Added by: marchus001 | Karma: 190.32 | Fiction literature | 22 September 2010
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Montford Heirs: Promise Me Tomorrow (Book 2)
A beautiful thief... Lord Lambeth can't help but be captivated by lovely Marianne Cotterwood though he knows she's hiding a secret. The desire he feels for this mysterious woman is powerful, as is his need to unravel her mystery...
Edited by: englishcology - 21 September 2010
Reason: Please provide full description in the second panel in the future !!
Marianne Moore: Comprehensive Research and Study Guide (Bloom's Major Poets)A collection of critical essays on the poetry of Marianne Moore. Also includes a chronology of events in her life.
Along with poets Ezra Pound and H.D., Marianne Moore was an influential member of the Imagist movement. She served as acting editor of the highly respected literary journal Dial and she won both the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize. Among the works covered here are her poems "Marriage," "The Fish," and "The Steeple-Jack.
Joyce Carol Oates' "We Were the Mulvaneys" follows the fallout in the lives of the Mulvaney family of upstate New York as the result of one fateful night. February 14, 1976--the Mulvaney's only daughter, Marianne, attends the prom at the local high school and high on her popularity makes a mistake and ends up being raped. Marianne's unwillingness to face her accuser in court ultimately rips the family apart--alienating the three Mulvaney sons, disolving the parent's marriage, all as Marianne struggles to find an identity for herself as the exiled fallen hero of the family.
Is the Miranda warning, which lets an accused know of the right to remain silent, more about procedural fairness or about the conventions of speech acts and silences? Do U.S. laws about Native Americans violate the preferred or traditional "silence" of the peoples whose religions and languages they aim to "protect" and "preserve"? In Just Silences, Marianne Constable draws on such examples to explore what is at stake in modern law: a potentially new silence as to justice.