2015, ISBN: 9780373585502
Hardcover
Robert Rose, 2008. Paperback. Very Good. May have limited writing in cover pages. Pages are unmarked. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed., R… More...
Robert Rose, 2008. Paperback. Very Good. May have limited writing in cover pages. Pages are unmarked. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed., Robert Rose, 2008, 3, Robert Rose, 2008. Paperback. Good. Former library book; Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed., Robert Rose, 2008, 2.5, Robert Rose, 2008. Paperback. Acceptable. Disclaimer:A readable copy. All pages are intact, and the cover is intact. Pages can include considerable notes-in pen or highlighter-but the notes cannot obscure the text. At ThriftBooks, our motto is: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed., Robert Rose, 2008, 2.5, Robert Laffont, 1978. in8. 1978. Broché. 180 pages. Qu'y a-t-il de l'autre côté ? Dans La vie après la vie Raymond Moody médecin et docteur en philosophie relatait l'expérience d'hommes et de femmes ayant connu la mort ""clinique"". Tous les témoignages concordaient : la sensation de flotter au-dessus de son propre corps le ""tunnel"" à traverser l'accession à un lieu de paix et de lumière. Et le retour à la vie - presque à regret... Aujourd'hui l'auteur approfondit son enquête et nous fait part de révélations plus étonnantes qui ouvrent des perspectives plus vastes encore. Message d'espoir aussi : tous ceux qui ont franchi l'ultime frontière sont revenus transformés. Leur vie a désormais un autre sens un autre but - l'amour d'autrui la paix et l'harmonie French édition -Le livre présente des marques importantes de lecture et ou de stockage sur la couverture et/ou les pourtours mais reste en état correct d'ensemble . Expédition soignée dans un emballage adapté depuis la France, Robert Laffont, 1978, 0, -: Penguin Books, 2012. None. Paperback. Very Good. -. Illuminating the life of Simon Cowell and delving into backstage scandal, tabloid rumour and the cut-throat worlds of music and television, Tom Bower leaves no stone unturned in this must-read biography. This is a detailed insider`s account of entertainment mogul Simon Cowell`s rise to meteoric fame and all of the controversial highs and lows along the way. Packed with juicy details, exclusive interviews and sensational revelations, Sweet Revenge is an incredible portrait of Simon Cowell which also uncovers the real stories behind The X Factor, Britain`s Got Talent and American Idol. Tom Bower is the author of nineteen books, including biographies of Robert Maxwell, Mohamed Fayed, Gordon Brown, Richard Branson, Conrad Black and, more recently, Bernie Ecclestone., Penguin Books, 2012, 3, Robert laffont / Réponses sante, 1981. in8. 1981. broché. 197 pages. Vous êtes fatigué le matin en vous levant : vous vous sentez déprimé et anxieux sans raison. Vous avez trop froid ou trop chaud trop faim ou pas assez. Vous dormez mal. Souvent ce sont des crampes musculaires des paupières qui sautent des fourmillements des contractures : tout cela traduisant l'hyperexcitabilité musculaire l'un des signes les plus évidents de la spasmophilie - appelée aussi parfois tétanie chronique. Mais ce ne sont pas là les seuls symptômes : maux de tête vertiges sensation de flou visuel signes viscéraux touchant à l'appareil digestif respiratoire vasculaire ainsi qu'à la sphère génitale l'éventail est vaste et souvent trompeur. Certains sujets cumulent les symptômes d'autres n'en présentent qu'un nombre limité. Mais il importe de détecter une spasmophilie méconnue - et souvent par les médecins eux-mêmes - pour sortir les malades de situations pathologiques inextricables. La spasmophilie est une maladie métabolique qui peut s'aggraver brusquement sous l'impact d'un facteur déclenchant tel que stress deuil divorce soucis professionnels etc. Il ne s'agit ni d'une maladie imaginaire ni d'une maladie mentale. Elle se diagnostique avec précision se soigne avec efficacité. Certaines règles d'hygiène alimentaire certaines précautions permettent d'en prévenir les décompensations les plus invalidantes et les plus angoissantes. Ce livre destiné au grand public a été le tout premier à faire le point sur cette affection méconnue mais aussi mal connue qui touche huit à dix millions de Français. Depuis plus de quinze ans il demeure avec plus de 150 000 exemplaires vendus l'ouvrage de référence dans son domaine légères marques de lecture et/ou de stockage mais du reste en TBE -Envoi rapide et soigné dans une enveloppe à bulle depuis la France, Robert laffont / Réponses sante, 1981, 0, Rose Incorporated, Robert, 2008. Paperback. Like New. Pages are clean and are not marred by notes or folds of any kind. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed., Rose Incorporated, Robert, 2008, 5, Robert Rose. Used - Good. Good condition. A copy that has been read but remains intact. May contain markings such as bookplates, stamps, limited notes and highlighting, or a few light stains., Robert Rose, 2.5, The Guilford Press. Very Good. 6 x 0.75 x 9 inches. Paperback. 2003. 245 pages. <br>If anger is starting to rule your life, or someone else has urged you to get a grip--or else, anger expert Dr. Robe rt Nay has a six-step plan that can help you regain control, even in the most stressful, hot-button situations. This proven progra m shows you how to stand up for yourself without losing your temp er. Put a lid on destructive anger once and for all with fine-tun ed strategies that help you: *Figure out which of the five faces of anger are a problem for you, from passive-aggression to all-o ut rage. *Recognize the early warning signs of anger in your phys ical sensations and thoughts. *Identify and change unrealistic ex pectations you have for yourself and other people. *Communicate e ffectively when differences arise--with your spouse, family membe rs, colleagues, or others. *Practice anger-management skills alon e and in public until they're second nature. For anyone who need s help with anger, Dr. Nay's program is effective, easy to learn, and--unlike other methods--brings about lasting change. See als o Dr. Nay's Anger Management Workbook: Use the STOP Method to Rep lace Destructive Responses with Constructive Behavior, which help s you build core anger management skills using interactive exerci ses, and Overcoming Anger in Your Relationship: How to Break the Cycle of Arguments, Put-Downs, and Stony Silences. Editorial Rev iews Review 'Taking charge of your anger is a journey,' Robert N ay observes. Your patients who have problems with anger control a nd aggression could not do better than to take this journey by re ading this practical, engaging, user-friendly guide. It blends in structive anecdotes and case material with self-help suggestions that are based on empirically validated procedures. Strongly reco mmended!--Donald Meichenbaum, PhD, Distinguished Professor Emerit us, University of Waterloo; Research Director, The Melissa Instit ute for Violence Prevention and Treatment of Victims of Violence, Miami, FL Rarely does one find outstanding scholarship and cli nical wisdom wedded in one book. Such is the case in Dr. W. Rober t Nay's exciting text. The writing style is highly engaging and t he text is filled with numerous relevant examples. This book is a 'must read' for anyone who wants to learn to utilize anger react ions more effectively, whether in personal relationships or the w ork world. It is a self-help goldmine from a very wise individual who is also a scholarly expert in the anger control field.--Jame s P. McCullough, Jr., PhD, Department of Psychology, Virginia Com monwealth University Dr. Nay presents clear, effective, and nonj udgmental road maps for identifying and gaining control of anger. He is a skilled clinician whose work is comprehensive, and helpf ul. Following this program is likely to help you improve your com munication and closeness with the important people in your life.