A lively TV-magazine programme for children. Key features: A team of young presenters offers an original mix of reports on British culture, and performs comedy sketches, games, quizzes, and songs. Activity Book wanted
Fraser is a highly regarded British biographer, and the late Harold Pinter, her husband, was a Nobel-winning British playwright. So, the circle they generally traveled in was made up of not only fellow writers but also, because of their individual and combined celebrity, fellow celebrities. Fraser’s latest book is both joyous and sad. The former because she shares diary entries concerning her relationship with Pinter (they lived together from August 1975 until Christmas 2008), and it was obviously a stimulating love-match. And sad because the book ends when it does because of Pinter’s death from cancer; his struggle with the disease had been years-long.
British and American National Symbols in the EFL Classroom
The manual offers some ways of using British and American national symbols in the EFL classroom. It is expected to become an essential resource for teachers and lecturers willing to make their classes Country Studies oriented. The manual DVD will help to achieve the aim.
In the ruins of Yorkshire’s Fountains Abbey lies the body of a man wrapped in a cloak, the face covered by a gas mask. Next to him is a book on alchemy, which belongs to the schoolmaster, a conscientious objector in the Great War. Who is this man, and is the investigation into his death being manipulated by a thirst for revenge? Meanwhile, the British War Office is searching for a missing man of their own, someone whose war work was so secret that even Rutledge isn’t told his real name or what he did.