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      • Crime & mystery

        The Cedar Face

        DI Elizabeth Jewell Book 3

        by Carole Pitt

        When Keith Wilson, an art teacher at Grasmere Academy is murdered DI Elizabeth Jewell expects to lead the investigation. Within hours, her new boss DCI Liam Yeats takes over and excludes both her and Sergeant Patterson without giving a valid reason. However, Yeats's policy is short lived when he realises alienating Jewell and her team is counterproductive.Jacob Morven, a Canadian citizen from a remote area of North-Western British Columbia is the prime suspect. Although the evidence against him points to his guilt, DI Jewell has doubts. Keith Wilson, the victim, had boasted of a change in his fortune, implying he was about to receive a substantial amount of money. With this in mind, Jewell looks further afield for other suspects. As the mystery deepens, Jewell and Patterson look back almost three hundred years to the origins of a lost artefact.Amidst escalating dissent at Park Road HQ, Elizabeth tackles yet another problem. Where is their previous boss, DCS Daly? And is his unexpected disappearance connected to the current situation?

      • Fiction
        September 2022

        This is Where We Talk Things Out

        by Caitlin Marceau

        This Is Where We Talk Things Out by Caitlin Marceau, author of Palimpsest: A Collection of Contemporary Horror, follows the gut-wrenching journey of Miller and her estranged mother, Sylvie, who have always had a tense relationship. After Miller's father dies, she agrees to a girls' vacation away from the city to reconnect with the only family she has left. Although she’s eager to make things work, Miller can’t help but worry that her mother is seeing their countryside retreat as a fun weekend getaway instead of what it really is: a last-ditch effort to repair their relationship. Unfortunately, that quickly becomes the least of Miller’s problems. Sylvie's trapped in the past and if Miller's not careful, she will be too. A cross between Stephen King's Misery and Stephanie Wrobel's Darling Rose Gold, This Is Where We Talk Things Out explores the horror of familial trauma, mother-daughter relationships, and what happens when we don't let go.

      • Romance
        October 2014

        The Perils of Skinny-dipping

        by Julie Sandilands

        Readership: Women's fiction Genre: Romance/adventure Manuscript length 65,000 words   Abbey Harris is a successful, career woman and enjoys a comfortable life style in the leafy Cheshire suburbs. One Sunday, she spots an advertisement for volunteers to work on an ecological project in the north of Botswana, and impulsively applies.   Abbey arrives in Kasane, ready to complete a one year contract with an international charity, working in the forestry unit. A few months into her contract, Abbey meets Darren, a diamond prospector, falls in love, and marries. As Abbey settles into her new life, she has to battle her way through black magic, arson and a poisonous snake lurking under her bed. To add to her problems she also has to contend with Anna, a stunning South African, who is determined to rekindle a relationship with Darren, undermining Abbey’s confidence whenever she can.    Abbey has two colleagues, Richard and Phil, who have both run away from responsibilities and failures at home in the England. Richard is an emotionally dysfunctional man, who in a bid to dominate others, treats people, especially women, with disdain and suspicion.  His attitude towards the Batswana women whom he uses for his personal gratification, demonstrates an inability to interact with the opposite sex in a meaningful way. Richard’s growing frustration of his two colleagues result in him devising a plot which he thinks will eliminate both of them out of his life forever.   Just as Abbey thinks she is settled and her problems are behind her, the sudden death of her mother forces her to temporarily return to the UK.  Here, she has to not only reassess her feelings, and come to terms the loss of her mother, but finds herself on a collision course with her estranged father. The rift between father and daughter is not just one of geographical distance, but deep rooted in an upbringing Abbey struggles to come to terms with.   Local characters are also important to the story, their individual accounts intertwined around the two main characters. Each character is based on a person who was/is known by the author. Names and other personal details have been changed; however, both Botswana and the Batswana have been portrayed as a proud, gracious race of people who readily accept newcomers into their hearts and communities. The story takes the reader from Gaborone in the south, to Kasane in the north.   The Perils of Skinny-dipping is a love story which documents one woman’s desire to find inner peace and create a meaningful life which has so far eluded her. It also describes the beauty and uniqueness of a country which enjoys both political and economic stability, and, reflects on its achievements as well as its problems. It observes the interaction between rich and poor, black and white, as they strive to live in harmony side by side

