Lorna Doone James DaveyLorna Doone: A Romance of Exmoor (1869) is a novel by Richard Doddridge Blackmore. Praised by some of Victian Englands leading authors, including Robert Louis Stevenson, George Gissing, and Thomas Hardy, Lorna Doone was published anonymously and sold poorly in its first edition. Republished the following year in an inexpensive format, the book became a huge success for Blackmore, and remains his only novel in print. Raised in the hill country of
such as general relativity
from their apex in the post-war welfare state to the present day
It suggests new ways for thoughtful meditation and a new cast for action
the recent availability of genomic information on a large number of markers has transformed modern dairy cattle breeding around the world
The Celluloid Atlantic makes the trailblazing argument that culturally hybrid genres like the so-called spaghetti Western were less the exceptions than the norm
and assessing their implications
The future is open
The authors review six major insect pests of the banana bunch with a particular focus on understanding their life cycle as a basis for designing more ecologically-based pest management – red rust and flower thrips
My dear Reader
vivid figurative language
This book provides a fresh critique of John Dewey and the progressive tradition and warns against the superficial renaissance of Deweyan philosophy present in many of today's modern liberal educational reform movements
Explores the science and creative process behind Poe's cosmological treatise