Dr. Bruce Gold, a forty-eight-year-old Jewish professor of English, faces the possibilities of being appointed to a high State Department position and being disowned by his family.
Edie Quentance is the odd one out in her family, a rebellious brunette among blond conformists. For generations, Quentance Bank has managed the private wealth of its rich clients. When Edie is pushed into joining the family business, she finds the work tedious. As a diversion, she seeks to uncover the truth about her great-grandfather Kit. Branded a coward and a thief, Kit Quentance escaped from Titanic and was rumoured to have carried a fortune into the lifeboat with him. Edie's excavations reveal shocking truths about Titanic's sinking, as well as unearthing far more recent secrets suggesting that Quentance Bank is not the paragon of probity it appears to be. As she attempts to right her family's wrong-doings, Edie's position becomes increasingly dangerous. Her twin brother, her parents, her uncle - is there anyone out there she can trust?
The fourteenth book in the New York Times and USA Today bestselling series featuring fractured fairy tales for fearless kids! Is this story TOO long? Is this story TOO short? Nope, it's just right! Abby and Jonah get pulled into their magic mirror and land in the story of Goldilocks and the Three Bears. There's porridge to sample and beds to test out! But if they help Goldilocks, will they risk running into big trouble with the Bear family in their cottage? Sarah Mlynowski delivers another feminist fairy tale for modern kids in her enchanting, bestselling series.
This book asks why there has never been a proper audit of the official US gold supplies, held at Fort Knox and elsewhere. It is a call for transparency in an area where there has been none since gold was confiscated from Americans in 1933.
Daywen Athalia wants love--true and lasting. Fearing a future of bitter loneliness, she seeks help from a gypsy woman. The price: a hundred pieces of gold. Daywen's never had two shillings to rub together in her life. Where's she going to find a hundred gold pieces? Bel MacEuros made a career of theft from fey creatures. When the cursed gold he rightfully stole from a gnome is taken from him by Daywen, the consequences could bless or break his life. It is not the gnome's curse or a gypsy's blessing but another magic, far deeper and more powerful, that will change their lives forever.
Imagine George Plimpton. Except with real athletic ability. And he’s a woman. And she’s taken on a challenge that makes Paper Lion look like a brisk game of Go Fish. Meet Kathryn Bertine, elite triathlete, former professional figure skater, and starving artist. Just as her personal and professional dreams begin to crumble in the summer of 2006, ESPN stakes her to a dream: Take two years to make the 2008 summer Olympics in Beijing. As Good As Gold is the heroic, hilarious account of Bertine’s serial exertions in the realms of triathlon, modern pentathlon, team handball, track cycling, road cycling, rowing, open water swimming, racewalking, and—fasten your seatbelts—luge. On her journey, the obstacles range from jet lag to jellyfish, flat tires to floundering relationships, repeated rejection to road rash. But, as time is running out, Bertine doesn’t sweat the small stuff, only the large—like scouring the globe for a tiny nation to adopt her, and pushing her body and mind as far as it will go. Maybe all the way to China. Between harrowing, often laugh-out-loud episodes of triumph and humiliation, Bertine takes short “Water Breaks” to contemplate the ins-and-outs of fan mail, failure, rehydration, nasal reconstruction, and how best to punish steroid users. Kathryn Bertine swims, runs, and rides—and writes—like a champion. In As Good as Gold, Bertine proves she has something more valuable than an Olympic medal. She’s got Olympic mettle. When it comes to the human heart, she takes the gold.
He’s the only person who can save me from this sorrowful life… Lizzie works as a waitress at a tavern to cover the debt her brother has incurred. It’s a job she’ll never get used to, with the fancy clothes and shoes that don’t fit… Then one day, the owner asks her to entertain customers! Lizzie’s horrified, but a well-dressed gentleman comes to her rescue. Will is an investor and a member of a well-known local ranching family. She’s surprised he’s being so nice to her, a total stranger, and even more surprised when he later shows up on her doorstep to offer her a job!
As Good As Gold: 50 Years of the MFA at Clemson showcases and celebrates the remarkable achievements of an impressive roster of artists who have graduated from Clemson University's Master of Fine Arts (MFA) Visual Arts program. Presented in three installations over the academic year, this milestone exhibition series commemorates the first awarding of an MFA from our program at Clemson in 1973, and features works across five decades spanning a variety of disciplines. Beginning with Jeanet Dreskin, the very first MFA Visual Arts graduate, the exhibition series highlights the work of approximately 70 artist alumni.