      • Thriller / suspense
        June 2014

        Global Raider

        by Jame McKenna

        When the American Air Force conducts final tests on Global Raider, the new unmanned bomber capable of deploying missiles from the outer stratosphere, terrorists close in to steal the aircraft and cause a major disaster.  On advice from the Security Services, Juliet Walsh, daughter of Wat Walsh, Global Hawk’s manufacturer, is sent to a safe house in Britain under close protection of her bodyguard Lisa, and Seb, a young SAS officer, to whom she becomes attached.  But betrayal, deceit and corruption allow Juliet’s abduction.  Seb is blamed, but is the real enemy Lisa or head of Walsh Security?  While Global Hawk flies towards the Middle East with its deadly load of missiles, two sides wrestle for control as Seb hunts for Juliet and her abductors.  Can her father allow the murder of his only child for the sake of American prestige, or will one innocent life be sacrificed to the intransigent hatred between terrorists and US government?  Only Seb can change the balance, but who does he trust?

      • July 2022

        The Next Big Asian Brands

        Who will emerge stronger and smarter in the post-Covid world?

        by Jörg Dietzel

        Alibaba, Samsung, Toyota – Asia is home to some of the world's biggest, most innovative and most trusted brands. As the global economy undergoes massive disruption in the wake of Covid-19, what are the new brands emerging from the region? Which brands will be the next big thing?   Take a deep dive into Asia's most promising brands, ranging from Korea’s fast-expanding Go Pizza and Singapore’s Kinobi edu-tech platform to Vietnam’s automobile wunderkind, VinFast. Through wide-ranging interviews with the brands’ founders and management teams, author Jörg Dietzel uncovers what makes each of them tick, and distils invaluable lessons for every business out there looking to take off in the post-Covid world.

      • Public relations

        Managing Corporate Communications in the Age of Restructuring, Crisis and Litigation

        Revisiting Groupthink in the Boardroom

        by David Silver

        Corporate executives, lawyers, and board of directors suffer from groupthink when confronted with a crisis, restructuring or litigation, which results in a communications meltdown that hurts a company’s number one asset—its reputation. This failure to understand how to communicate in distressed situations results in lost credibility and trust on a global basis in front of many target audiences: customers, employees, vendors, business partners, the media, analysts covering the company, lenders, bankers, regulatory agencies, and elected officials. This book gives examples of corporations who failed to communicate in a crisis, litigation, or restructuring in this era of financial meltdowns. By analyzing real-life examples (Lehman Brothers, BP, Toyota, MGA/Mattel, etc.), it offers innovative solutions and communications strategies for decision makers to help avoid groupthink and keep good reputations intact. If you are a CEO, CFO, general counsel, board of director, or part of the C-suite, understanding how to communicate in a distressed situation is crucial. A public relations nightmare might be just around the corner. Be prepared!

      • Humanities & Social Sciences
        January 2013

        From Camel to Truck

        The Bedouin in the Modern World

        by Dawn Chatty

        A classic study of cultural endurance and radical change in the Arabian desert. The Bedouin tribes of Northern Arabia have lived thousands of years as pastoralists, migrating across the semi-arid badia in search of graze and browse for their herds. Romantic images of Bedouin – black tents, robed Arabs and camels – still persist. However, mobile pastoral livelihoods have come under pressure to change in recent years. The modern nation-states of the Middle East view pastoralism as anachronistic and encourage Bedouin to become settled cultivators. An even more dramatic shift has taken place within the last few decades: the Bedouin have traded in their camels as beasts of burden in favour of the half-ton truck. The ship of the desert is now a Toyota, Datsun, Nissan or General Motors pick-up. Nevertheless, many Bedouin continue to herd livestock – sheep, goat and camel – at the same time as engaging in new economic activities. They have been open to remarkable change whilst firmly holding onto their culture, and their traditional moral and value systems. The truck has allowed many the possibility of interacting with the region’s modern economy while still pursuing their mobile pastoral livelihoods. Extensive field research underlies anthropologist Dawn Chatty’s comprehensive study. She examines contemporary Bedouin society of Lebanon and Syria in the contexts of history, economy and political and moral culture. She details the consequences of motorized transport for this community – and she draws some surprising conclusions about its future viability.

