Is Oakstown not safe anymore? That's what the Oakstown mayor thinks in Domino Effect 5 The Fallout of Oakstown. One night the Oakstown Hospital took care of many pregnant women while the mayor made an announcement on the TV that Oakstown isn't safe anymore and will be blown up and irradiated. Twenty-three years later, the mother who saw this main premonition, Maggie Ivey; her son Thomas Ivey is going on a trip to what once was Oakstown with seven of his friends. But instead of Maggie having these visions, it is her son who is having these visions. While these eight people go back to Oakstown for the trip, they all start to die off one by one in the order they would have died. But how is this even possible since they weren't even born yet? How is it not Maggie and the other mothers who are supposed to be dying? And most importantly, how will each of these people fare on this radioactive trip? Well the book explains all of that. You will just have to read it and find out on your own.
Robin Hood is a national English icon. He is portrayed as a noble robber, who, along with his band of merry men, is said to have stolen from the rich and given to the poor. His story has been reimagined many times throughout the centuries. Readers will be introduced to some of the candidates who are thought to have been the real Robin Hood, before journeying into the fifteenth century and learning about the various ‘rymes of Robyn Hode’ that were in existence. This book then shows how Robin Hood was first cast as an earl in the sixteenth century, before discussing his portrayals as a brutish criminal in the eighteenth century. Then learn how Robin Hood became the epitome of an English gentleman in the Victorian era, before examining how he became an Americanized, populist hero fit for the silver screen during the twentieth century. Thus, this book will take readers on a journey through 800 years of English cultural and literary history by examining how the legend of Robin Hood has developed over time
First published in 1990. This issue features a dialogue among acknowledged experts concerned with the influence of the work of Milton H. Erickson, M.D. Most readers of the Ericksonian Monographs will be familiar with the far-reaching impact of Erickson's contribution. Erickson's communication-based approach offered, perhaps for the first time, a nonpathological orientation toward treating human suffering
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