- -Stephen Winter, President, American Healthcare Institute If ang er is a problem for you, Dr. Nay offers a step-by-step, practical model for what sets off your anger, what happens once you 'lose it,' and how you can gain control. With control, anger will no lo nger have a negative impact on your personal, social, or work rel ationships. I can attest to Dr. Nay's abilities as a teacher and trainer. Now he brings his expertise directly to readers in this excellent book.--Larry B. Silver, MD, Department of Psychiatry, G eorgetown University Medical Center Nay's comprehensive, rigorou sly ordered, step-by-step management program for identifying, und erstanding and defusing anger will surely continue to find a broa d and welcoming audience across modern societies. One of the feat ures that sets apart Nay's approach from other anger management p rograms is his refusal of the usual reductive definition of the p roblem...In favor of a uniquely broad definition of anger as havi ng a spectrum of 'faces.' His program rests upon a long trial and research period (over 25 years and hundreds of treated cases), a nd has evolved through the decade that Nay has been using his mod el to train professional therapists across the country, working i n the fields of mental health, medicine, social work, substance a buse, and school counseling....A worthwhile read for everyone. It provides the basics for any community, school or family program for rethinking ways of relating. A highly detailed step-by-step p rogram for restructuring one's life, this book has positive messa ges and useful strategies that can benefit every individual and e very community! ? Mental Help Published On: 2015-02-26 About the Author W. Robert Nay, PhD, is a clinical psychologist in privat e practice in McLean, Virginia, and Annapolis, Maryland, and Clin ical Associate Professor at Georgetown University School of Medic ine. The author of two psychology textbooks, Dr. Nay has taught t housands of mental health professionals nationwide to conduct ang er management training with their clients. He has appeared repeat edly on national television to discuss media violence. His websit e is www.wrobertnay.com. Excerpt. ® Reprinted by permission. Al l rights reserved. Introduction Step One. Understanding and Recog nizing Anger 1. The Faces of Anger: Who Do You See in the Mirror? 2. Behind the Mask: Understanding Anger and Its Expression Step Two. Identifying and Preparing for Anger Triggers 3. Understandin g Your Anger Triggers Step Three. Pinpointing Your Anger Early On and Dampening Arousal 4. Anger Awareness 5. Dampening Anger Arou sal Step Four. Identifying and Changing Thoughts That Fuel Anger 6. Recognizing Thoughts That Fuel Anger 7. Rewriting Your Script: New Thinking for New Solutions Step Five. Staying Cool Under Fir e 8. Assertive Problem Solving: Expressing Anger Constructively i n Conflict Situations 9. When Anger Is Aimed at You Step Six. Sta ying the Course: Sustaining New Behavior and Coping with Roadbloc ks 10. Establishing New Anger Habits 11. So You¨ve Had a Setback: Getting Back on Track Appendix 1. Self-Assessment of Anger Quest ionnaire (SAQ) Appendix 2. Personal Anger Scale Appendix 3. Anger Analysis Suggested Resources References Index Excerpt. ® Reprin ted by permission. All rights reserved. Introduction Step One. Un derstanding and Recognizing Anger 1. The Faces of Anger: Who Do Y ou See in the Mirror? 2. Behind the Mask: Understanding Anger and Its Expression Step Two. Identifying and Preparing for Anger Tri ggers 3. Understanding Your Anger Triggers Step Three. Pinpointin g Your Anger Early On and Dampening Arousal 4. Anger Awareness 5. Dampening Anger Arousal Step Four. Identifying and Changing Thou ghts That Fuel Anger 6. Recognizing Thoughts That Fuel Anger 7. R ewriting Your Script: New Thinking for New Solutions Step Five. S taying Cool Under Fire 8. Assertive Problem Solving: Expressing A nger Constructively in Conflict Situations 9. When Anger Is Aimed at You Step Six. Staying the Course: Sustaining New Behavior and Coping with Roadblocks 10. Establishing New Anger Habits 11. So You¨ve Had a Setback: Getting Back on Track Appendix 1. Self-Asse ssment of Anger Questionnaire (SAQ) Appendix 2. Personal Anger Sc ale Appendix 3. Anger Analysis Suggested Resources References Ind ex ., The Guilford Press, 2003, 3, Arrow. Good. 5.12 x 1.75 x 7.81 inches. Paperback. 2008. 816 pages. Cover worn<br>Campbell, Alastair Editorial Reviews A bout the Author Alastair Campbell was born in Keighley, Yorkshire in 1957, the son of a vet. After graduating from Cambridge Unive rsity in modern languages, his first chosen career was journalism , principally with the Mirror Group. When Tony Blair became leade r of the Labour Party, he asked Campbell to be his press secretar y. He worked for Blair - first in that capacity, then as official spokesman and director of communications and strategy - from 199 4 to 2003, since when he has been engaged mainly in writing, publ ic speaking and working for Leukaemia Research, where he is chair man of fundraising. He has continued to act as an advisor to Mr B lair and the Labour Party, including during the 2005 election cam paign. He lives in North London with his partner of 25 years, Fio na Millar. They have three children Rory, 19, Calum, 17 and Grace , 12. His interests include running, triathlon, bagpipes and Burn ley Football Club. From the Hardcover edition. Excerpt. ® Repri nted by permission. All rights reserved. The following are excerp ts from Alastair Campbell's The Blair Years. Mr. Campbell's comme nts on the entries are in bold. Meeting Diana As a journalist, I had often been critical of Princess Diana. The moment I met her , former negative thoughts were banished. Thursday, May 4, 1995 Local elections. Terry picked me up to go to collect TB/CB to go to Walworth Rd for the results coming in. They were at a dinner in Hyde Park Gardens that had been organised for them to meet Pri ncess Diana. I rang the bell and said could you tell Mr Blair his car is here. I went back to the car and the next thing TB is tap ping at the car window and he says: 'Someone wants to meet you.' I get out and she's walking towards me, and she says: 'There he i s, can I come over and say hello,' and then she's standing there, absolutely, spellbindingly, drop-dead gorgeous, in a way that th e millions of photos didn't quite get it. She said hello, held ou t her hand and said she was really pleased to meet me, so I mumbl ed something back about me being more pleased and how I didn't ex pect when I left the house tonight that I'd end up standing in th e middle of the road talking to her. 'It would make a very funny picture if there were any paparazzi in those trees,' she said. TB was standing back and Cherie was looking impatient and I was jus t enjoying flirting with her. I asked if he had behaved well and she said yes, very well. I said in that case I think you should come with us to Walworth Road and create an almighty sensation. 'I just might,' she said. Northern Ireland In the introduction to the book I cite TB's optimism and resilience as two of his gre atest qualities. Here, in his second week as Prime Minister, the optimism is on display after a weekend spent reflecting on Northe rn Ireland. The resilience would follow as, over the course of hi s Premiership, he secured progress towards peace. Monday, May 12 , 1997 TB said he reckoned he could see a way of sorting the No rthern Ireland problem. I loved the way he said it, like nobody h ad thought of it before. I said what makes you think you can do i t when nobody else could? Death of Diana The events following t he death of Diana are recorded in some detail in the book. Here i s a short extract which records how I heard the news, and how TB initially reacted. Saturday, August 30, 1997 I got to bed, and at around two I was paged by media monitoring: 'Car crash in Pari s. Dodi killed. Di hurt. This is not a joke.' Then TB came on. He had been called by Number 10 and told the same thing. He was rea lly shocked. He said she was in a coma and the chances are she'd die. I don't think I'd ever heard him like this. He was full of p auses, then gabbling a little, but equally clear what we had to d o. We started to prepare a statement. We talked through the thing s we would have to do tomorrow, if she died. By now the phones we re starting from the press, and I didn't sleep. Then about an hou r later Nick, the duty clerk, called and said simply 'She's dead. The Prime Minister is being told now.' I went through on the cal l. Angus Lapsley was duty private secretary and was taking him th rough what we knew. But it was hard to get beyond the single fact of her death. 