Anna was just a normal teenager with a great best friend and a great boyfriend that loved her... or so she thought. She had a normal life except for the fact that her parents had died when she was just a little girl. She was starting to get happier, after the trauma that it had caused. But when things were starting to get better, back to the way things used to be, things started to change. The one decision that she thought would make her life better, would change her life for the worst.
Eliza is a ten-year-old girl who moved from London to New York. While unfolding a mystery in her city, she gets tangled up in secret truths, mysterious people, treacherous events, and even finds some friendships along the way. When she gets stuck in a world she didn’t even know existed, will she ever find the tools and the courage to make it out?
Anna was just a normal teenager with a great best friend and a great boyfriend that loved her... or so she thought. She had a normal life except for the fact that her parents had died when she was just a little girl. She was starting to get happier, after the trauma that it had caused. But when things were starting to get better, back to the way things used to be, things started to change. The one decision that she thought would make her life better, would change her life for the worst.
A founding text of Victorian middle-class identity, Household Management is today one of the great unread classics. Over a thousand pages long, and written when its author was only 22, it offered highly authoritative advice on subjects as diverse as fashion, child-care, animal husbandry, poisons, and the management of servants. To the modern reader expecting stuffy moralizing and watery vegetables, Beeton's book is a revelation: it ranges widely across the foods of Europe and beyond, actively embracing new foodstuffs and techniques, mixing domestic advice with discussions of science, religion, class, industrialism and gender roles. Alternately fashionable and frugal, anxious and blusteringly self-confident, Household Management highlights the concerns of the ever-expanding Victorian middle-class at a key moment in its history. - ;'As with the commander of an army, or the leader of any enterprise, so it is with the mistress of a house.' A founding text of Victorian middle-class identity, Household Management is today one of the great unread classics. Over a thousand pages long, and written when its author was only 22, it offered highly authoritative advice on subjects as diverse as fashion, child-care, animal husbandry, poisons, and the management of servants. To the modern reader expecting stuffy moralizing and watery vegetables, Beeton's book is a revelation: it ranges widely across the foods of Europe and beyond, actively embracing new food stuffs and techniques, mixing domestic advice with discussions of science, religion, class, industrialism and gender roles. Alternately fashionable and frugal, anxious and blusteringly self-confident, Household Management highlights the concerns of the ever-expanding Victorian middle-class at a key moment in its history. The abridged edition does justice to its high status as a cookery book, while also suggesting ways of approaching this massive, hybrid text as a significant document of social and cultural history. - ;sold out in Central London book shops within weeks - Red, August 2000
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.