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Stephen Martin

    L'opera di George Martin Stephen si addentra nella letteratura inglese, nella storia navale moderna e nella poesia di guerra, mostrando un ampio respiro intellettuale. I suoi acclamati romanzi gialli storici sono meticolosamente ambientati durante le epoche elisabettiana e giacobiana, offrendo ai lettori uno sguardo vivido sulla Londra e Cambridge di quel periodo. Attraverso queste narrazioni, esplora misteri avvincenti radicandoli in ricchi dettagli storici e intuizioni psicologiche. I suoi numerosi titoli accademici sottolineano ulteriormente la sua profonda competenza e passione per gli studi letterari e storici.

    York Notes for GCSE on "Of Mice and Men"
    Never Such Innocence. Poems of the First World War
    Messengers. Who We Listen To, Who We Don't, and Why
    Fluffy McWhiskers Cuteness Explosion
    An Introductory Guide to English Literature
    The O Level Book
    • The O Level Book

      Genuine Exam Questions from Yesteryear!

      • 160pagine
      • 6 ore di lettura

      'The O Level Book' contains questions spanning a number of subjects, from English and mathematics to geography and general science

      The O Level Book
      5,0
    • Fluffy McWhiskers Cuteness Explosion

      • 40pagine
      • 2 ore di lettura

      Friendship is hard for Fluffy, a kitten so precious that anyone who looks at her explodes!

      Fluffy McWhiskers Cuteness Explosion
      4,1
    • Why are self-confident ignoramuses so often believed? Why are thoughtful experts so often given the cold shoulder? And why do apparently irrelevant details such as a person’s height, their relative wealth, or their Facebook photo influence whether or not we trust what they are saying?These are just some of the questions that behavioural experts Steve Martin and Joseph Marks tackle in their ground-breaking new book Messengers: Who We Listen To, Who We Don’t, and Why. Drawing extensively on the very latest research, they identify the powerful forces that result in some becoming society’s prevailing Messengers, and others ending up woefully ineffectual or under-represented. They examine the worlds of punditry, business and politics to show why being right carries less weight than looking right. And in the process they demonstrate why in a world of ambiguity, uncertainty and fake news it is now increasingly the Messenger who is the message.

      Messengers. Who We Listen To, Who We Don't, and Why
      3,7
    • An exciting collection of war poetry featuring renowned poets like Owen, Sassoon, and Brooke, along with rediscovered poems and songs from the Great War.

      Never Such Innocence. Poems of the First World War
      3,9
    • Each title in this series offers an exciting approach to English literature and will help students achieve a better grade. This book is packed with detailed summaries and commentaries, snappy advice, fun facts, and an extended resources section

      York Notes for GCSE on "Of Mice and Men"
      4,0
    • York Notes: Of Mice and Men: Notes

      • 72pagine
      • 3 ore di lettura

      1984 York Notes -- Notes on Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men (Paperback)(8.25"x5.6"x0.25") Notes by Martin Stephen *** 9780582781856 ***72 Pages

      York Notes: Of Mice and Men: Notes
      3,5
    • For hundreds of years historians have argued not only the truth of the Gunpowder Plot, but whether an obscure resident of Stratford-upon-Avon could have written the plays accredited to William Shakespeare. In these two highly acclaimed historical crime thrillers, Martin Stephen combines a top academic's grasp of history with a storyteller's ability to create huge suspense ? all this set against a vividly realised background of an England poised between the medieval and modern age. Stephen's books are not just top-class crime adventures, but provide an enthralling vision of history. Nominated for a Golden Dagger award, this is thriller writing at its best.

      The Desperate Remedy/The Conscience of the King
      3,2
    • The Galleons' Grave

      • 352pagine
      • 13 ore di lettura

      It is 1588 and King Philip of Spain has assembled the greatest fleet and the most powerful army in the world. It is envisaged that the Armada, commanded by the brave and chivalric Duke Medina Sidonia, will crush the English and bring an end to the reign of Queen Elizabeth. One man who has inside knowledge of this event is the young Henry Gresham. Caught up in the intrigues of Elizabeth's court as its inhabitants jostle for power and favour, he begins to realise that are many there who resent his youth, wealth and good looks. His position as a spy for Walsingham further endangers his life - and when he finds himself sailing on the Armada in order to spy on Sir Francis Drake, who is deemed suspicious of working for the Spanish, he's not entirely certain where the real threat lies...

      The Galleons' Grave
      3,9