'I can't believe this. I just can't believe it,' s aid TB. 'You just can't take it in, can you?' And yet, as ever wi th TB, he was straight onto the ramifications. Historic day with Sinn Fein There were many important milestones on the road to t he Good Friday Agreement, which was perhaps the greatest high of my entire time with TB, elections included. This extract relates to one such milestone, the first visit to Downing Street by Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness, two men crucial to the peace proces s. Thursday, December 11, 1997 Gerry Adams and his team arrived 15 minutes early, and he did a little number in the street, wher e the media numbers were huge. This was a big moment, potentially historic in the progress it could lead to. They came inside and we kept them waiting while we went over what TB was due to say. M o Mowlam and Paul Murphy were both there and Mo was pretty fed up , feeling she was getting shit from all sides. They were hovering around the lifts and were summoned down to the Cabinet room. We had agreed TB should be positive but firm. He actually came over as friendly, welcoming them individually as they came in. I shook McGuinness by the hand, who as he sat down said, fairly loudly, 'So this is the room where all the damage was done.' It was a cla ssic moment where the different histories played out. Everyone on our side thought he was referring to the mortar attack on Major, and we were shocked. Yet it became obvious from their surprise a t our shock that he was referring to policymaking down the years, and Britain's involvement in Ireland. 'No, no, I meant 1921,' he said. I found McGuinness more impressive than Adams, who did the big statesman bit, and talked in grand historical sweeps, but Mc Guinness just made a point and battered it, and forced you to tak e it on board. Of the women, I could not work out whether they re ally mattered, or whether they just took them round with them to look a bit less hard. They were tough as boots all three of them. TB was good in the use of language and captured well the sense o f history and occasion. He said we faced a choice of history - vi olence and despair, or peace and progress. We were all taking ris ks, but they are risks worth taking. He said to Adams he wanted t o be able to look him in the eye, hear him say he was committed t o peaceful means, and he wanted to believe him. I was eyeing thei r reaction to TB the whole time, and both Adams and McG regularly let a little smile cross their lips. Martin Ferris [Sinn Fein ne gotiator] was the one who just stared. Mo got pissed off, volubly , when they said she wasn't doing enough. TB was maybe not as fir m as we had planned, but he did ask - which I decided not to brie f, and knew they wouldn't - whether they would be able to sign up to a settlement that did not explicitly commit to a united Irela nd. Adams was OK, but McGuinness was not. Adams said the prize of a lasting peace justifies the risks. Lloyd George, Balfour, Glad stone, Cromwell, they all thought they had answers of sorts. We w ant our answers to be the endgame. A cobbled-together agreement w ill not stand the test of time. He pushed hard on prisoners being released, and the aim of total demilitarisation, and TB just lis tened. TB said he would not be a persuader for a united Ireland. The principle of consent was central to the process. Adams said i f TB could not be a persuader, he could be a facilitator. He said we would be dead in 40 years, but in the meantime this was the b iggest test of TB's time in office, how he deals with the displac ed citizens in a divided territory. 9/11 September 11 was meant to be another fairly routine day. It came to be a defining momen t in the Blair years and would ensure foreign policy dominated hi s second term. As with Diana's death, once the initial shock subs ided, he was straight onto the ramifications. Tuesday, September 11, 2001 I woke up to the usual blah on the radio about TB and the TUC speech, all the old BBC clichés about us and the unions, the only new thing GMB ads asking if you trust TB not to privatis e the NHS. Peter H and I went up to the flat. TB had done a good section on public-private, an effective hit back at the Edmonds l ine. With the economy, public services, Europe/euro and a bit on asylum, we had a proper speech. We sharpened it and honed it a bi t. He was furious at the GMB ads, said he intended to give Edmond s a real hammering. We finished it on the train to Brighton, were met and driven to the hotel. We were there, up at the top of th e hotel putting the finishing touches to the speech, when the att acks on the New York Twin Towers began. Godric was watching in th e little room where the Garden Room girl had set up, came up to t he top of the little staircase leading to the bit where TB and I were working, and signalled for me to go down. It was all a bit c haotic, with the TV people going into their usual breathless brea king-news mode, but it was clearly something way out of the ordin ary. I went upstairs, turned on the TV and said to TB he ought to watch it. It was now even clearer than just a few moments ago ju st how massive an event this was. It was also one that was going to have pretty immediate implications for us too. We didn't watch the TV that long, but long enough for TB to reach the judgement about just how massive an event this was in its impact and implic ations. It's possible we were talking about thousands dead. We wo uld also have to make immediate judgements about buildings and in stitutions to protect here. TB was straight onto the diplomatic s ide as well, said that we had to help the US, that they could not go it all on their own, that they felt beleaguered and that this would be tantamount to a military attack in their minds. We had to decide whether we should cancel the speech. There was always a moment in these terrorist outrages where governments said we mus t not let the terrorists change what we do, but it was meaningles s. Of course they changed what we did. At first, we felt it best to go ahead with the speech but by the time we were leaving for t he venue, the Towers were actually collapsing. The scale of the h orror and the damage was increasing all the time and it was perfe ctly obvious he couldn't do the speech. We went over to the confe rence centre, where TB broke the news to John Monks [TUC general secretary] and Brendan Barber that he intended to go on, say a fe w words, but then we would have to head back to London. We would issue the text but he would not deliver the speech. Monks said to me that it's on days like this that you realise just how big his job is. TB's mind was whirring with it. His brief statement to t he TUC went down well, far better than his speech would have done . We walked back to the hotel, both of us conscious there seemed to be a lot more security around. We arranged a series of confere nce calls through Jonathan with Jack Straw, Geoff Hoon, David Blu nkett. We asked Richard Wilson to fix a Cobra meeting as soon as we got back. We set off for Brighton station. He said the conseq uences of this were enormous. On the train he was subdued, though we did raise a smile when someone said it was the first and last time he would get a standing ovation from the TUC. Robert Hill w as listening to the radio on his earpiece and filling us in every now and then. TB asked for a pad and started to write down some of the issues we would have to address when we got back. He said the big fear was terrorists capable