The Chicken And Poultry Bible: The Definitive Sourcebook, with over 800 Illustrations
Replete with lavish color photographs, a comprehensive cookbook surveys the history of chicken, turkey, and other poultry and offers a wealth of information on purchasing, storing, and cooking them, along with recipes. 30,000 first printing." --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Added by: Kahena | Karma: 11526.37 | Fiction literature | 22 October 2010
6
Crossfire
Shell-shocked and missing a foot-lost to an IED during his tour of duty in Afghanistan-Captain Tom Forsyth has been sent home by the army and, at loose ends, returns to his estranged mother's house for the first time since he joined up at seventeen. But Josephine Kauri, the first lady of British racing, has always put the horses she trains first and her family last. Tom soon finds himself strained to the breaking point with his mother and stepfather.
Planning math instruction is a demanding aspect of teaching. Teachers need to have an overall sense of the curriculum for the whole year, of what's going to be taught each month, and of what specifically to teach each day. This guide makes it easy to plan all three. It offers helpful mathematical strands organized month by month and covering grade-relevant topics. Includes reproducibles.
In the second book of this series, we are re-introduced to the characters from the first book. This time, the women are at a quilting retreat. The author does a nice job bringing readers through the event - I could feel myself there with them throughout the book. The characters remain interesting, fun and as lively as they were in the first book, yet this book could stand alone on its own merits. The author again brings up many interesting aspects of the quilting industry today and how they are dealt with. I also finished this one in a day! I'll be eagerly awaiting the next one in the series!
Added by: Nemini | Karma: 405.93 | Non-Fiction, Other | 20 October 2010
14
Supernatural Horror In Literature
Supernatural Horror in Literature is a long essay surveying the field of horror fiction. It was written between November 1925 and May 1927 and revised in 1933-1934. It was first published in 1927 in the one-shot magazine The Recluse.