Unable to reconcile herself to the deaths of her husband and her eldest daughter, poet Elizabeth Layton is teetering on the edge of an emotional abyss. To keep her from excessive mourning, her sister and brother pressure Elizabeth into going on a museum sponsored trip to the Aegean. The scenes in the novel are set against the exotic background of Greece, Turkey, Crete, Italy, and the sea. Hounded by memories, by odd, recurring dreams, by profound and disturbing encounters with two men, Elizabeth crosses a threshold. Is it another world...or madness?
The Cantonese film "Stories on Canton 3 days Massacre in 1650 (廣州三日屠城記))", also know as "Two military commanders made a Massacre in Canton city (兩藩王入粵大殺廣州城)" which is presented by the Hong Kong Chung Wo Sound Film Co. Ltd. (香港中和聲片公司), premiered on 31st March, 1937 (Wednesday), claimed to be an unprecedented, patriotic, comedic, erotic, martial arts Cantonese sound film in Chinese film industry. Ms. Nangaen Chearavanont found that its film special issue (March, 1937) in her Goo-pau (Ms. Au Ho (歐荷))’s remained bookshelf, she remember that she has watched this film when she was just a litter kid, let us to review this film and our childhood with her fifth book.
President by Massacre pulls back the curtain of "expansionism," revealing how Andrew Jackson, William Henry Harrison, and Zachary Taylor massacred Indians to "open" land to slavery and oligarchic fortunes. President by Massacre examines the way in which presidential hopefuls through the first half of the nineteenth century parlayed militarily mounted land grabs into "Indian-hating" political capital to attain the highest office in the United States. The text zeroes in on three eras of U.S. "expansionism" as it led to the massacre of Indians to "open" land to African slavery while luring lower European classes into racism's promise to raise "white" above "red" and "black." This book inquires deeply into the existence of the affected Muskogee ("Creek"), Shawnee, Sauk, Meskwaki ("Fox"), and Seminole, before and after invasion, showing what it meant to them to have been so displaced and to have lost a large percentage of their members in the process. It additionally addresses land seizures from these and the Tecumseh, Tenskwatawa, Black Hawk, and Osceola tribes. President by Massacre is written for undergraduate and graduate readers who are interested in the Native Americans of the Eastern Woodlands, U.S. slavery, and the settler politics of U.S. expansionism.