of this getting in league wit h rogue states that would help them. He'd been going on about bin Laden for a while because there had been so much intelligence ab out him and al-Qaeda. He wanted to commission proper reports on O BL and all the other terror groups. He made a note of the need to reach out to the British Muslim community, who would fear a back lash if this was bin Laden. Everyone seemed convinced it couldn't be anyone else. Crucial talks with Bush The Blair-Clinton rela tionship was easy for people to understand, his close relationshi p with President Bush less so. TB was determined to get on with h im, and believed maximum public support, particularly post Septem ber 11, led to increased private influence, including on the effo rts to resolve Iraq through the UN. Saturday, September 7, 2002 When TB came back in, GWB said he'd decided to go to the UN and put down a new UNSCR, challenge the UN to deal with the problems for its own sake. He could not stand by. He would say OK, what wi ll you do? Earlier, not too convincingly, Karen [Hughes, GWB's co mmunications adviser] had claimed GWB was always going to go down the UN route. Cheney looked very sour throughout, and after dinn er, when TB and Bush walked alone to the chopper, Bush was open w ith him that Cheney was in a different position. Earlier, when we had said that the international community was pressing for some direction but that in the US there would be people saying 'Why ar e you going to the UN, why aren't you doing it now?' Cheney smile d across the table, making it pretty clear that was where he was. The mood was good. As we left, Bush joked to me 'I suppose you c an tell the story of how Tony flew in and pulled the crazed unila teralist back from the brink.' He was very clear on the threat, a nd the need of the UN to deal with it. He said he would get somet hing on the Middle East. 'That's a promise.' He was, as Sally Mor gan [director of political and government relations] said, far mo re impressive close up. Robin Cook's resignation and Commons deb ate over Iraq The day before the defining Commons vote on Iraq, Robin Cook resigned, adding to a sense of crisis and a Prime Mini ster's future on the line as he sought to persuade Parliament to support military action. Monday, March 17, 2003 TB started Cabi net, introduced Goldsmith, then Clare came in and asked Sally whe re Robin was. 'He's gone,' said Sal. 'Oh my God.' TB's only refer ence to Robin was to say that he had resigned. Peter Goldsmith we nt through the answer on legal authority to use force. One by one , a succession of colleagues expressed s, Arrow, 2008, 2.5, Western Reflections Publishing Company, 2003. Paperback. As New. Disclaimer:Pages are clean and are not marred by notes or folds of any kind. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed., Western Reflections Publishing Company, 2003, 5, Western Reflections Publishing Company, 2003. Paperback. Acceptable. Disclaimer:A readable copy. All pages are intact, and the cover is intact. Pages can include considerable notes-in pen or highlighter-but the notes cannot obscure the text. At ThriftBooks, our motto is: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed., Western Reflections Publishing Company, 2003, 2.5, Rose Incorporated, Robert. Used - Good. Used book that is in clean, average condition without any missing pages., Rose Incorporated, Robert, 2.5, Rose Incorporated, Robert. Used - Good. Former library book; may include library markings. Used book that is in clean, average condition without any missing pages., Rose Incorporated, Robert, 2.5, Rose Incorporated, Robert. Used - Very Good. Former library book; may include library markings. Used book that is in excellent condition. May show signs of wear or have minor defects., Rose Incorporated, Robert, 3, Nonesuch, 2014-09-09T00:00:01Z. audioCD. Good. 80x89x5. Disk is in good condition. May be a few marks on disc but does not affect play. Packaging may have cracks on the case., Nonesuch, 2014-09-09T00:00:01Z, 2.5, Robert Rose, 2008-10-10. Paperback. Used: Good., Robert Rose, 2008-10-10, 2.5, Rose Incorporated, Robert, 2006. Paperback. As New. Disclaimer:An apparently unread copy in perfect condition. Dust cover is intact; pages are clean and are not marred by notes or folds of any kind. At ThriftBooks, our motto is: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed., Rose Incorporated, Robert, 2006, 5, Pelican Publishing Company., 2003. Author copyright 1946, 1974. 2003 5th Pelican printing.. Mass-market paperback. Fine. Back cover price sticker.. 1 Mass-market paperback. Glued binding. 256 p. Contains: Unspecified. Audience: General/trade. Louisiana Writers Project research by author contributed to this book, sorting out there nonsense and sensationalism from the 200 years of history, rites and dances, cures, charms, gris-gris, witch-doctors, queens., Pelican Publishing Company., 2003, 5, New York: Tor, 2002. First edition, Hardcover, Fine in Near Fine dust jacket,. Alan Pollack,. New York: Tor:, 2002. First edition, Hardcover, Fine in Near Fine dust jacket, 333 pp. Cover artwork by: Alan Pollack, The beautiful Allan Pollack cover art looks sort of like Jim Burns, and that reminds me of Robert Charles Wilson, and the makes me think that this book might be good. Plus, I've always liked Schmidt's short stories. This is Schmidt's first novel in sixteen years!!! Three decades in the future a man is stung by strange flying insect. He manages to grab and hold the creature before he passes out. He wakes to a flood of memories and sensations and emotions he believes were caused by the insect. When the emergency room technicians pry the bug from his hand, it releases a swarm of smaller bugs who sting them with similar effect. Our man believes the earth is under attack and enlists the aid of an entomologist to determine what's going on. "An incursion at a tiny scale but of global scope, it is pervasive reconnaissance that puts the legendary hundred eyes of Argus to shame. Somebody is literally bugging the planet.", Tor, 2002, 4.5, Surrey: Silhouette Books, 1992. Book. Very Good. Mass Market Paperback. First Silhouette Edition. VG, Edgewear, creases, spine lean, dealer stamp, ink price, browning. Romance, in the Silhouette 'Sensation' line. Expanded condition report/scan on request.., Silhouette Books, 1992, 3<
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1992, ISBN: 0373585500
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[EAN: 9780373585502], Used, very good, [PU: Silhouette Books 24/04/1992], This book is in very good condition and will be shipped within 24 hours of ordering. The cover may have some limited signs of wear but the pages are clean, intact and the spine remains undamaged. This book has clearly been well maintained and looked after thus far. Money back guarantee if you are not satisfied. See all our books here, order more than 1 book and get discounted shipping. ., Books<
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1992, ISBN: 9780373585502
Silhouette Books. Paperback. Used; Good. **Simply Brit** Shipped with Premium postal service within 24 hours from the UK with impressive delivery time. We have dispatched from our book … More...
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1992, ISBN: 0373585500
[EAN: 9780373585502], Used, very good, [PU: Silhouette Books, Surrey], VG, Edgewear, creases, spine lean, dealer stamp, ink price, browning. Romance, in the Silhouette 'Sensation' line. E… More...
[EAN: 9780373585502], Used, very good, [PU: Silhouette Books, Surrey], VG, Edgewear, creases, spine lean, dealer stamp, ink price, browning. Romance, in the Silhouette 'Sensation' line. Expanded condition report/scan on request., Books<
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1992, ISBN: 0373585500
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2015, ISBN: 9780373585502
Hardcover
Robert Rose, 2008. Paperback. Very Good. May have limited writing in cover pages. Pages are unmarked. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed., R… More...
