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1000 tulosta hakusanalla Daphne Carr
Daphne, An Autumn Pastoral: (Margaret Sherwood Classics Collection)
Margaret Sherwood
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2015
nidottu
Daphne's Pocket Posh Journal, Chevron
Andrews McMeel Publishing
2016
pokkari
Daphne's Pocket Posh Journal, Mum
Andrews McMeel Publishing
2016
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Daphne's Pocket Posh Journal, Polka Dot
Andrews McMeel Publishing
2016
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Daphne's Pocket Posh Journal, Tulip
Andrews McMeel Publishing
2016
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Daphne is a blind dog who has arrived at an animal rescue facility. People are kind to her there, but she is still nervous and on guard. Daphne can't see anything, but her ability to smell, hear, feel, and know helps her to understand the world around her. Daphne copes as best she can, but she always longs for something better-and she's not sure what that might be.A new adult, a stranger, adopts Daphne and takes her home. It takes Daphne a little while to adapt to this unfamiliar environment, where everything is new again. But when she does, she understands what she was looking for all along-joy....
Daphne is a blind dog who has arrived at an animal rescue facility. People are kind to her there, but she is still nervous and on guard. Daphne can't see anything, but her ability to smell, hear, feel, and know helps her to understand the world around her. Daphne copes as best she can, but she always longs for something better-and she's not sure what that might be.A new adult, a stranger, adopts Daphne and takes her home. It takes Daphne a little while to adapt to this unfamiliar environment, where everything is new again. But when she does, she understands what she was looking for all along-joy....
Daphne is a blind dog who is bored because she doesn't know how to play with toys. She goes to a dog training school to learn to play and have fun. When she starts nose work classes, she is nervous and scared. Daphne doesn't understand the game of finding treats hidden in boxes, so she practises at home. At school, the teacher makes accommodations to support Daphne. Gradually, Daphne finds the courage to participate and begins to enjoy the class.Although she progresses at a different rate than the other dogs at school, Daphne succeeds at nose work. She has fun playing new games at home. With more confidence, she even learns to do some tricks. Daphne isn't bored anymore....
Daphne is a blind dog who is bored because she doesn't know how to play with toys. She goes to a dog training school to learn to play and have fun. When she starts nose work classes, she is nervous and scared. Daphne doesn't understand the game of finding treats hidden in boxes, so she practises at home. At school, the teacher makes accommodations to support Daphne. Gradually, Daphne finds the courage to participate and begins to enjoy the class.Although she progresses at a different rate than the other dogs at school, Daphne succeeds at nose work. She has fun playing new games at home. With more confidence, she even learns to do some tricks. Daphne isn't bored anymore....
Daphne the Dirty Dog
Adie Wynter; Michelle Wynter
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2016
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Daphne and Her Boys: A Novel of Love and Sex
Kathryn M. Burke
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2016
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Daphne Matson is a young English professor at Westminster College in Ithaca, New York. As she begins to tutor the young and na ve college senior Edward Wharton on a special project, she finds that she has fallen in love with him-and he with her. Westminster is a college where men heavily outnumber women, and out of the goodness of her heart Daphne begins giving lessons to other college boys into the mysteries of female desire. In this beautifully written and richly textured novel, we learn of Daphne's prior relationship with an older man, Howard Ashton; Edward's conflicted relationship with his divorced parents; and much else besides. This is a novel whose emotional resonance you won't be able to forget
Daphne: or, "Marriage a la mode" (1909). By: Mrs. Humphry Ward, illustrated By: Fred Pegram: Fred Pegram or Frederick Pegram (
Fred Pegram; Mrs Humphry Ward
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2016
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Daphne's First Day Of Fifth Grade
Brenda Nichole Estrada
Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2017
