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In every book I've read, the happy ending comes once the guy gets the girl. Now I sit beside her, wondering if those books were ever really fiction after all...A beautiful collection of poetry using themes of love and nature. Follow the author's Instagram profile danieljlink for just a taste.
"Who. After all. Knows who we really are or where we are going?We are all, in a way, carried onwards by a greyhound bus" ...Third in the Limberlost Trilogy, this prequel focuses on the early life of Kim, the beginning of her journey and the people who played a significant role in her early years.
Reaching 60 is huge.I had to do something to mark my big birthday! I hit upon the original idea of travelling a mile in 60 different ways during my birthday year. Trying to think of 60 felt like a challenge in itself, not to mention that twelve months in the year meant I had to achieve an average of five per month! Some of them were easy enough and others not quite so easy, in fact quite challenging, but it gave me a real focus for the whole year. I had great fun and felt a tremendous sense of achievement as one by one I ticked them off.I had a wonderful year culminating in a great party for which I had been determined to lose weight. Did I succeed? I should have done as I had a whole year…….but did I????
Imagine if John Lennon was still alive.What music would he be creating?Would he still be doodling and drawing images he sees all around him?Sadly at the young age of forty, his life was cruelly snatched away from him and his music and creativity died with him - OR DID IT??Imagine from beyond the grave he was able to transmit his thoughts and music to an ordinary non musical untrained Liverpool man, in order that his music live on.An amazing thought. Almost too ridiculous to contemplate.Except that, incredibly it's true.It happened to me and this is my story.
John Daniels never knew, in his lifetime, his grandfather Frank Pine (who sketched this corner of Westminster Abbey) but John's research into his life has found that his achievements had also been painted into a corner by a further war. Since he died on the eve of the Bath Blitz, he was also something of an unknown warrior.This is a story of social security - in two senses: of establishing a role in society from poor beginnings, and of furthering the welfare of a community in the days before the Welfare State through friendly societies and local government.Frank Pine was a leading player in the Bath Hospital Box Scheme that rescued the Bath Royal United Hospital from debt. In playing a key role in these activities Frank Pine looked to his marital links with the Beckingsale family and was part of a close association with the Daniels family of Combe Down.He and his family (and the Daniels family) played their part amongst many other local residents in the political and social activities of Bath, particularly Combe Down, in the 1920s and 1930s.
You're at rock bottom now, the only way is back up!Royalties will go to Framework for all the wonderful work they do in helping the homeless www.frameworkha.orgMeet Mary White and follow her amazing journey from tomboy escapades to acclaimed crusader for the homeless.She travels from a warring family, through the army, to a disastrous marriage and her own homelessness. Rescued by an old friend she rebuilds a life now dedicated to working for the homeless of Mansfield, spearheading the development of a uniquely effective service with her second husband David. Then, in her 60s, she starts to foster rejected young people...Told in her own down-to-earth voice Mary brings us stories of triumph and tragedy, rich humour, rescued lives and betrayal, as she works with the vulnerable members of our society.Revive memories of a forgotten Mansfield of the 40s and 50s and see how one woman's extraordinary compassion and energy made a difference to hundreds of lives - a true Mansfield Hero!
A change happens in one's life when one receives the diagnosis of bipolar. Suddenly what you've been going through has a name, a label, a medical title. But you are not a label or a title. You are a unique individual with likes, dislikes, preferences, hopes and dreams.Written from a personal perspective, the author narrates her story of working through and with bipolar. She shares many useful tips to help people deal with the most challenging symptoms and create a meaningful life.The message of the book is one of hope, optimism and a strong desire to live a good life.
It is 1349 in plague-ravaged Cologne. A young Jewish boy, Aaron Levey, overhears plans to rid the city of Jews in an attempt to halt the Black Death. Despite escaping under cover of darkness, his family are overpowered and Aaron flees alone into the unknown countryside. There unfolds an exciting yet horrific story of religious prejudice, purging, friendship and betrayal, while Aaron travels through foreign lands with his young ward, looking for peace and a place they can call home. He has the skills to establish a tailoring business wherever he ends up, but will he find love?