Robert Rose, 2008. Paperback. Very Good. May have limited writing in cover pages. Pages are unmarked. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed., Robert Rose, 2008, 3, Robert Rose, 2008. Paperback. Good. Former library book; Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed., Robert Rose, 2008, 2.5, Robert Rose, 2008. Paperback. Acceptable. Disclaimer:A readable copy. All pages are intact, and the cover is intact. Pages can include considerable notes-in pen or highlighter-but the notes cannot obscure the text. At ThriftBooks, our motto is: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed., Robert Rose, 2008, 2.5, Robert Laffont, 1978. in8. 1978. Broché. 180 pages. Qu'y a-t-il de l'autre côté ? Dans La vie après la vie Raymond Moody médecin et docteur en philosophie relatait l'expérience d'hommes et de femmes ayant connu la mort ""clinique"". Tous les témoignages concordaient : la sensation de flotter au-dessus de son propre corps le ""tunnel"" à traverser l'accession à un lieu de paix et de lumière. Et le retour à la vie - presque à regret... Aujourd'hui l'auteur approfondit son enquête et nous fait part de révélations plus étonnantes qui ouvrent des perspectives plus vastes encore. Message d'espoir aussi : tous ceux qui ont franchi l'ultime frontière sont revenus transformés. Leur vie a désormais un autre sens un autre but - l'amour d'autrui la paix et l'harmonie French édition -Le livre présente des marques importantes de lecture et ou de stockage sur la couverture et/ou les pourtours mais reste en état correct d'ensemble . Expédition soignée dans un emballage adapté depuis la France, Robert Laffont, 1978, 0, -: Penguin Books, 2012. None. Paperback. Very Good. -. Illuminating the life of Simon Cowell and delving into backstage scandal, tabloid rumour and the cut-throat worlds of music and television, Tom Bower leaves no stone unturned in this must-read biography. This is a detailed insider`s account of entertainment mogul Simon Cowell`s rise to meteoric fame and all of the controversial highs and lows along the way. Packed with juicy details, exclusive interviews and sensational revelations, Sweet Revenge is an incredible portrait of Simon Cowell which also uncovers the real stories behind The X Factor, Britain`s Got Talent and American Idol. Tom Bower is the author of nineteen books, including biographies of Robert Maxwell, Mohamed Fayed, Gordon Brown, Richard Branson, Conrad Black and, more recently, Bernie Ecclestone., Penguin Books, 2012, 3, Robert laffont / Réponses sante, 1981. in8. 1981. broché. 197 pages. Vous êtes fatigué le matin en vous levant : vous vous sentez déprimé et anxieux sans raison. Vous avez trop froid ou trop chaud trop faim ou pas assez. Vous dormez mal. Souvent ce sont des crampes musculaires des paupières qui sautent des fourmillements des contractures : tout cela traduisant l'hyperexcitabilité musculaire l'un des signes les plus évidents de la spasmophilie - appelée aussi parfois tétanie chronique. Mais ce ne sont pas là les seuls symptômes : maux de tête vertiges sensation de flou visuel signes viscéraux touchant à l'appareil digestif respiratoire vasculaire ainsi qu'à la sphère génitale l'éventail est vaste et souvent trompeur. Certains sujets cumulent les symptômes d'autres n'en présentent qu'un nombre limité. Mais il importe de détecter une spasmophilie méconnue - et souvent par les médecins eux-mêmes - pour sortir les malades de situations pathologiques inextricables. La spasmophilie est une maladie métabolique qui peut s'aggraver brusquement sous l'impact d'un facteur déclenchant tel que stress deuil divorce soucis professionnels etc. Il ne s'agit ni d'une maladie imaginaire ni d'une maladie mentale. Elle se diagnostique avec précision se soigne avec efficacité. Certaines règles d'hygiène alimentaire certaines précautions permettent d'en prévenir les décompensations les plus invalidantes et les plus angoissantes. Ce livre destiné au grand public a été le tout premier à faire le point sur cette affection méconnue mais aussi mal connue qui touche huit à dix millions de Français. Depuis plus de quinze ans il demeure avec plus de 150 000 exemplaires vendus l'ouvrage de référence dans son domaine légères marques de lecture et/ou de stockage mais du reste en TBE -Envoi rapide et soigné dans une enveloppe à bulle depuis la France, Robert laffont / Réponses sante, 1981, 0, Rose Incorporated, Robert, 2008. Paperback. Like New. Pages are clean and are not marred by notes or folds of any kind. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed., Rose Incorporated, Robert, 2008, 5, Robert Rose. Used - Good. Good condition. A copy that has been read but remains intact. May contain markings such as bookplates, stamps, limited notes and highlighting, or a few light stains., Robert Rose, 2.5, The Guilford Press. Very Good. 6 x 0.75 x 9 inches. Paperback. 2003. 245 pages. <br>If anger is starting to rule your life, or someone else has urged you to get a grip--or else, anger expert Dr. Robe rt Nay has a six-step plan that can help you regain control, even in the most stressful, hot-button situations. This proven progra m shows you how to stand up for yourself without losing your temp er. Put a lid on destructive anger once and for all with fine-tun ed strategies that help you: *Figure out which of the five faces of anger are a problem for you, from passive-aggression to all-o ut rage. *Recognize the early warning signs of anger in your phys ical sensations and thoughts. *Identify and change unrealistic ex pectations you have for yourself and other people. *Communicate e ffectively when differences arise--with your spouse, family membe rs, colleagues, or others. *Practice anger-management skills alon e and in public until they're second nature. For anyone who need s help with anger, Dr. Nay's program is effective, easy to learn, and--unlike other methods--brings about lasting change. See als o Dr. Nay's Anger Management Workbook: Use the STOP Method to Rep lace Destructive Responses with Constructive Behavior, which help s you build core anger management skills using interactive exerci ses, and Overcoming Anger in Your Relationship: How to Break the Cycle of Arguments, Put-Downs, and Stony Silences. Editorial Rev iews Review 'Taking charge of your anger is a journey,' Robert N ay observes. Your patients who have problems with anger control a nd aggression could not do better than to take this journey by re ading this practical, engaging, user-friendly guide. It blends in structive anecdotes and case material with self-help suggestions that are based on empirically validated procedures. Strongly reco mmended!--Donald Meichenbaum, PhD, Distinguished Professor Emerit us, University of Waterloo; Research Director, The Melissa Instit ute for Violence Prevention and Treatment of Victims of Violence, Miami, FL Rarely does one find outstanding scholarship and cli nical wisdom wedded in one book. Such is the case in Dr. W. Rober t Nay's exciting text. The writing style is highly engaging and t he text is filled with numerous relevant examples. This book is a 'must read' for anyone who wants to learn to utilize anger react ions more effectively, whether in personal relationships or the w ork world. It is a self-help goldmine from a very wise individual who is also a scholarly expert in the anger control field.--Jame s P. McCullough, Jr., PhD, Department of Psychology, Virginia Com monwealth University Dr. Nay presents clear, effective, and nonj udgmental road maps for identifying and gaining control of anger. He is a skilled clinician whose work is comprehensive, and helpf ul. Following this program is likely to help you improve your com munication and closeness with the important people in your life.- -Stephen Winter, President, American Healthcare Institute If ang er is a problem for you, Dr. Nay offers a step-by-step, practical model for what sets off your anger, what happens once you 'lose it,' and how you can gain control. With control, anger will no lo nger have a negative impact on your personal, social, or work rel ationships. I can attest to Dr. Nay's abilities as a teacher and trainer. Now he brings his expertise directly to readers in this excellent book.