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The Dark man: The Journal of Robert E. Howard Studies, Vol. 7, No. 1, December 2012. Contents:Prefatory RemarksBy Mark E. HallArticlesThe Writer's Style: Sound and Syntaxin Howard's SentencesBy David C. Smith"I 'n' I A-Liberate Zimbabwe": Motifs of Africa and Freedom in Howard's "The Grisly Horror"By Patrick R. BurgerRobert E. Howard and the Lone ScoutsBy Rob RoehmReviews by Charles Hoffman and Charles Gramlich.
This is a comprehensive compendium of contributions collected from the Black, African and Asian Therapy Network on anti-racist, intercultural and intersectional approaches to therapeutic training and practice. It is an insightful and practical resource for professionals looking to nurture an anti-racist and more diverse approach to their practice.
Fabulous bargain Christmas pack of two paperback picture books with wintry themes. The pack contains Cant ac Un Dalmasiwn and Y Lloches. -- Cyngor Llyfrau Cymru
Panini Comics proudly present the second volume of stories starring the Doctor's most deadly foes - the Daleks! Featuring tales of the 2nd, 6th, 7th and 8th Doctors, plus a never before collected story starring Dr Who, as played by Peter Cushing, in the two Dalek movies.
Here are libraries modest, mobile, mystical (Borges of course) and magical (Helen Oyeyemi's enchanting 'Books and Roses'); public and private, provincial and prestigious. Little that happen in Elizabeth McCracken's eccentric library did not happen in real life - even down to the murder; and it is rumoured that on 3 June 1997 the British Museum Reading Room really was visited by the ghost of Max Beerbohm's obscurest of poets, Enoch Soames...Fiction and reality merge in Cortazar's 'A Continuity of Parks'. Characters step out of their books in Fay Weldon's 'Lily Bart's Hat Shop', while Jasper Fforde's Jurisfiction operatives enter Wuthering Heights to deliver a Rage-Counselling session. Charles Lamb muses on the annoying book-borrowing habits of Samuel Taylor Coleridge; the teenage Teffi is overawed by Tolstoy; Helene Hanff in Manhattan launches her famous correspondence with a London antiquarian bookshop at 84 Charing Cross Road.Reading, as the Queen informs an appalled private secretary, is 'untidy, discursive and perpetually inviting'. And also, of course, a lot of fun. Sit comfortably, then, and begin.
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