A Guide to America's World Heritage Sites

A Guide to America's World Heritage Sites

Author: Robert Manning

Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield

Published: 2024-11-05

Total Pages: 217

ISBN-13: 149308142X

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There are twenty-four World Heritage Sites scattered across the United States.These U.S. World Heritage Sites are the most important natural and cultural areas around the world; these are the places that the United Nations, and the 167 countries it represents, have recognized as the most important contributions to the world’s heritage. World Heritage Sites are premier visitor destinations, yet most people are not familiar with the World Heritage Site designation and many of the places included on the World Heritage List. A Guide to America's World Heritage Sites: The Heritage of Humanity describes these twenty-four sites, including why they are so important, the visitor attractions they feature, and logistical advice on how to visit them.


Tangled Destiny

Tangled Destiny

Author: Patricia M. Cooper

Publisher: FriesenPress

Published: 2014-09-22

Total Pages: 368

ISBN-13: 1460247299

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It is 1778, and the contractual marriage between Christian St. Clair and Catherine Trevane will unite two of the most powerful families in South Carolina. But when Catherine disappears just weeks before the wedding, both families are at their wits end and will do anything to find her. In desperation, Christian approaches Linnet, a local healer and wise woman, who is reputed to have 'unusual' gifts. Linnet, an immortal and time travel guide, knows that Catherine has travelled across time and is now living in the 20th century but reluctantly agrees to bring her back to fulfil the marriage contract. Linnet tracks Catherine down, but discovers that she is now in her 70s and a grandmother. Undaunted, Linnet realizes that Catherine's career-oriented granddaughter, Sarah, is the spitting image of Catherine when young, and uses her powers-plus a tad of magic-to arrange a series of events to bring Sarah back through time to 18th century Charles Town and pass her off as the missing bride. A tangled mess of deception, lies, murder and mayhem plays out before the truth is revealed and destiny is fulfilled. It is also a story of love and sacrifice by two women born centuries apart, but joined in destiny.


Linnet

Linnet

Author: Grant Allen

Publisher: Good Press

Published: 2019-12-19

Total Pages: 367

ISBN-13:

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A fiction novel crafted by Grant Allen. This narrative takes readers on a journey from the bustling streets of London, England, to the picturesque landscapes of the Tyrol region in the Austrian Alps. A captivating read for those who enjoy narratives that blend urban and natural settings.


Linnet

Linnet

Author: Grant Allen

Publisher: London : Richards

Published: 1898

Total Pages: 424

ISBN-13:

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Linnet, a Romance

Linnet, a Romance

Author: Grant Allen

Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand

Published: 2019-09-25

Total Pages: 382

ISBN-13: 3734080517

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Reproduction of the original: Linnet, a Romance by Grant Allen


Glacier-Waterton International Peace Park

Glacier-Waterton International Peace Park

Author: Vicky Spring

Publisher: The Mountaineers Books

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 260

ISBN-13: 9780898868050

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In 1932, Glacier National Park in Montana and WatertonLakes National Park in Alberta, Canada were joinedtogether to create the world's first International PeacePark. More than a political union, the park was createdin recognition that the beautiful, rare, and delicateecosystems of the northern Rockies shouldn't end atnational or ......


The Linnet Bird

The Linnet Bird

Author: Linda Holeman

Publisher: Crown

Published: 2005-05-17

Total Pages: 448

ISBN-13: 0307238482

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“For you, I will write of it all—part truth, part memory, part nightmare—my life, the one that started so long ago, in a place so far from here . . .” India, 1839: Linny Ingram, the respectable young wife of a British colonial officer, settles down to write her life story. In the claustrophobic, mannered world of British India, Linny seems the perfect society wife: pretty, gracious, subservient. But appearances can be deceptive. Linny Ingram was born Linny Gow, an orphan raised in the cold, gray slums of Liverpool. Sold into prostitution by her stepfather when she was only eleven, Linny is a born survivor and an accomplished chameleon and manipulator. Through a stroke of luck and considerable scheming, she manages to re-create herself as a proper Victorian young lady, middle-class and seemingly respectable. By befriending a merchant’s daughter, Linny secures a place with her new companion on a ship bound for India, where they will join “the fishing fleet”—young women of good birth but no fortune who sail to India in search of a husband. India, with its exotic colors, sights, and smells, is a world away from the cold back alleys of Linny’s childhood. But even there, she is haunted by her past, and by the constant threat of discovery. To secure her place in society, she marries Somers Ingram, a wealthy British officer with secrets of his own. Soon Linny discovers that respectability and marriage bring a new kind of imprisonment, as well as the same menace and violence that she thought she had escaped. But Linny is not about to surrender easily. In the lush tropics of India she finds not only the means for rebellion but also the love and freedom she never had in England. We had been at sea almost four months. Swallows swooped near the railings, indicating land nearby. Mrs. Cavendish likened these busy, twittering creatures to the dove with its olive branch. She was right, and within another day villages were spotted along the coast. The water became noisy with dozens of tiny rocking boatloads of Indians. Bumboat men, Mrs. Cavendish called them, shouting to be heard over the cries of the villagers as they boasted of their merchandise, hoping to sell coconuts, bananas, or tamarinds. I hung over the railing, watching as the natives threw ropes with baskets attached over the ship’s side. Some of the crew called down to them in a strange tongue that I couldn’t identify, putting coins into the baskets. The baskets were lowered, and then came up again, filled with whatever the sailors had requested. I longed to try the strange-looking fruit, but Mrs. Cavendish, with a slight shake of her head, indicated that it would be beneath us to purchase anything in this way. During the last few days, as we grew ever closer to our destination, excitement grew in me. At first I attributed it to the beauty of the water and sun, the flying fish sending little droplets of water onto the smooth sea, but then realized it was something else. I detected a difference in the atmosphere, and whether it was the air itself or the degree of heat I couldn’t say. Perhaps the smells carried in the wind contributed to the unexplained breathlessness I experienced. My nose filled with the strange smells of an unfamiliar populace, the scents of unknown vegetation. I felt as heady as I had when twirled in my first quadrille. —from The Linnet Bird