The CenterMint Caper

The CenterMint Caper
Author: Craig Conley
Publisher: Pegasus Elliot Mackenzie Pu
Total Pages: 186
Release: 2008
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9781843863717

Violence Against Women and Children

Violence Against Women and Children
Author: Carol J. Adams
Publisher: A&C Black
Total Pages: 516
Release: 1995-11-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0826408303

Violence against women and children has reached epidemic proportions. It cuts across all economic strata and is found in our urban centers and the farthest corners of the nation. This is the only sourcebook on domestic violence for clergy and counselors.

The Piano Tuner

The Piano Tuner
Author: Peter Meinke
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Total Pages: 169
Release: 2012-03-15
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0820343587

In The Piano Tuner, Peter Meinke writes of the foreignness that awaits us when we go abroad and when we answer our own front door to admit a stranger, that confronts us in unfamiliar cities and villages and in the equally disquieting surroundings of our memories and regrets. Often in these stories, what seems a safe, comfortable environment turns suddenly threatening. In the title story, a writer's quiet existence amid his antiques and books is dismantled, piece by piece, by a demonic, beer-bellied piano tuner. In "The Ponoes," a man recalls how, as a young boy living in Brooklyn during World War II, he became a collaborationist in the brutal pranks of two Irish bullies. In "The Twisted River," the sedate collegiality of a Polish university is disrupted when an American on a Fulbright grant attempts to blackmail two faculty members. And in "The Bracelet," a young anthropology student doing field work in Africa finds herself drawn further and further into the role of a priestess of Oshun, into a life dictated by the configuration of cowry shells cast upon the floor. Meinke writes of a world where our control over our lives seldom exists across a border, and often extends no further than our fingertips. Attempts to bridge two cultures, two lives are sometimes successful, as when an actor finds love in the arms of a tough-talking barmaid, but more usually lead to disillusionment, as when a hard-drinking salesman's career is shattered after he is drunk under the table one night by a Polish engineer, or when an English father struggles to find common ground with his American son. Riveting, almost terrifying, the stories in The Piano Tuner tell of decent men and women caught in events that they could never have predicted, would never have chosen.

Love Does No Harm

Love Does No Harm
Author: Marie Fortune
Publisher: A&C Black
Total Pages: 202
Release: 1998-10-01
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9780826411280

This work is aimed at those caught somewhere in the middle between those for whom only heterosexual and monogamous marriage, or "anything goes," are paradigms of suitable behaviour and intimate relationships. Ethicist and Christian Marie Fortune explores what it means to be in an intimate relationship today, surrounded as we are by domestic violence and continued silencing of women's voices.

Virginia Woolf and the Politics of Language

Virginia Woolf and the Politics of Language
Author: Judith Allen
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Total Pages: 144
Release: 2012-09-25
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0748674535

Through close readings of Woolf's essays, including 'Montaigne', A Room of One's Own, 'Craftsmanship', Three Guineas, and 'Thoughts on Peace in an Air Raid', Allen shows how Woolf's politics, expressed and enacted by her writings, are relevant to our curr

Soldiers of Reason

Soldiers of Reason
Author: Alex Abella
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Total Pages: 416
Release: 2009
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780156033442

This history of the RAND Corporation, written with full access to its archives, is a page-turning chronicle of the rise of the secretive think tank that has been the driving force behind the American government for 60 years.

Bright Before Us

Bright Before Us
Author: Katie Arnold-Ratliff
Publisher: Tin House Books
Total Pages: 290
Release: 2011-05-10
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1935639072

Facing the prospect of fatherhood, disillusioned by his fledgling teaching career, and mourning the loss of a fraught former relationship, 25-year-old Francis Mason is a prisoner of his past mistakes. But when his second-grade class discovers a dead body during a field trip to a San Francisco beach, Francis spirals into unbearable grief and all-consuming paranoia. As his behavior grows increasingly erratic, and tensions arise with the school principal and the parents of his students, he faces the familiar urge to flee — a choice that forces him to confront the character weaknesses that have shattered his life again and again — and to accept the wrenching truth about the past he’s never been able to move beyond.

In a Mist

In a Mist
Author: Devon Code
Publisher: Invisible Publishing
Total Pages: 127
Release: 2007-10
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0978218531

In a Mist explores longing, loss and isolation. This debut collection of short stories examines the lives of socially isolated individuals with obsessive interests and desires. These lonely protagonists find solace in emotionally evocative forms of cultural expression such as early jazz, classic cinema and renaissance motets. The transcendent potential of music is a recurring theme of this collection.

The Nature of Trauma in American Novels

The Nature of Trauma in American Novels
Author: Michelle Balaev
Publisher: Northwestern University Press
Total Pages: 165
Release: 2012-06-11
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0810128195

"This book examines literary trauma theory from its foundations to its implementations and new possibilities. ... [A]n analysis that reconsiders the meaning and value of traumatic experience by demonstrating the diversity of its forms in contemporary Amerian novels in an effort to deepen the discussion of trauma beyond that of the disease-driven paradigm in literary criticism today. ... [The author's] model views trauma and the process of remembering within a framework that emphasizes the multiplicity of responses to an extreme experience and the importance of contextual factors in detemining the significance of the event. In order to demonstrate this new approach, [she focuses her] discussion on late-modern canonical and emergent American novels that deal with trauma. In analyzing the narrative methods authors employ to portray suffering, [she] found two major patterns: the use of landscape imagery to convey the effects of trauma and remembering, and the use of place as a site that shapes the protagonist's experience and perception of the world."--Introduction.