These are the adventures of two safari guides in Africa. As best friends since their early days at school, each of them has developed a passion and an abiding love for the ways of Africa, its culture and its fauna and flora. The opportunity to pass on their knowledge and experience of their environment to others is for them, an added bonus.Their stories take us on a variety of individual journeys where for instance, Sam and his clients survive a terrifying lion charge; where we witness an extraordinary event involving a stricken zebra foal at a lonely waterhole. We read about Gabriel and the buffalo, and how the realities of life and death on the Savannah are brought dramatically home to one unfortunate traveller, and we experience the greed and cruelty of animal poaching.The wild waters of the "Mighty Zambezi" very nearly claim the life of one of our guides, whilst another finds himself trapped by an unfamiliar species. Finally, we read about what can go wrong on safaris, either through mistakes or sheer bad luck. Wherever they go and whatever adventures they have, Sam and Gabriel's primary goal is to enable travellers from many parts of the world, to be a part of a unique experience that will remain with them forever.
A Cilla Black look-alike, Brenda Collins tells her crib to cruise life story.
Darkly Under Sun, as with the volume Over June Lane, both by Kevin Ryan, came about due to sleep not always arriving hand in hand with the dark above a loud city.
Being able to tell a good tale has always been part of a hairdresser's repertoire, as well as listening to the customers' stories. This collection brings together the memorable people and events collected over a lifetime of cutting hair. Diversity is a fact of life, which is reflected in the array of stories within these pages. In every chapter there is a story within a story, and each story has a twist in the tale.
Often contentious, but always illuminating, Ian Walton's poetry has won many prizes, including the prestigious 'Orbis International'. In Fit for Human Consumption his astute, sometimes humorous, comments on life and lives come together in warm, intimate and beautifully phrased poems. A book you will love to read - and read again. Ian Walton was born in Leicester in 1951. Expelled from the City of Leicester Boys' School at the age of 12 he continued his education at a local Secondary Modern. At 17 he joined the Merchant Navy and travelled extensively while working as a cook. The rest of his life has included - Editorship of several Leisure magazines, running his own business, and selling advertising. Ian has lived in many areas of Britain, from Devon to the highlands of Scotland, including a spell in London (with his wife and daughter) as a homeless family.
It's August 1959 and it's blackberry picking time. 'Lollipop' and 'Living Doll' blare out from the juke box: boys wear natty suits, their hair slicked back in Elvis quiffs; girls are dressed in puffed out skirts - all of them with one thing on their minds ... How far do we go to keep a promise? A back street stabbing changes the lives of five young people forever and promises prove difficult to keep. Blackberry Promises is an evocative exploration of teenage sexuality set in an era which invented the teenager.
"I was having a dispute with my wife-she pulled my hair causing me to turn into a lamp standard!" This is but one of the many excuses used by motor accident claimants. Many more of his favourites and quirkiest have been chosen by the author and included in the chapter "We Arnott Amused". From humble and often homeless beginnings the author succeeded in building one of the country's largest car insurance businesses and this, his second book, reveals his inside account of the Lloyds of London scandals, his own failings and of those involved in his business life, including his MD Brooks Mileson who went on to achieve fame-and notoriety-as Chairman of Gretna FC during their fairy-tale adventure into Europe. Many people dream of being their own boss. This book may encourage them to go for it-or maybe forget it. It contains some vital lessons, advice and pitfalls for the would-be entrepreneur and some stark reminders that it is not for the fainthearted. A sort o' sequel to the author's sort o' autobiography Social, Domestic and Pleasure, this is a fascinating account of "A People Business". "A wealth of material"-The Literary Consultancy.
"Spice is the variety of life."-This is one of the book's many "Chrissarisms" and just about sums it up. The book brings together, in the words of The Literary Consultancy, "a wealth of material." Described as "a sort of autobiography", it is not just about a boy who, from humble beginnings, created one of the country's leading car insurance businesses. It is much, much more than that. In a series of mini biographies you will meet characters like Tramlines Taylor and some of the author's irresponsible drinking companions like Alan the Gallon and Patsy, an eclectic version of several of them. The author's confrontations with authority in "Gypsies" and "DA versus the FA & Others" are described in detail and his views on religion, democracy, political correctness, crime (especially paedophilia) and punishment are bound to raise a few eyebrows. The ups and downs of Lloyds of London, the 'We Arnott Insured' slogan and the people involved, including the Chairman of Gretna FC during their fairy tale journey into Europe, are featured in Volume II: Accidental Millionaire.
Two boys, Colin Monro a Protestant and Tom O'Neill a Catholic, both born at the beginning of the Second World War become blood brothers in the innocence of childhood friendship. Both boys grow into men with the expectations of their communities, Colin becoming an Officer in the Parachute Regiment and Special Air Service, Tom a solicitor and a leader of the Provisional IRA. Through their eyes and those of their family and friends we experience the influence of a closed environment on the social history of a Province, which can lead to mans' inhumanity even to the people they love.
