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      • Children's & young adult reference material
        May 2004

        My scrapbook of knowledge

        by QA International

        In My Scrapbook of Knowledge, Professor Genius takes readers on a voyage of discovery into a number of captivating subjects. Passionate about science, he introduces us to the mysteries of the universe, goes on to tell the story of life on Earth and then delves into the secrets of the human body and the pure sciences (physics, chemistry and mathematics). This learned professor also walks us through the extraordinary world of discoveries and inventions and explores the magic of music. By assembling his thoughts and memories gathered over the years into a scrapbook, Professor Genius creates a dynamic book that unveils the diverse richness of the world around us to children age 10 and up.

      • 2019

        Imagining Anne

        L. M. Montgomery's Island Scrapbooks

        by Elizabeth Rollins Epperly

        The beautiful, personal, original scrapbooks from Anne of Green Gables author L.M. Montgomery are finally available. Reflecting Montgomery’s youth and optimism, these full-colour pages cover the period from 1893 to 1910 and are filled with insight into the young writer’s inspiration during the period she would create the beloved character of Anne Shirley, who would win the hearts of millions of readers worldwide with the publication of Anne of Green Gables in 1908.To learn more about this publisher, click here: http://bit.ly/2K0Zpv6

      • Biography: historical, political & military

        Hell's Belles

        Prostitution, Vice, and Crime in Early Denver, With a Biography of Sam Howe, Frontier Lawman

        by Clark Secrest

        This newly updated and revised edition of HELL'S BELLES takes the reader on a soundly researched, well-documented, and amusing journey back to the early days of Denver. Clark Secrest details the evolution of Denver's prostitution, the gambling, the drug addicts, and the corrupt politicians and police who, palms outstretched, allowed it all to happen. Also included in HELL'S BELLES is a biography of one of Denver's original police officers, Sam Howe, upon whose crime studies the book is based. The popular veneer of Denver's present-day Market Street -- its fancy bars, posh restaurants, and Coors Field -- is stripped away to reveal the street's former incarnation: a mecca of loose morals entrenched in prostitution, liquor, and money. Hell's Belles examines the neglected topics of vice and crime in Denver and utilises a unique and invaluable historic source -- the scrapbooks of Detective Sam Howe.

      • Cricket
        March 2015

        A Flick of the Fingers

        The Chequered Life and Career of Jack Crawford

        by Michael Burns

        Thanks to his discovery of a collection of scrapbooks and memorabilia, writer and filmmaker Michael Burns is able to relate for the first time the remarkable story of Surrey and England cricketer Jack Crawford. A schoolboy prodigy who took Edwardian cricket by storm, the amateur all-rounder became Surrey's youngest ever centurion and, at 19 years and 32 days, England's youngest Test player. However, a row over captaining a weakened team against the Australians led to a spectacular fallout - and a life ban by his county. Emigration to Australia ensued, where Crawford established himself as one of the world's great all-rounders; yet controversy dogged him, on and off the pitch. Having married and deserted an Adelaide teenage beauty, Crawford then dodged involvement in the Great War. He returned to England to divorce, re-marry and fade into middle-aged obscurity, but not before playing two of the most remarkable innings of his life.

      • Gardening

        Gertrude Jekyll at Munstead Wood

        by Martin Wood (author), Judith Tankard (author)

        First published in the UK by Sutton Publishing in 1996 (and by Timber Press in the US), this Pimpernel Classic edition has been redesigned and includes new photography. Gertrude Jekyll was probably the most influential garden designer of the early twentieth century. In this classic work Judith Tankard and Martin Wood explore her life and work at the home she created for herself at Munstead Wood in Surrey. Here she exercised her knowledge of architecture and local building skills, and her passion for form, grouping and colour was given full scope in the garden which she designed and worked from scratch.  Taking as a basis Gertrude Jekyll’s own photographs, scrapbooks and notebooks, and the recollections of contemporaries from Edith Wharton and Vita Sackville-West to William Robinson and Henry Francis Du Pont, the authors describe not only the building and development of the house and garden but also Jekyll’s skills both in the arts and as a businesswoman, and her collaborations with architects – pre-eminently Edwin Lutyens, but also Oliver Hill and M.H. Baillie Scott, among many others. This revised edition includes many photographs that have never previously been published.