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"Daphne's Dive is the kind of place 'where everybody knows your name.'...Ms. Hudes has a supple feel for characterization and a wide-ranging sympathy for life's waifs and strays. And like the characters on Cheers, the regulars at Daphne's make up an informal family with whose triumphs and troubles we come to sympathize." --New York Times "A slow-burning, vibrantly sketched portrait of a scruffy North Philly booze joint run by love-scarred Daphne...Most bartenders listen to others' problems, but Daphne's cheerful reticence about her own demons makes us lean forward." --Time Out New York "Daphne's Dive led me to this conclusion: I'm just not spending enough time in bars. The one depicted here is the sort of hangout where you go not so much to drink but rather to engage with your extended family through triumphs and tribulations. Not to mention breaking out into the occasional spontaneous dance party." --Hollywood Reporter "Quiara Alegr a Hudes finds humor as well as tears in Daphne's Dive, a vibrantly sketched portrait of a North Philadelphia watering hole that a diverse group of friends call home." --NY1 A revolutionary trying to shake up the status quo. A child looking for refuge from a violent home. An artist in search of some trash to paint. You'll find them all at Daphne's Dive, a neighborhood bar in North Philly, where a collection of misfits gather for cold beer and warm company. Known for her acclaimed Elliot Trilogy, Quiara Alegr a Hudes continues to grapple with what it means to be an outsider while searching for empathy and connection in Daphne's Dive. Quiara Alegr a Hudes is the author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning play Water by the Spoonful. She wrote the book for the Broadway musical In the Heights, which received a Tony Award for Best Musical and was a Pulitzer Prize finalist. Recent work includes the musical Miss You Like Hell.
Don't Look Now: Selected Stories of Daphne Du Maurier
Daphne du Maurier
New York Review of Books
2008
nidottu
Classic horror stories by one of masters of the form. Full of bone-chilling tales, this collection includes "The Birds," the basis for the Alfred Hitchcock film of the same title, and other creepy classics. Daphne du Maurier wrote some of the most compelling and creepy novels of the twentieth century. In books like Rebecca, My Cousin Rachel, and Jamaica Inn she transformed the small dramas of everyday life--love, grief, jealousy--into the stuff of nightmares. Less known, though no less powerful, are her short stories, in which she gave free rein to her imagination in narratives of unflagging suspense.Patrick McGrath's revelatory new selection of du Maurier's stories shows her at her most chilling and most psychologically astute: a dead child reappears in the alleyways of Venice; routine eye surgery reveals the beast within to a meek housewife; nature revolts against man's abuse by turning a benign species into an annihilating force; a dalliance with a beautiful stranger offers something more dangerous than a broken heart. McGrath draws on the whole of du Maurier's long career and includes surprising discoveries together with famous stories like "The Birds." Don't Look Now is a perfect introduction to a peerless storyteller.
Daphne du Maurier
M. Evans Co Inc
2014
pokkari
Daphne du Maurier’s correspondence with Oriel Malet began in the early 1950s, after they met at a cocktail party in London. At least twenty years separated them: Oriel was a gauche young writer while Daphne was the famous, much-fêted author of bestselling novels including Jamaica Inn, My Cousin Rachel, and Rebecca. The friendship flourished for thirty years, fed by the letters that arrived faithfully from Menabilly, the du Maurier house in Cornwall. While Oriel tasted life on a houseboat on the Seine and mixed with the aristocratic Who’s Who of Paris, Daphne’s letters tell of her family, past and present, her marriage to General Sir Frederick Browning—a war hero known privately as ‘Moper’ whose fits of melancholy caused many a crisis at Menabilly—and events like Prince Philip coming for dinner: ‘We’ve got only four knives with handles, and one silver candlestick must be glued!’ Most of all, her letters are a valuable record of the complex and rigorous art of a fine and well-loved writer: the ‘brewing’ of a plot, the research, and the ‘pegging’ of secret fantasies onto a living person in order to create classical characters such as Cousin Rachel and Roger Kylmerth. Disarmingly frank about sex, an earnest seeker after spiritual and psychological truth, Daphne du Maurier is revealed in her letters as an inspiring and delightful correspondent—as well as a once-in-a-lifetime friend.