“An essential synopsis of essential readings that every human geographer must read. It is highly recommended for those just embarking on their careers as well as those who need a reminder of how and why geography moved from the margins of social thought to its very core.” -Barney Warf, Florida State University
This dictionary presents and explains the key words and concepts in Locke's thought and books. Over 130 entries include accounts of his various books, his place in science and religion and his writings on education, theology and economics. The dictionary should make Locke's thought accessible to specialist and non-specialist readers alike. The concepts and terms are taken from the full range of his publications and the dictionary is based on all that he published, including his correspondence.
This brilliant study -- Gaddis' fifth book on the Cold War -- provides an exhaustive and ever-quizzical approach to the early years of the superpower conflict. Gaddis has a knack for asking large and interesting questions, and he brings a lively style to his answers. Despite the promise of startling revelations from newly opened archives, what "we now know" turns out to bear an uncanny resemblance to what we thought then; never has "post-revisionism" seemed so indistinguishable from the original orthodoxy.
Englishtips.org is the first site and the only one for now that provides this book for free. Only text. 296 pages
In "A Prisoner in the Caucasus", by Leo Tolstoy, Tartar rebels take a Russian officer prisoner in order to collect a ransom. But the officer's one thought throughout his cruel ordeal is to escape.