--Larry B. Silver, MD, Department of Psychiatry, G eorgetown University Medical Center Nay's comprehensive, rigorou sly ordered, step-by-step management program for identifying, und erstanding and defusing anger will surely continue to find a broa d and welcoming audience across modern societies. One of the feat ures that sets apart Nay's approach from other anger management p rograms is his refusal of the usual reductive definition of the p roblem...In favor of a uniquely broad definition of anger as havi ng a spectrum of 'faces.' His program rests upon a long trial and research period (over 25 years and hundreds of treated cases), a nd has evolved through the decade that Nay has been using his mod el to train professional therapists across the country, working i n the fields of mental health, medicine, social work, substance a buse, and school counseling....A worthwhile read for everyone. It provides the basics for any community, school or family program for rethinking ways of relating. A highly detailed step-by-step p rogram for restructuring one's life, this book has positive messa ges and useful strategies that can benefit every individual and e very community! ? Mental Help Published On: 2015-02-26 About the Author W. Robert Nay, PhD, is a clinical psychologist in privat e practice in McLean, Virginia, and Annapolis, Maryland, and Clin ical Associate Professor at Georgetown University School of Medic ine. The author of two psychology textbooks, Dr. Nay has taught t housands of mental health professionals nationwide to conduct ang er management training with their clients. He has appeared repeat edly on national television to discuss media violence. His websit e is www.wrobertnay.com. Excerpt. ® Reprinted by permission. Al l rights reserved. Introduction Step One. Understanding and Recog nizing Anger 1. The Faces of Anger: Who Do You See in the Mirror? 2. Behind the Mask: Understanding Anger and Its Expression Step Two. Identifying and Preparing for Anger Triggers 3. Understandin g Your Anger Triggers Step Three. Pinpointing Your Anger Early On and Dampening Arousal 4. Anger Awareness 5. Dampening Anger Arou sal Step Four. Identifying and Changing Thoughts That Fuel Anger 6. Recognizing Thoughts That Fuel Anger 7. Rewriting Your Script: New Thinking for New Solutions Step Five. Staying Cool Under Fir e 8. Assertive Problem Solving: Expressing Anger Constructively i n Conflict Situations 9. When Anger Is Aimed at You Step Six. Sta ying the Course: Sustaining New Behavior and Coping with Roadbloc ks 10. Establishing New Anger Habits 11. So You¨ve Had a Setback: Getting Back on Track Appendix 1. Self-Assessment of Anger Quest ionnaire (SAQ) Appendix 2. Personal Anger Scale Appendix 3. Anger Analysis Suggested Resources References Index Excerpt. ® Reprin ted by permission. All rights reserved. Introduction Step One. Un derstanding and Recognizing Anger 1. The Faces of Anger: Who Do Y ou See in the Mirror? 2. Behind the Mask: Understanding Anger and Its Expression Step Two. Identifying and Preparing for Anger Tri ggers 3. Understanding Your Anger Triggers Step Three. Pinpointin g Your Anger Early On and Dampening Arousal 4. Anger Awareness 5. Dampening Anger Arousal Step Four. Identifying and Changing Thou ghts That Fuel Anger 6. Recognizing Thoughts That Fuel Anger 7. R ewriting Your Script: New Thinking for New Solutions Step Five. S taying Cool Under Fire 8. Assertive Problem Solving: Expressing A nger Constructively in Conflict Situations 9. When Anger Is Aimed at You Step Six. Staying the Course: Sustaining New Behavior and Coping with Roadblocks 10. Establishing New Anger Habits 11. So You¨ve Had a Setback: Getting Back on Track Appendix 1. Self-Asse ssment of Anger Questionnaire (SAQ) Appendix 2. Personal Anger Sc ale Appendix 3. Anger Analysis Suggested Resources References Ind ex ., The Guilford Press, 2003, 3, Arrow. Good. 5.12 x 1.75 x 7.81 inches. Paperback. 2008. 816 pages. Cover worn<br>Campbell, Alastair Editorial Reviews A bout the Author Alastair Campbell was born in Keighley, Yorkshire in 1957, the son of a vet. After graduating from Cambridge Unive rsity in modern languages, his first chosen career was journalism , principally with the Mirror Group. When Tony Blair became leade r of the Labour Party, he asked Campbell to be his press secretar y. He worked for Blair - first in that capacity, then as official spokesman and director of communications and strategy - from 199 4 to 2003, since when he has been engaged mainly in writing, publ ic speaking and working for Leukaemia Research, where he is chair man of fundraising. He has continued to act as an advisor to Mr B lair and the Labour Party, including during the 2005 election cam paign. He lives in North London with his partner of 25 years, Fio na Millar. They have three children Rory, 19, Calum, 17 and Grace , 12. His interests include running, triathlon, bagpipes and Burn ley Football Club. From the Hardcover edition. Excerpt. ® Repri nted by permission. All rights reserved. The following are excerp ts from Alastair Campbell's The Blair Years. Mr. Campbell's comme nts on the entries are in bold. Meeting Diana As a journalist, I had often been critical of Princess Diana. The moment I met her , former negative thoughts were banished. Thursday, May 4, 1995 Local elections. Terry picked me up to go to collect TB/CB to go to Walworth Rd for the results coming in. They were at a dinner in Hyde Park Gardens that had been organised for them to meet Pri ncess Diana. I rang the bell and said could you tell Mr Blair his car is here. I went back to the car and the next thing TB is tap ping at the car window and he says: 'Someone wants to meet you.' I get out and she's walking towards me, and she says: 'There he i s, can I come over and say hello,' and then she's standing there, absolutely, spellbindingly, drop-dead gorgeous, in a way that th e millions of photos didn't quite get it. She said hello, held ou t her hand and said she was really pleased to meet me, so I mumbl ed something back about me being more pleased and how I didn't ex pect when I left the house tonight that I'd end up standing in th e middle of the road talking to her. 'It would make a very funny picture if there were any paparazzi in those trees,' she said. TB was standing back and Cherie was looking impatient and I was jus t enjoying flirting with her. I asked if he had behaved well and she said yes, very well. I said in that case I think you should come with us to Walworth Road and create an almighty sensation. 'I just might,' she said. Northern Ireland In the introduction to the book I cite TB's optimism and resilience as two of his gre atest qualities. Here, in his second week as Prime Minister, the optimism is on display after a weekend spent reflecting on Northe rn Ireland. The resilience would follow as, over the course of hi s Premiership, he secured progress towards peace. Monday, May 12 , 1997 TB said he reckoned he could see a way of sorting the No rthern Ireland problem. I loved the way he said it, like nobody h ad thought of it before. I said what makes you think you can do i t when nobody else could? Death of Diana The events following t he death of Diana are recorded in some detail in the book. Here i s a short extract which records how I heard the news, and how TB initially reacted. Saturday, August 30, 1997 I got to bed, and at around two I was paged by media monitoring: 'Car crash in Pari s. Dodi killed. Di hurt. This is not a joke.' Then TB came on. He had been called by Number 10 and told the same thing. He was rea lly shocked. He said she was in a coma and the chances are she'd die. I don't think I'd ever heard him like this. He was full of p auses, then gabbling a little, but equally clear what we had to d o. We started to prepare a statement. We talked through the thing s we would have to do tomorrow, if she died. By now the phones we re starting from the press, and I didn't sleep. Then about an hou r later Nick, the duty clerk, called and said simply 'She's dead. The Prime Minister is being told now.' I went through on the cal l. Angus Lapsley was duty private secretary and was taking him th rough what we knew. But it was hard to get beyond the single fact of her death. 'I can't believe this. I just can't believe it,' s aid TB. 