Jonathan Lee is a British writer whose recent fiction has appeared in prominent literary magazines such as Tin House, Granta, and A Public Space. His novel 'High Dive' marks his debut publication in the United States. He resides in Brooklyn, contributing as an editor for Guernica and a regular writer for The Paris Review Daily.
Perfect for revision, colouring is a fun and creative way for students to
learn biopsychology, whilst taking a break from screens. Including short
simple introductions to each topic, this book asks students to identify the
anatomy and complete the label before moving on to add colour to the
illustrations.
‘Nuzzink in ze vorld can schtop me now!’There’s a new TV show about to hit the airwaves, but Colonel Lethbridge-Stewart won’t be tuning in. With the future of the Fifth Operational Corps in doubt he’s got enough to worry about, but a plea from an old friend soon finds Lethbridge-Stewart and Anne Travers embroiled in a plot far more fantastical than anything on the small screen.Can charismatic star Aubrey Mondegreene really be in two places at the same time? What lengths will ailing entertainment mogul Billy Lovac go to in order to reach his audience? And is luckless journalist Harold Chorley really so desperate that he’ll buy into a story about Nazi conspiracies from a tramp wearing a tin foil hat?There’s something very rotten at the heart of weekend television, and it isn’t all due to shoddy scripts and bad special effects.
Throughout the 19th and up to the mid-20th centuries, immigrants from China, Japan, Korea, India, and the Philippines came to America through San Francisco. The end of the decades-long Vietnam War changed the modern Asian American demographics of the city, this time with refugees coming from Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos. The San Francisco Bay Area remains a hub for Laotian American culture, history, and community resources, and it has been a center for Laotian American advancement since the early 1980s. After calling the United States home for more than 30 years and battling the scars of war, a new Laotian American society is seeking meaning from its past while moving forward with hopes of a better future as Americans.
Details the armies of what is known as 'the Rough Wooing'. This work covers a
transition period, from medieval to Renaissance armies, the spread of
firearms, the involvement of foreign mercenaries, and revolutionary tactics
that included early instances of the classic Highland Clan charge.