When twelve ageing musicians are devastated by their exclusion from a breakaway orchestra, TV film composer Frank Morrison sets out to repair the damage and give them a new sense of purpose, by forming a retro dance band. After a hesitant start, they are soon reproducing the wonderful romantic sounds of the 1930s and before long, dedication and soaring enthusiasm lead to a string of successful engagements. Meanwhile, Frank's personal life becomes increasingly complex with the involvement of the athletic and appealing Regional Produce Candidate and the enigmatic Sarah. His professional life is no less hectic: he is soon working flat out with an impossible workload and, in his exhausted state, he still has to prepare the band for the most demanding gig of all.
Done to death by deadlines and other peoples clocks, I took several decades to think about this book before I finally had the frame of mind to write it. I am confident that the end result is nearer now to whatever you my proponents have wanted and 'they' my protagonists have expected. In any event, even if I could I wouldn't have written it in any other way. Limberlost II is the second of a trilogy. That said, it is not a collection; it is but one single thought: of how an all-encompassing passion will endure through several lifetimes. This particular book is an essential amplification of the first book and the crucial beginning of what I'll write next time around.
Nine-year-old Flo is a talented cook, and as the Food and Fun looms on the Dog Bone Asteroid, she sets out to secure the ingredients for the perfect pudding, in exchange for some of her parent's inventions. Helped by the creative talents of her seven-year-old brother, Hugo, Flo hopes to create a spectacular pudding that the family can trade for whatever they need to continue with their space travels. Flying in the family space pod, armed with unique inventions such as the sucking and sorting hoover and the zapa-snapa, Flo visits Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Saturn and Jupiter, in search of original and delectable delights, such as hot ice cream and volcano-smoked pancakes, for her perfect pudding. Full of colourful planetary facts, wacky inventions, near disaster and a lot of laughter, Flo and Hugo's ingenuity is tested to the very last minute.
What happens when all heaven breaks loose? The idyllic setting of a university town on the Mid-Wales coast. New arrivals from various parts of Britain, exhilarated and apprehensive at the prospect of grappling with the unfamiliar, in learning, ideas - and life. Four boys, extrovert, loner, poetry lover, aspiring intellectual. A malapropistic landlady. Three girls, one worldly, one demurely innocent, one full of adolescent ardour. A lecturer and would-be writer romantically inclined towards his students. And ever-present in all its moods, watching the human drama unfold, inspirer and tempter, lovely and sinister, the sea. The situation is ripe for a series of adventures, by turns comic, traumatic, poignant and, for one of the characters, ultimately tragic.
Disorderly Fields is a memoir-based account of the author's experiences of seasonal work from 1980 to 1993 in the UK, Greece, Israel, Canada, USA, Australia and New Zealand. It is a gritty, funny, sad and absorbingly interesting record of the pleasures and vagaries of a life lived in camps throughout the world, picking fruit and vegetables where such work can be found-and it is often an exposé of the sometimes brutal, crude work and living conditions, recorded as it was observed. The account is void of political correctness because it had yet to be invented-and still doesn't really exist in seasonal circuits. Disorderly Fields is the second work in this genre. The first observations of a seasonal worker was published in 1990 under the same title. It was serialized in the travel journal The Overseas Jobs Express, whose editor also commissioned the author to co-write two relevant books. All in all, about 30,000 readers have read the first work. The author became an authority on seasonal work and has been interviewed on radio and interviewed for The Times, and invited on radio and television.
Two men meet in a pub, one a psychotherapist, the other, friend and confidante, a priest. The former, Frank Appleton, is fraught with the pains of unrequited love. The latter, Fr. Alec, is increasingly and disturbingly haunted by the activities of a serial rapist - an antagonist who bears a peculiar grudge against the Roman Catholic church. The story tells how each man is variously affected by the unfolding crimes and the powerful personality of their sinister perpetrator. This novel is unusual in that it eschews a straightforward narrative and evolves for the most part through the letters and dairy of the counselling protagonist. By adopting the perspective of 'the wounded healer' the author is able to give added immediacy to the impact of the criminal and to explore as he does so various themes: these include the viability of faith in the modern world, the potential for evil and madness when integrity becomes compromised, and the endeavour to maintain a sexual ethic in a secular environment. Of interest to all who have suffered love's troubles, this book will hold special appeal for those affected by the ambiguities of religion and who yet strive towards a spiritual goal.
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