The Prison Reform Movement

The Prison Reform Movement

Author: Larry E. Sullivan

Publisher: Macmillan Reference USA

Published: 1990

Total Pages: 188

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Traces the history of prison reform in the United States, as the reformers attempt to set up a system that would deter further crime and rehabilitate convicts come into conflict with the need to punish and the inherent character of imprisonment.


Passages

Passages

Author: Gail Sheehy

Publisher: Penguin

Published: 2013-10-08

Total Pages: 632

ISBN-13: 069813866X

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Learn how to better navigate the challenges of adult life with Gail Sheehy’s landmark bestseller—named one of the ten most influential books of our times by the Library of Congress. For decades, Gail Sheehy’s Passages has been inspiring readers to see the predictable crises of adult life as opportunities for growth. She charts the stages between 18 and 50 as unfolding in a pattern of adult development: once recognized, more easily managed. Passages is an insightful road map of adulthood that illustrates with vivid stories our continuing personality and sexual changes throughout the “Trying 20s,” “Catch 30s,” “Forlorn 40s,” and “Refreshed (or Resigned) 50s.” One comment is continuously repeated by men, women, singles, couples, and people who recover from a midlife crisis: “This book changed my life.”


Forlorn Hope

Forlorn Hope

Author: James Mace

Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform

Published: 2012-03-28

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781475108675

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Lieutenant James Webster is in mourning, following the loss of his wife, and volunteers to lead the small group that will lead the assault.


Forlorn Hope

Forlorn Hope

Author: Troy Taylor

Publisher:

Published: 2021-03

Total Pages: 342

ISBN-13: 9781735270661

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

FORLORN HOPE A HAUNTED HISTORY OF THE DONNER PARTY BY TROY TAYLOR "In prosecuting this journey," warned an 1849 guidebook to the West, "the emigrant should never forget that it is one in which time is everything." It was the best advice that any settler going West was given during the days of the wagon trains to California. The clock ticked with each passing mile, sounding an alarm that meant success for most but doom for an unlucky few - like the Donner Party. In Troy Taylor's latest book of historical horror, discover the true story of the Donner Party, which left Illinois in the spring of 1846 and traveled by wagon toward California. Most of us know how the story ends - with cannibalism in the mountains - but most don't know how they ended up there, snowbound in a winter landscape of ice and snow. The Donners began their journey filled with hope and a hunger for new land in the sunshine, but they had no idea what awaited them on the overland trail. Cursed by bad luck, they made careless mistakes, took an untested shortcut, and were plagued by death and bloodshed along the way. Within these pages, you'll travel along with them as they face horrifying storms, cut a new trail through the Wasatch, spend four days in the desert with no water, and banish one of the caravan's best men after a murder in self-defense. They only had to cross the Sierra Nevada before the heavy winter snowfalls - but they didn't make it. Trapped for months in the snow-covered mountains, slowly dying from cold and starvation, they did everything they could to stay alive - even the unthinkable. Discover the events that left them stranded at Truckee Lake, the plight of the first escape attempt by a snowshoe, the horrors found at the camps by the rescue parties, the desperate hunger that led to eating human flesh, the monster that acquired a taste for it and, finally, the eerie hauntings left behind in the wake of the tragedy. This is a story that we all think we know - but there's much more to it than we hear about in school. This is one of the author's strangest and most unsettling books so far!


Brazilian Adventure

Brazilian Adventure

Author: Peter Fleming

Publisher: Northwestern University Press

Published: 1999

Total Pages: 380

ISBN-13: 9780810160651

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

In 1932 Peter Fleming, a literary editor, engaged to search for missing English explorer Colonel P.H. Fawcett, lost in tributary of the Amazon, with the hardships of meager supplies, faulty maps, and a pack of rival newspaper-men on their trail.


The Forlorn Hope

The Forlorn Hope

Author: Edmund Yates

Publisher: e-artnow

Published: 2020-12-17

Total Pages: 368

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

"The Forlorn Hope" features the bohemian and turbulent life of a wealthy young man named Ramsay Caird. Edmund Hodgson Yates (1831-1894) was a British journalist, novelist and dramatist. His first career was a clerk in the General Post Office, becoming in 1862 head of the missing letter department, and where he stayed until 1872. Meanwhile, he entered journalism, working on the "Court Journal" and then "Daily News", under Charles Dickens. In 1854 he published his first book "My Haunts and their Frequenters", after which followed a succession of novels and plays.