Lion's Bride

Lion's Bride
Author: Iris Johansen
Publisher: Bantam
Total Pages: 454
Release: 1996-01-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780553569902

A sizzling novel of passion, peril, and searing sensuality from “a master among master storytellers” (Affaire de Coeur)—a magical weaver of spellbinding tales, enticing characters, and unforgettable romance. The darkly handsome warrior found her in the hot desert night, the last survivor of a caravan devastated by a brutal attack. But Thea could hardly have found a less likely savior. Brooding and powerful, the infamous Lord Ware felt no need to rescue a total stranger, but Thea’s striking beauty and fighting spirit moved him. So the knight in tarnished armor carried her away to his secret stronghold at Dundragon, where she would become his prisoner, his tormentor, his lover . . . and the one weapon his deadly enemy could use to destroy him.

The Lion's Share

The Lion's Share
Author: Arnold Bennett
Publisher: IndyPublish.com
Total Pages: 432
Release: 1916
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

This is about an heiress who goes to Paris and gets into an upper class social circle, returns to England to help with the suffrage movement and then goes back to Paris. --Phil at Amazon.com.

The Lion's Share

The Lion's Share
Author: Guido Alfani
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 245
Release: 2019-02-07
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1108756786

This is the most in-depth analysis of inequality and social polarization ever attempted for a preindustrial society. Using data from the archives of the Venetian Terraferma, and compared with information available for elsewhere in Europe, Guido Alfani and Matteo Di Tullio demonstrate that the rise of the fiscal-military state served to increase economic inequality in the early modern period. Preindustrial fiscal systems tended to be regressive in nature, and increased post-tax inequality compared to pre-tax - in contrast to what we would assume is the case in contemporary societies. This led to greater and greater disparities in wealth, which were made worse still as taxes were collected almost entirely to fund war and defence rather than social welfare. Though focused on Old Regime Europe, Alfani and Di Tullio's findings speak to contemporary debates about the roots of inequality and social stratification.

The Lion's Share

The Lion's Share
Author: Arnold Bennett
Publisher: Prabhat Prakashan
Total Pages: 303
Release: 2021-01-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

First published in the year 1916, Arnold Bennett's novel 'The Lion's Share' is one of his fictional works that carries the theme of thriller and mystery.

The Lion's Bride

The Lion's Bride
Author: Connie Mason
Publisher:
Total Pages: 454
Release: 1995
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780843938845

After saving William the Conqueror's life on the battlefield, Lord Lyon of Normandy cannot help falling in love with the young bride chosen for him by his king--Ariana of Cragmere, who considers the Norman warrior her sworn enemy.

The Lion's Share

The Lion's Share
Author: Kathleen Fuller
Publisher:
Total Pages: 372
Release: 1987-12-12
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780804100205

Upon his death, Governor Matthew Adams Stockwell left behind a legacy of fabulous wealth, secrecy and scandal. Now, from passionate conflicts to boardroom manipulations, the hot-blooded Stockwell family members vie fiercely for The Lion's Share.

Hunger's Brides

Hunger's Brides
Author: W. Paul Anderson
Publisher: Vintage Canada
Total Pages: 1886
Release: 2011-07-27
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0307368319