      • 2019

        My Parents Are Separating

        A Scrapbook of Activities and Memories for Dealing with Change

        by Jennifer Tremblay Illustrated by Félix Girard

        A scrapbook of activities and memories for dealing with change. This is a scrapbook not only for preserving precious memories of family life but also, through activities (drawing, writing, etc.), for expressing the emotions created by parental separation and divorce. Concepts related to the family are explained in a simple and reassuring way, thus giving the child tools to deal with these events. This scrapbook is also an excellent guide for parents who want to discuss the subject with their child.To learn more about this publisher, click here: http://bit.ly/32Ljkqk

      • 2018

        Grieving the Death of My Pet

        A Scrapbook of Activities and Memories for Coping with Loss

        by Annique Lavergne Illustré par Yves Dumont

        This pet scrapbook is a place where kids can preserve precious memories of their faithful friend (photos, anecdotes, details about its habits) and also express the emotions stirred up by its death through activities like drawing or writing. Whether a pet is given away, is lost or has died, children feel grief and have to talk about it. Concepts related to death are simply and reassuringly explained in the book, providing children with tools for dealing with these upsetting events. To learn more about this publisher, click here: http://bit.ly/1OF183E

      • Handicrafts, decorative arts & crafts
        November 2008

        Making Christmas Cards

        With Printable Papers and Embellishments by Kirsty Wiseman

        by Jenny Cocks

        Making stylish Christmas cards is easy with this new ebook Making Christmas Cards by Jenny Cocks, with exclusive printable papers and embellishments by Kirsty Wiseman. Here is everything you need for a complete cardmaking session: two themed sets of gorgeous papers and embellishments, complete with the inspiration and ideas for how to use them in all manner of ways. Access to papers and embellishments to print as and when you like gives you an endless supply of goodies. Mix and match to your hearts content – there are so many possibilities. The ideas include: quick cards, mass production cards, cards to hang on the tree or for tags, and designs for home decorations.

      • History of engineering & technology
        December 2013

        The Contractors

        The Story of British Civil Engineering Contractors

        by Hugh Ferguson , Mike Chimes (Author)

        Fully illustrated in colour, The Contractors, is the first history of the challenges and adventures faced by British civil engineering contractors from their emergence with canal construction in the late-eighteenth century to the present day. Extraordinarily ambitious, largely unrecognised men who built the world’s infrastructure – its roads and railways, canals and bridges, docks and harbours, lighthouses and breakwaters, sea works and flood defences, water supply and irrigation, urban drainage and sewerage, gas works and power stations, and buildings of all shapes and sizes – these contractors took considerable risks, many failed in the process but others thrived and developed into some of the most powerful and influential industrialists of their day. Including profiles of many of the key figures and organisations in the industry through the ages, The Contractors explains what the business is about and where it comes from, sharing with a wider audience the exploits of these adventurers, haracterised by their inspiring leadership, sheer hard work, a strong constitution and perseverance in the face of adversity. Over time, the contractor has changed: from the great Victorian contractors, towering men whose business was their personal affair, through the twentieth century which has seen the rise of the corporate contractor, specialist contractors and the blurring of the distinction between consulting engineers and contractors, to the larger firms of recent years becoming larger through merger and acquisition but, as the examples in this book demonstrate, there is still room for the entrepreneur with vision, leadership and drive to become a highly successful contractor. The Contractors is a compulsory read for all those working in the industry, including civil engineers, those interested in the industry and its impact on the world, and the wider public. Readers will experience the boom of the canal and railway eras, working at home and abroad, the difficulties and opportunities brought by wars, the equipment used and the specialists and sub-contractors of today, fully illustrated with unique material from ICE and the firms themselves. Following the success of The Civil Engineers, Hugh Ferguson BSc(Eng) CEng FICE MCIHT and Mike Chrimes MBE BA MLS MCLIP bring their extensive experience and unique insight and passion to civil engineering contractors.