'You just can't take it in, can you?' And yet, as ever wi th TB, he was straight onto the ramifications. Historic day with Sinn Fein There were many important milestones on the road to t he Good Friday Agreement, which was perhaps the greatest high of my entire time with TB, elections included. This extract relates to one such milestone, the first visit to Downing Street by Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness, two men crucial to the peace proces s. Thursday, December 11, 1997 Gerry Adams and his team arrived 15 minutes early, and he did a little number in the street, wher e the media numbers were huge. This was a big moment, potentially historic in the progress it could lead to. They came inside and we kept them waiting while we went over what TB was due to say. M o Mowlam and Paul Murphy were both there and Mo was pretty fed up , feeling she was getting shit from all sides. They were hovering around the lifts and were summoned down to the Cabinet room. We had agreed TB should be positive but firm. He actually came over as friendly, welcoming them individually as they came in. I shook McGuinness by the hand, who as he sat down said, fairly loudly, 'So this is the room where all the damage was done.' It was a cla ssic moment where the different histories played out. Everyone on our side thought he was referring to the mortar attack on Major, and we were shocked. Yet it became obvious from their surprise a t our shock that he was referring to policymaking down the years, and Britain's involvement in Ireland. 'No, no, I meant 1921,' he said. I found McGuinness more impressive than Adams, who did the big statesman bit, and talked in grand historical sweeps, but Mc Guinness just made a point and battered it, and forced you to tak e it on board. Of the women, I could not work out whether they re ally mattered, or whether they just took them round with them to look a bit less hard. They were tough as boots all three of them. TB was good in the use of language and captured well the sense o f history and occasion. He said we faced a choice of history - vi olence and despair, or peace and progress. We were all taking ris ks, but they are risks worth taking. He said to Adams he wanted t o be able to look him in the eye, hear him say he was committed t o peaceful means, and he wanted to believe him. I was eyeing thei r reaction to TB the whole time, and both Adams and McG regularly let a little smile cross their lips. Martin Ferris [Sinn Fein ne gotiator] was the one who just stared. Mo got pissed off, volubly , when they said she wasn't doing enough. TB was maybe not as fir m as we had planned, but he did ask - which I decided not to brie f, and knew they wouldn't - whether they would be able to sign up to a settlement that did not explicitly commit to a united Irela nd. Adams was OK, but McGuinness was not. Adams said the prize of a lasting peace justifies the risks. Lloyd George, Balfour, Glad stone, Cromwell, they all thought they had answers of sorts. We w ant our answers to be the endgame. A cobbled-together agreement w ill not stand the test of time. He pushed hard on prisoners being released, and the aim of total demilitarisation, and TB just lis tened. TB said he would not be a persuader for a united Ireland. The principle of consent was central to the process. Adams said i f TB could not be a persuader, he could be a facilitator. He said we would be dead in 40 years, but in the meantime this was the b iggest test of TB's time in office, how he deals with the displac ed citizens in a divided territory. 9/11 September 11 was meant to be another fairly routine day. It came to be a defining momen t in the Blair years and would ensure foreign policy dominated hi s second term. As with Diana's death, once the initial shock subs ided, he was straight onto the ramifications. Tuesday, September 11, 2001 I woke up to the usual blah on the radio about TB and the TUC speech, all the old BBC clichés about us and the unions, the only new thing GMB ads asking if you trust TB not to privatis e the NHS. Peter H and I went up to the flat. TB had done a good section on public-private, an effective hit back at the Edmonds l ine. With the economy, public services, Europe/euro and a bit on asylum, we had a proper speech. We sharpened it and honed it a bi t. He was furious at the GMB ads, said he intended to give Edmond s a real hammering. We finished it on the train to Brighton, were met and driven to the hotel. We were there, up at the top of th e hotel putting the finishing touches to the speech, when the att acks on the New York Twin Towers began. Godric was watching in th e little room where the Garden Room girl had set up, came up to t he top of the little staircase leading to the bit where TB and I were working, and signalled for me to go down. It was all a bit c haotic, with the TV people going into their usual breathless brea king-news mode, but it was clearly something way out of the ordin ary. I went upstairs, turned on the TV and said to TB he ought to watch it. It was now even clearer than just a few moments ago ju st how massive an event this was. It was also one that was going to have pretty immediate implications for us too. We didn't watch the TV that long, but long enough for TB to reach the judgement about just how massive an event this was in its impact and implic ations. It's possible we were talking about thousands dead. We wo uld also have to make immediate judgements about buildings and in stitutions to protect here. TB was straight onto the diplomatic s ide as well, said that we had to help the US, that they could not go it all on their own, that they felt beleaguered and that this would be tantamount to a military attack in their minds. We had to decide whether we should cancel the speech. There was always a moment in these terrorist outrages where governments said we mus t not let the terrorists change what we do, but it was meaningles s. Of course they changed what we did. At first, we felt it best to go ahead with the speech but by the time we were leaving for t he venue, the Towers were actually collapsing. The scale of the h orror and the damage was increasing all the time and it was perfe ctly obvious he couldn't do the speech. We went over to the confe rence centre, where TB broke the news to John Monks [TUC general secretary] and Brendan Barber that he intended to go on, say a fe w words, but then we would have to head back to London. We would issue the text but he would not deliver the speech. Monks said to me that it's on days like this that you realise just how big his job is. TB's mind was whirring with it. His brief statement to t he TUC went down well, far better than his speech would have done . We walked back to the hotel, both of us conscious there seemed to be a lot more security around. We arranged a series of confere nce calls through Jonathan with Jack Straw, Geoff Hoon, David Blu nkett. We asked Richard Wilson to fix a Cobra meeting as soon as we got back. We set off for Brighton station. He said the conseq uences of this were enormous. On the train he was subdued, though we did raise a smile when someone said it was the first and last time he would get a standing ovation from the TUC. Robert Hill w as listening to the radio on his earpiece and filling us in every now and then. TB asked for a pad and started to write down some of the issues we would have to address when we got back. He said the big fear was terrorists capable of this getting in league wit h rogue states that would help them. He'd been going on about bin Laden for a while because there had been so much intelligence ab out him and al-Qaeda. He wanted to commission proper reports on O BL and all the other terror groups. He made a note of the need to reach out to the British Muslim community, who would fear a back lash if this was bin Laden. Everyone seemed convinced it couldn't be anyone else. Crucial talks with Bush The Blair-Clinton rela tionship was easy for people to understand, his close relationshi p with President Bush less so. TB was determined to get on with h im, and believed maximum public support, particularly post Septem ber 11, led to increased private influence, including on the effo rts to resolve Iraq through the UN. Saturday, September 7, 2002 When TB came back in, GWB said he'd decided to go to the UN and put down a new UNSCR, challenge the UN to deal with the problems for its own sake. He could not stand by. He would say OK, what wi ll you do? Earlier, not too convincingly, Karen [Hughes, GWB's co mmunications adviser] had claimed GWB was always going to go down the UN route. Cheney looked very sour throughout, and after dinn er, when TB and Bush walked alone to the chopper, Bush was open w ith him that Cheney was in a different position. Earlier, when we had said that the international community was pressing for some direction but that in the US there would be people saying 'Why ar e you going to the UN, why aren't you doing it now?' Cheney smile d across the table, making it pretty clear that was where he was. The mood was good. As we left, Bush joked to me 'I suppose you c an tell the story of how Tony flew in and pulled the crazed unila teralist back from the brink.' He was very clear on the threat, a nd the need of the UN to deal with it. He said he would get somet hing on the Middle East. 