An epic novel of genius and obsession — apocalyptic, lyrical and erotically charged. Spanning three centuries and two cultures, Hunger’s Brides brings to vivid life the greatest Spanish poet of her time, Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, and plumbs a mystery that has intrigued writers as diverse as Robert Graves, Diane Ackerman, Eduardo Galeano and Nobel laureate Octavio Paz. Why did a writer of such gifts silence herself? At the time of her death in 1695, Juana Inés de la Cruz was arguably the greatest writer working in any European tongue, yet she had never set foot in Europe. Instead she was born among the descendants of the Aztec empire, in the shadow of the mountain pass Cortés and his troops descended on their advance to Montezuma’s capital. A child prodigy from a barbarous wilderness, her beauty and wit provoked a sensation at the viceregal court in Mexico City. But at the age of nineteen, still a favourite of the court, Juana entered a convent, and from that point her life unfolded between the mystery of her sudden flight from palace to cloister, and the enigma of her final vow of silence, signed in blood. After a quarter-century of graceful, often sensuous poetry, plays and theological argument, Sor Juana chose silence, which she maintained until she died of plague at the age of forty-five. Drawing on chronicles of the conquest and histories of the Inquisition, myth cycles and archeological studies, ancient poetry and early Spanish accounts of blood sacrifice, Hunger’s Brides is a mammoth work of inspired historical fiction framed in a contemporary mystery. In the dead of a Calgary winter night, a man escapes from an apartment in which a young woman lies bleeding — in his arms he clutches a box he has found on her table addressed to him. He is Donald Gregory, a once-respected, now-disgraced, academic. She is Beulah Limosneros, one of his students, and for a brief time his lover. Brilliant, erratic, voracious, she had disappeared two years earlier in Mexico, following the thread of her growing obsession with Sor Juana. Over the ensuing days and weeks, as a police investigation closes in around him, Gregory pieces together the contents of the box she has left him: a poetic journal of her travel in Mexico, diaries, research notes, unposted letters, and a strange manuscript — part biography, part novel — on Sor Juana. Hunger’s Brides is a dramatic unveiling of three intimate journeys: a man’s forced march to self-knowledge, a great poet’s withdrawal from the world, and a profane mystic’s pilgrimage into modern Mexico, in which the bones of the past constantly poke through a present built on the ruins of the vanquished. Excerpt from Hunger’s Brides “From the moment I was first illuminated by the light of reason, my inclination toward letters has been so vehement that not even the admonitions of others . . . nor my own meditations have been sufficient to cause me to forswear this natural impulse that God placed in me . . . that inclination exploded in me like gunpowder. . . .” —Sor Juana, in a letter of self-defence written to a bishop in 1691, just before she took a vow of silence

The Lion's Share

The Lion's Share
Author: Bernard Porter
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 438
Release: 2014-06-11
Genre: History
ISBN: 131786039X

As well as presenting a lively narrative of events, Bernard Porter explores a number of broad analytical themes, challenging more conventional and popular interpretations. He sees imperialism as a symptom not of Britain's strength in the world, but of her decline; and he argues that the empire itself both aggravated and obscured deep-seated malaise in the British economy.

Brides of Montana

Brides of Montana
Author: Kelly Eileen Hake
Publisher: Barbour Publishing
Total Pages: 419
Release: 2017-10-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1683222881

Love Spans Three Generations of Settlers Under the majestic expanse of Montana sky, the timing seems right for romance in the town of Saddleback. In 1864, Delana Albright is eager to join her fiancé Dustin Friemont on the homestead he has been working for a year, but she arrives much earlier than expected. Will poor timing send her dreams in a new direction? Rosalind MacLean anticipates the arrival of the railroad in 1886 to bring new opportunities, adventure, and possible romance; but Ewan Gailbraith, a scout, precedes the line with subtle warnings. Will hidden dangers bring more than Rosalind can bear? Nessa Gailbraith has dreamed of Isaac Freimont’s proposal since childhood. So why, after careful planning and timing in the year 1916, does she refuse him when he asks and turn to another? When romance’s timing becomes all wrong for these young women, how will they turn things around and reap a bountiful harvest of faith and love?

Brides of Christ

Brides of Christ
Author: Asunción Lavrin
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Total Pages: 840
Release: 2008-05-13
Genre: History
ISBN: 0804787514

Brides of Christ invites the modern reader to follow the histories of colonial Mexican nuns inside the cloisters where they pursued a religious vocation or sought shelter from the world. Lavrin provides a complete overview of conventual life, including the early signs of vocation, the decision to enter a convent, profession, spiritual guidelines and devotional practices, governance, ceremonials, relations with male authorities and confessors, living arrangements, servants, sickness, and death rituals. Individual chapters deal with issues such as sexuality and the challenges to chastity in the cloisters and the little-known subject of the nuns' own writings as expressions of their spirituality. The foundation of convents for indigenous women receives special attention, because such religious communities existed nowhere else in the Spanish empire.