      • Historical fiction
        February 2014

        The Doksany Legacy

        by Quentin Cope

        The Doksany Legacy It’s the winter of 1987. Mohsen Raza, merciless head of Iran’s feared Revolutionary Guard hunts millionaire oilman Declan Doyle, whose personal undertaking to deliver the Geneva Project … a vital offshore oilfield installation in the Persian Gulf, crucial to the survival of an Iranian economy, weakened by the war with Iraq … has proven worthless. Englishman Doyle, desperate to escape Raza’s retribution and save his company, makes a frantic last throw of a set of dice loaded heavily against him. Evading Raza’s forces he flees the tiny Arab state of Abu Nar, feverishly bent on seeking the truth in a dying man’s story of Nazi treasure, one great enough to finance and complete the Geneva Project, saving him from a possibly agonising end at Raza’s hands. With nail-biting action from the start, Doyle’s frantic escape from his Iranian hunters leads him through dangerous, unpredictable Mujahideen-controlled Pakistan, onward to Northern Europe and finally to the Arab enclave of Dhofar, a desolate place that holds the key to possibly saving his life … a life spent cheating and ruled by greed for which he knows, inevitably, a price must be paid. What Doyle cannot know is his chequered past and discovery of much sought after Nazi treasure, has set other hunters on his trail … and Mohsen Raza may not end up being the very worst of them. The Doksany Legacy … the much-anticipated sequel to Quentin Cope’s highly successful action and adventure novel The Geneveh Project, is an un-put-downable tale of stark terror and final retribution for a lone, desperate man fleeing some of the most feared adversaries in the world … until finally forced to face the ultimate legacy of his own past.

      • Crime & mystery
        October 2014

        MALICIOUS

        by JAMES RAVEN

        THE KINDLE BESTSELLER - 70,000 DOWNLOADS IN ONE WEEKSEND! 'Cover up your webcams or suffer the consequences.' He calls himself the Slave Master. He spies on women through their webcams. Then he spies on those who unknowingly reveal their secrets to him. His last victim was brutally murdered. Now he's targeting the cop in charge of the investigation. To him she's perfect prey - because she has secrets of her own.

      • Business, Economics & Law
        June 2022

        The Startup Lexicon

        Demystifying the everyday language of startups

        by Ken Valledy and Eamonn Carey

        With simple definitions of the most frequently used words, alongside stories that give more context and colour, The Startup Lexicon is an incredible primer for anyone interested in one of the biggest and fastest growing sectors in the business world.

      • Fiction

        Panorama

        by Dušan Šarotar

        A writer, perhaps the author’s alter ego, looks for peace and inspiration as he travels slowly along the rainy, foggy coast of Ireland. From there he goes to Belgium and then, by way of Ljubljana, to Sarajevo, but for the most part his journey leads him ever deeper into the landscapes of his own inner world. The narrative takes the form of an associative stream of consciousness in which different times, places, and events overlap to create an unusual story with many narrative voices. Although the connections between them may not be immediately obvious, it is not entirely accidental that they find themselves sharing a common story. Diverse narratives create a panoramic view of the search for something people might call home that in a foreign setting seems ever more elusive. In the manner of W. G. Sebald, the story is supported and complemented by photographs taken by Šarotar himself.

      • Crime & mystery fiction (Children's/YA)
        February 2021

        The Mystery of the Lost Will

        by Yerby, Jack||Hanna Al-Shaer illustrator

        Did old man Granger rewrite his will and change his mind about who was going to inherit his millions? And what was he trying to tell the nurse just as he died? Kalani Henderson is sure there must be another will hidden somewhere. Together with his brother Tristen and Navajo friend Danner, he sets off to find it. But first he must find out if Wyatt Granger even had time to write a new will before his sudden death. The mystery seems impossible, even to an experienced crime solver like his dad who encourages his sons in this seemingly impossible quest.

      • Children's & young adult fiction & true stories
        November 2020

        The Last Muster

        by Leonie Norrington

        This is an exciting, authentic and often deeply moving story about stolen land, a herd of wild horses, and two families, one indigenous and one settler, who must fight for the right to stay in the country they love. Leonie Norrington is the award-winning author of The Barrumbi Kids series.

      • Thriller / suspense
        April 2021

        Dress for Death

        DCI Grant McVicar Book 2

        by Diarmid MacArthur

        Friend or Foe? DCI Grant McVicar Book 2 THE BODY A young woman murdered in the changing room of a local supermarket. A suspected terrorist incident. And there may be a serial killer at work THE ENEMY WITHIN There are no easy answers, and it soon becomes apparent that someone in his team is leaking information. Loyalties increasingly strained, answers remain just out of reach. THE ENEMY WITHOUT Confusion and paranoia reign supreme, and Grant’s personal life starts to spiral out of control. With the killer almost within his grasp, he finds himself in mortal danger. Will he be the final victim?

