London from My Windows

London from My Windows

Author: Mary Carter

Publisher: Kensington Books

Published: 2015-07-28

Total Pages: 368

ISBN-13: 1617737070

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Ava Wilder’s home in small-town Iowa is her sanctuary. A talented sketch artist with severe agoraphobia, Ava spends her days drawing a far more adventurous life than her invisible disability allows. Until she receives a package from London, explaining that she has inherited her Aunt Beverly’s entire estate—on condition that she lives in Bev’s West End flat for a year. Once overseas, Ava wonders if she’s simply swapped one prison for another. The streets and shops are intimidating, and Bev’s home appears to be a drop-in center for local eccentrics. Worst of all, Bev left a list of impossible provisos to be overseen by her quirky, attractive solicitor. Ava is expected to go out—to experience clubs, pubs, and culture; to visit Big Ben, Hyde Park, and the London Eye. After years of viewing the world through a pane of glass, she’s at the messy, complicated center of it. As exhilarated as she is terrified, will she be able to step up, step out, and claim the life she was meant for? In an insightful, poignant novel, Mary Carter delves deep into self-discovery and the meaning of courage, exploring the fears that serve to protect us—until life calls us to connect at last.


The Tsar's Window

The Tsar's Window

Author: Lucy Hamilton Hooper

Publisher: Good Press

Published: 2021-04-11

Total Pages: 190

ISBN-13:

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You will love this novel about the main character's adventures with a friend on business in St. Petersburg. Excerpt: The waiter comes in to know what we will order for dinner. He looks at us as if he wished to say, Poor creatures, how sorry I am for you! After all, it is not your fault that you were not born British subjects.


Killing Strangers

Killing Strangers

Author: T. K. Wilson

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2020-09-02

Total Pages: 272

ISBN-13: 0192608746

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A bewildering feature of so much contemporary political violence is its stunning impersonality. Every major city centre becomes a potential shooting gallery; and every metro system a potential bomb alley. Victims just happen, as the saying goes, to 'be in the wrong place at the wrong time'. We accept this contemporary reality - at least to some degree. But we rarely ask: where has it come from historically? Killing Strangers tackles this question head on. It examines how such violence became 'unchained' from inter-personal relationships. It traces the rise of such impersonal violence by examining violence in conjunction with changing social and political realities. In particular, it traces both 'push' and 'pull' - the ability of modern states to force the violence of their challengers into niche forms: and the disturbing new opportunities that technological changes offer to cause mayhem in fresh and original ways. Killing Strangers therefore aims to highlight the very strangeness of contemporary experience when it is viewed against a long-term perspective. Atrocities regularly capture media attention - and just as quickly fade from public view. That is both tragic - and utterly predictable. Deep down we expect no different. And that is why such atrocities must be repeated if our attention is to be re-engaged. Deep down we expect that, too. So Killing Strangers deliberately asks the very simplest of questions. How on earth did we get here?


Patrick Geddes

Patrick Geddes

Author: Helen Meller

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2005-08-02

Total Pages: 271

ISBN-13: 1134849281

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This recent analysis of Patrick Geddes' life and work reviews his ideas and philosophy of planning, providing a scholarly yet accessible account for students of the history of planning, urban design, social theory and British history.