      • Handicrafts, decorative arts & crafts
        October 2007

        Making Cards

        Using Printable Art Papers

        by Jenny Cocks

        Making cards is easy with this ebook Making Cards by Jenny Cocks. This disk contains two fully printable cardmaking kits, with art papers hand painted by Theresa Mann, including alphabet designs, ribbon strips, greetings and embellishments in two striking designs. The six chapters cover different techniques, with step-by-step guides and examples of how to use the kits. There are 24 project cards shown on the CD, and you could use the papers to make many more designs of your own. Techniques covered: eyelets, punching, distressing, stitching, adding dimension with raised embellishments, heat embossing, printing on textured papers. ‘a great introduction to computer cardmaking with over 20 step-by-step guides to get you started.You’ll find page after page of card ideas, plus ‘how to’ guides from eyelet setting to printing onto textured surfaces like vellum or shrink plastic! To top it off you can print out 17 pages of patterned paper, again, and again, and again . . so this is really a computer craft kit’ – PaperCraft Inspirations

      • May 2019

        Life in Translation

        by Anthony Ferner

        The narrator looks back on the muddle of his life as a literary translator, moving between London and Lima, Paris and Madrid, Leiden and back to London.  He has long dreamt of finding literary fame, and has toiled away at his translation of an important but dauntingly bleak Peruvian novel. He struggles to complete the work, and takes on a series of dead-end jobs to make ends meet. For a while he earns a living at a large multinational company whose hidebound hierarchy infuriates him. At length he discovers his true niche as a translator of the works of a tricky doyen of Latin American fiction.   Over the years, friends, family, colleagues and lovers appear, disappear and reappear, but his edgy relationships with them seem to go nowhere. He comes to the painful realisation that he, a translator, is prone to ‘misreadings’: of his own strengths and weaknesses, of the women in his life, of his colleagues, of the viability of his translation career, of the options open to him.  Will this bumbling translator succeed in disentangling the knotty syntax of his own life and relationships?

      • Children's & YA
        February 2019

        Raspberry Hill

        Ghosts and spooks for middle grade readers by Finland’s rising crime queen.

        by Eva Frantz

        Raspberry Hill is a sanatorium in the middle of the healing countryside, where city dwellers with lung diseases end up. Many of the child patients treated there are from poor families–like Stina. She’s lived on Seaman Street in southern Helsinki in a small room with her five siblings and the mother since the father died in the war, and now she is very sick.   The sanatorium feels like a castle to Stina. It is vast and full of long corridors and echoes. It is also a very lonely place, until one day Stina meets Ruben. The boy starts turning up when they should be sleeping, taking her on nightly expeditions to forbidden parts of the building– like the eastern wing, which has recently burned down.   Little by little Stina starts to realize that everything is not quite right in the sanatorium. Why isn’t her mother writing back to her? Why do the nurses seem so afraid? What really happened in the fire? And what is Ruben trying to warn her about?   Raspberry Hill is crime author Eva Frantz’s first children’s book–a suspenseful horror story for middle grade readers. It starts a series of stand-alone horror novels set in early 20th century that take their young readers on a journey back in time.

      • Biography: literary
        April 2013

        Jane Austen & Adlestrop

        Her Other Family

        by Victoria Huxley

        The  story of Jane Austen's links with the idyllic village of Adlestrop and Stoneleigh Abbey, the ancestral home of the two branch of the Leigh family, has not yet been fully told.  Jane's mother, Cassandra, was a Leigh, a dynasty that boasted an Elizabethan Lord Mayor, ducal marriage alliances, a peerage granted by Charles I, eccentric Oxford luminaries, as well as the spectre of lunacy and bitter inheritance quarrels.   Jane Austen visited Adlestrop at least three times and kept in constant touch with events there by letter.  It wasi n Gloucestershire that she first heard of Humphry Repton wo was emplyed by the Leighs and saw at first hand how the 18th century craze for improvements totally changed the village.   Jane Austen & Adlestrop opens up a fresh window on the author's life and experience and is also a portrayal of archetypal English village's journey through the last two hundred years.

