner to one of the biggest brands in Britain. He credits his success to four brilliant pieces of advice, each given to him just when he needed them most. Ever since, it has been Richard's habit, whenever he meets somebody he admires, to ask them for their best piece of advice. If they could tell him just one thing, what would it be? Richard has collected pearls of wisdom from some of the most remarkable, inspiring and game-changing people in the world - in business, tech, philanthropy, politics, sport, art, spirituality, medicine, film, and design. From Hollywood greats like Judi Dench and Richard Curtis, to entrepreneurial legends like Richard Branson and Simon Cowell; from sports stars and TV personalities like Andy Murray and James Cordon to political activists and born survivors like Mandela's Comrades and Katie Piper, Richard has picked some of the world's most interesting brains to give you a lesson in how to live, how to love, how to create and how to succeed.
Combines time-saving tips with a ten-week meal plan consisting of quick-prepare dinners to counsel busy family cooks on everything from equipping a kitchen and organizing grocery runs to cooking in accordance with healthy guidelines. Original. 35,000 first printing.
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Between the Stops is a sort of a memoir, my sort. It's about a bus trip really, because it's my view from the Number 12 bus (mostly top deck, the seat at the front on the right), a double-decker that plies its way from Dulwich, in South East London where I was living, to where I sometimes work at the BBC in the heart of the capital. It's not a sensible way to write a memoir at all, probably, but it's the way things pop into your head as you travel, so it's my way. From London facts including where to find the blue plaque for Una Marson, 'the first black woman programme maker at the BBC', to discovering the best Spanish coffee under Southwick railway arches; from a brief history of lady gangs...
"Published to accompany the exhibition Gay Icons held at the National Portrait Gallery, London, from 2 July to 18 October 2009"--T.p. verso.
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Catching up with her 11 fellows of the Gladys Society - formed at her high school in New York by those taking part in a production of 'The Skin of Our Teeth' - Sandi Toksvig took a journey through the States. The result is part memoir, part travel journal, and a portrait of American women today.