Triangle

Triangle

Author: Margaret Falcon

Publisher: iUniverse

Published: 2011-07-29

Total Pages: 286

ISBN-13: 1462031501

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To everyone on the North Carolina campus, Karen and Kevin seem the perfect couple. She is beautiful and charming, while he is smart and handsome. They are the kind of couple people envy and want to emulate. There is one problem, however. Karen cannot be faithful to her unsuspecting boyfriend. As rumors spread, people who interfere with the tumultuous couple are mysteriously and brutally murdered. Karens best friend, and roommate, Tina is privy to her indiscretions. Torn between loyalty to Karen, and a growing passion for Kevin, tensions mount between the friends. Can Tina keep a secret long enough to stay alive?


Learning from China

Learning from China

Author: Carl Fingerhuth

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 242

ISBN-13: 9783764369439

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The powerful social and cultural transformations of recent decades as expressed in the shape and form of the city need to be examined and reviewed. New methods and procedures in urban planning and a new relationship between town and land are urgently required. Learning from China calls to mind that seminal work of the post-modern, Learning from Las Vegas, and relates the principles of Taoist thought and action to the perspectives for a new urban design beyond that of today, truly post modern.


Mountains Figured and Disfigured in the English-Speaking World

Mountains Figured and Disfigured in the English-Speaking World

Author: Françoise Besson

Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing

Published: 2020-06-01

Total Pages: 730

ISBN-13: 1527554031

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The essays in this book, written by poets, novelists, mountain-climbers and academics from all over the world, evoke the representation of mountains in the English-speaking world as artists, writers, philosophers or mountain-climbers have represented them from the sixteenth to the twenty-first centuries. From the Alps to the Pyrenees, from Mount Fuji to Mount Shasta, from the Himalayas to the Scottish Highlands, from Ikere in Nigeria to Devil's Tower in the United States, from Uluru in Australia to the most northern mountain of the Arctic, the shapes of the world speak the same language and tell the world its own story. This interdisciplinary book, weaving together mountaineering, literature, philosophy, painting, cinema, ecology, history, palaeontology, geography, geopolitics, toponymy, law, religion and myth, invites people to an innovative reading of mountains: it reveals the close relationship existing between the shapes of the world and all forms of writing and, at the same time, it shows how the representations of the imagination may be instrumental in protecting the natural world. The story told by the landscape inscribes a broken line in the shapes of the world, tearing the landscape like a fragile page whenever historical and political events (wars, mining or deforestation) leave scars in the landscape; but writers' and artists' representations of mountains constitute a path to awareness as they are not only a painting of beauty, but an image of our link to nature and a warning as well. For centuries the image of the mountain has conveyed a symbolism telling the story of human thought, and this book shows to what extent literature and art play an essential part in our awareness of nature.