      • Teaching, Language & Reference
        January 2014

        To Kill a Mockingbird: An Instructional Guide for Literature

        An Instructional Guide for Literature

        by Kristin Kemp

        Introduce students to this classic Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by encouraging them to explore social issues within the story and make connections to current and historical events. To Kill a Mockingbird: An Instructional Guide for Literature provides rigorous and engaging cross-curricular activities and lessons that work in conjunction with the text to teach students how to analyze and comprehend rich, complex literature. Students will learn how to analyze story elements in multiple ways, practice close reading and text-based vocabulary, determine meaning through text-dependent questions, and much more.

      • Romance
        December 2013

        Because of You

        by Candy Caine

        Defying her parents by marrying Adam, a white man, Jill Stone believed love could conquer all. And throughout Adam’s rise as an executive in a large New York advertising agency, Jill bottled up her unhappiness about his long hours and many trips out of town. But when their sizzling love life fizzled, she couldn’t keep quiet anymore. She wanted him home. More. And in her bed. Adam recognized his marriage was going down the tubes, but couldn’t exorcise the demons of Jill’s parents thinking he wasn’t good enough for her, and the fear that he might somehow end up a failure like his father. He had to succeed. At all costs. To compound his problems, his latest boss was a gorgeous blonde who took one look at Adam’s buff, six foot- two body and didn’t make any bones about wanting him. Anyway she could get him.

      • Children's & YA
        May 2017

        Growing up in Stages: Cognitive Development of Three- and Four- Year Olds

        by Susan A. Miller

        Preschoolers have a sense of wonder about so many aspects of their world. They enjoy demonstrating their knowledge to others, and they are challenged to use their brains in fascinating new ways every day. Whether they are making clay figures, rolling cars down ramps, experimenting with writing, or exploring nature, they are expanding their mental horizons constantly. Cognitive Development of Three- and Four-Year-Olds will help you understand typical milestones children tend to reach during the preschool years as they develop their ability to think, understand, and solve problems. As you examine classroom scenarios, you will gain insight into various ways young children express their developing cognitive skills and some challenges that tend to occur. You will also learn strategies for supporting and nurturing children's cognitive growth, especially in the following areas: Believing in magical thinking Expressing a sense of curiosity Understanding time concepts Developing spatial awareness Practicing problem solving Exploring creativity through art Developing mathematical thinking Investigating science questions Exploring the writing process Developing emergent reading skills By guiding children to think creatively and critically, you will help them gain confidence and competence.

      • Children's & YA
        September 2019

        How To Be Remy Cameron

        by Julian Winters

        Everyone on campus knows Remy Cameron. He’s the out-and-proud, superlikable guy who friends, faculty, and fellow students alike admire for his cheerful confidence. The only person who isn’t entirely sure about Remy Cameron is Remy himself. Under pressure to write an A+ essay defining who he is and who he wants to be, Remy embarks on an emotional journey toward reconciling the outward labels people attach to him with the real Remy Cameron within.

      • Fiction
        January 2015

        Graveyard Grapevine

        by Kim Ekemar

        Not everything is what it seems – a tombstone doesn’t necessarily mean the end of a person’s life. The remarkable short stories included in this book narrate eleven extraordinary cases with the common theme that life challenges death. So, prepare yourself for the meeting with a Tibetan monk as he contemplates his way out of a Chinese prison, a Mexican mythomaniac’s idea of true beauty, and the secret caller of a Russian Duchess. You will encounter a ruthless German concentration camp commander, a shipwreck survivor in the Indian Ocean, and a spy novel writer with emerald eyes. You will be shown how too much luck can become a strikingly sad experience, how the prospect of taxes can be more aggravating than the knowledge of looming death, and that orchestrating your own demise for a new life is a daunting task indeed. There’s an account of the repeated delays for a man condemned to death because he refuses the humiliation of getting down on his knees yet another time. Most terrifying of these captivating tales is, perhaps, the unique opportunity to listen in on the cut-up confession of a plastic surgeon after his execution.

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