'That's a promise.' He was, as Sally Mor gan [director of political and government relations] said, far mo re impressive close up. Robin Cook's resignation and Commons deb ate over Iraq The day before the defining Commons vote on Iraq, Robin Cook resigned, adding to a sense of crisis and a Prime Mini ster's future on the line as he sought to persuade Parliament to support military action. Monday, March 17, 2003 TB started Cabi net, introduced Goldsmith, then Clare came in and asked Sally whe re Robin was. 'He's gone,' said Sal. 'Oh my God.' TB's only refer ence to Robin was to say that he had resigned. Peter Goldsmith we nt through the answer on legal authority to use force. One by one , a succession of colleagues expressed s, Arrow, 2008, 2.5, Western Reflections Publishing Company, 2003. Paperback. As New. Disclaimer:Pages are clean and are not marred by notes or folds of any kind. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed., Western Reflections Publishing Company, 2003, 5, Western Reflections Publishing Company, 2003. Paperback. Acceptable. Disclaimer:A readable copy. All pages are intact, and the cover is intact. Pages can include considerable notes-in pen or highlighter-but the notes cannot obscure the text. At ThriftBooks, our motto is: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed., Western Reflections Publishing Company, 2003, 2.5, Rose Incorporated, Robert. Used - Good. Used book that is in clean, average condition without any missing pages., Rose Incorporated, Robert, 2.5, Rose Incorporated, Robert. Used - Good. Former library book; may include library markings. Used book that is in clean, average condition without any missing pages., Rose Incorporated, Robert, 2.5, Rose Incorporated, Robert. Used - Very Good. Former library book; may include library markings. Used book that is in excellent condition. May show signs of wear or have minor defects., Rose Incorporated, Robert, 3, Nonesuch, 2014-09-09T00:00:01Z. audioCD. Good. 80x89x5. Disk is in good condition. May be a few marks on disc but does not affect play. Packaging may have cracks on the case., Nonesuch, 2014-09-09T00:00:01Z, 2.5, Robert Rose, 2008-10-10. Paperback. Used: Good., Robert Rose, 2008-10-10, 2.5, Rose Incorporated, Robert, 2006. Paperback. As New. Disclaimer:An apparently unread copy in perfect condition. Dust cover is intact; pages are clean and are not marred by notes or folds of any kind. At ThriftBooks, our motto is: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed., Rose Incorporated, Robert, 2006, 5, Pelican Publishing Company., 2003. Author copyright 1946, 1974. 2003 5th Pelican printing.. Mass-market paperback. Fine. Back cover price sticker.. 1 Mass-market paperback. Glued binding. 256 p. Contains: Unspecified. Audience: General/trade. Louisiana Writers Project research by author contributed to this book, sorting out there nonsense and sensationalism from the 200 years of history, rites and dances, cures, charms, gris-gris, witch-doctors, queens., Pelican Publishing Company., 2003, 5, New York: Tor, 2002. First edition, Hardcover, Fine in Near Fine dust jacket,. Alan Pollack,. New York: Tor:, 2002. First edition, Hardcover, Fine in Near Fine dust jacket, 333 pp. Cover artwork by: Alan Pollack, The beautiful Allan Pollack cover art looks sort of like Jim Burns, and that reminds me of Robert Charles Wilson, and the makes me think that this book might be good. Plus, I've always liked Schmidt's short stories. This is Schmidt's first novel in sixteen years!!! Three decades in the future a man is stung by strange flying insect. He manages to grab and hold the creature before he passes out. He wakes to a flood of memories and sensations and emotions he believes were caused by the insect. When the emergency room technicians pry the bug from his hand, it releases a swarm of smaller bugs who sting them with similar effect. Our man believes the earth is under attack and enlists the aid of an entomologist to determine what's going on. "An incursion at a tiny scale but of global scope, it is pervasive reconnaissance that puts the legendary hundred eyes of Argus to shame. Somebody is literally bugging the planet.", Tor, 2002, 4.5, Surrey: Silhouette Books, 1992. Book. Very Good. Mass Market Paperback. First Silhouette Edition. VG, Edgewear, creases, spine lean, dealer stamp, ink price, browning. Romance, in the Silhouette 'Sensation' line. Expanded condition report/scan on request.., Silhouette Books, 1992, 3<
1992, ISBN: 0373585500
[EAN: 9780373585502], Used, very good, [PU: Silhouette Books 24/04/1992], This book is in very good condition and will be shipped within 24 hours of ordering. The cover may have some limi… More...
[EAN: 9780373585502], Used, very good, [PU: Silhouette Books 24/04/1992], This book is in very good condition and will be shipped within 24 hours of ordering. The cover may have some limited signs of wear but the pages are clean, intact and the spine remains undamaged. This book has clearly been well maintained and looked after thus far. Money back guarantee if you are not satisfied. See all our books here, order more than 1 book and get discounted shipping. ., Books<
1992
ISBN: 9780373585502
Silhouette Books. Paperback. Used; Good. **Simply Brit** Shipped with Premium postal service within 24 hours from the UK with impressive delivery time. We have dispatched from our book … More...
Silhouette Books. Paperback. Used; Good. **Simply Brit** Shipped with Premium postal service within 24 hours from the UK with impressive delivery time. We have dispatched from our book depository; items of good condition to over ten million satisfied customers worldwide. We are committed to providing you with reliable and efficient service at all times. 04/24/1992, Silhouette Books, 2.5<
1992, ISBN: 0373585500
[EAN: 9780373585502], Used, very good, [PU: Silhouette Books, Surrey], VG, Edgewear, creases, spine lean, dealer stamp, ink price, browning. Romance, in the Silhouette 'Sensation' line. E… More...
[EAN: 9780373585502], Used, very good, [PU: Silhouette Books, Surrey], VG, Edgewear, creases, spine lean, dealer stamp, ink price, browning. Romance, in the Silhouette 'Sensation' line. Expanded condition report/scan on request., Books<
1992, ISBN: 0373585500
[EAN: 9780373585502], [PU: Silhouette Books], **SHIPPED FROM UK** We believe you will be completely satisfied with our quick and reliable service. All orders are dispatched as swiftly as … More...
[EAN: 9780373585502], [PU: Silhouette Books], **SHIPPED FROM UK** We believe you will be completely satisfied with our quick and reliable service. All orders are dispatched as swiftly as possible! Buy with confidence! Greener Books., Books<
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Details of the book - Boundary Lines (Sensation S.)
EAN (ISBN-13): 9780373585502
ISBN (ISBN-10): 0373585500
Hardcover
Paperback
Publishing year: 1992
Publisher: Silhouette Books
Book in our database since 2008-02-28T15:19:28-05:00 (New York)
Detail page last modified on 2023-11-14T09:21:59-05:00 (New York)
ISBN/EAN: 0373585500
ISBN - alternate spelling:
0-373-58550-0, 978-0-373-58550-2
Alternate spelling and related search-keywords:
Book author: robb nora roberts
Book title: boundary lines, sensations, sensation
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