      • Agriculture & farming
        June 2008

        Tuber and Root Crops: Vol.09. Horticulture Science Series

        by M.S.Palaniswami & K.V.Peter

        Tuber and root crops are the third important group of food crops after cereals and pulses, feeding about one fifth of the world population. With the burgeoning population coupled with limited land, water and other resources, the future beckons tuber and root crops in fulfilling the countrys food requirements. These crops have higher biological efficiency and greater adoption with profound production potential per unit area per unit time. Tuber and root crops are well known from time immemorial as natures energy bank and famine savior. This book is conceived to have an updated version on the tuber and root crops especially in the Indian context, including information on the history, biodiversity, geographical distribution, botany, neutraceutical and pharmaceutical values, new varieties, production technologies, IPM strategies, starches, post harvest technologies and value added products, bio-processing, biotechnology, ITK and future thrusts. Various aspects of cassava, sweet potato, elephant foot yam, taro, yams, coleus, yam bean and arrow root are elucidated in 17 s and appendices. This book will be of immense use to the policy makers, scientists, post graduate and under graduate students and officials concerned with tuber and root crops research, development and extension.

      • Technology, Engineering & Agriculture
        January 2020

        Electric Machines in Agriculture

        Origin,Development and Applications

        by Kevin Desmond

        As far back as 1873, experiments were carried out to see whether the electric trolley system applied to omnibuses could be adapted to ploughing and tilling fields. In 1913, 1,600 trolley/cable ploughs were in use across German farmlands. The arrival of the gasoline tractor relegated the use of electricity to electroculture, short haul farm machinery and lawn mowers. But it is only with the commercial availability of the lithium-ion battery during the last decade, that electrically powered drones and more recently tractors and earth movers are being seen as the way ahead. In this, the sixth in his seminal electric transport history series, Kevin Desmond portrays the life and work of the innovative engineers who perfected these e-tractors and agricultural drones.

      • Fiction

        A God in Warsaw (Vārcāvil oru kaṭavuḷ )

        A Stunning Novel that Captures the Warsaw Days of a South Indian

        by Tamilavan

        The main character Chandran, born to a woman who was accidentally saved from Burma as a child by a Tamilian during an exodus during the Second World War and brought up as his own daughter, goes to Warsaw. He, a computer engineer, a product of modern India, finding solace from his personal tragedy of the death of his wife due to fire, meets a lot of Polish characters and the scenario of which forms the social and philosophical backdrop of this novel where the east meets the west in a different way. This novel having been set in the early part of this century in Europe gives, amidst the narratives of tragic and magic details of migration and an Indian-medicine practicing Brahmin god-man who during his illegal transportation is jailed in  Germany, a clue to understanding the modern meaning of globalization.

      • Thriller / suspense

        The Silver Mine under Croagh Patrick

        The Father of Troy.

        by James Kilcullen

        An Irish geologist, who had his own silver mine in Southern Bolivia, returns to Ireland when that country is taken over by a brutal dictator who is working with an unscrupulous American to take over his company (PLC). Now, after two years prospecting in south Mayo, he has discovered a mega silver mine under Croagh Patrick. His permission is subject to purchasing the land which has an extraordinarily complicated title - and the opposition of the Church. How can he sort out this problem and raise the necessary finance to help the freedom fighters in south Bolivia?

      • ELT resource books for teachers
        May 1999

        Pictures of English Tenses 2

        by Mark Fletcher / Richard Munns

        Designed for teaching at Council of Europe language level CEF - A2/B1. Where CEF is Common European Framework. Visuals and exercises at Lower Intermediate level. Grammar taught includes: Present Perfect Past / Present Perfect Past / Past Continuous For/Since/Ago 1st Conditional Present and Past Passives exact CONTENTS are as follows:      Pictures (Side A) / Exercises (Side B)         1             Overview of tenses         2             Present Perfect (with ‘just’)         3             For / Since / Ago         4             Past / Present Perfect          5             Past Simple / Continuous          6             Instructions         7             Much / Many / A lot of         8             Comparatives and Superlatives         9             1st conditional        10             Present & Past Passive        11              Describing things        12             Revision

      • Illumination

        by Nthikeng Mohlele

        Mohlele describes the book as “…an exploration of the nature and pitfalls of an artistic life. The backbone of the narrative is essentially a love story, but also how the charges and passions inherent in art, particularly music, interface and become transformed when fused with passions and anxieties of a more personal and discreet kind” Bantubonke is an accomplished and revered musician, composer and band leader in decline – an absent present and inadequate spouse. He lives for art at the expense of all else, an imbalance that derails his life and propels him to the brink of madness and despair. A story of direct and implied betrayals, Illumination is an unrelenting study of art, possession and loss, of the beauty and uncertainty of love, of friendship and the dangers and intrusions of fame.

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