Pointy-Enders


Book Description

Dodging flying chairs, wrestling screaming, abusive children and dealing with angry parents. This is part of the daily fare for Hugo Walker who fights crime and violence every day. His beat is not the cruel streets but the classrooms, corridors and playgrounds of Kookaburra Primary School. Hugo is part of the rapid response group charged with keeping children and staff safe from harm. It is a big job. Travel with Hugo behind the scenes. Join him in his quest to bring order to the chaos as he provides a sense of caring in an increasingly uncaring world.




Pointy-Enders


Book Description

Dodging flying chairs, wrestling screaming, abusive children and dealing with angry parents. This is part of the daily fare for Hugo Walker who fights crime and violence every day. His beat is not the cruel streets but the classrooms, corridors and playgrounds of Kookaburra Primary School. Hugo is part of the rapid response group charged with keeping children and staff safe from harm. It is a big job. Travel with Hugo behind the scenes. Join him in his quest to bring order to the chaos as he provides a sense of caring in an increasingly uncaring world.




More Adventures with Leaders and Enders


Book Description

Imagine making more than one quilt at a time while watching your stash dwindle. Sounds too good to be true, but it’s not. Join Bonnie K. Hunter as she shows you how to get your scraps organized into usable sizes – and save money, fabric, thread and time.




Democracy at the Point of Bayonets


Book Description

No country has worked harder to coerce others to adopt liberal institutions than the United States. This book examines the promotion of democracy during U.S. military interventions in the twentieth century, showing it to be one of the central ways in which the United States attempts to reconcile the potential contradictions involved in being a liberal great power. Examining interventions from the Spanish-American War through recent actions in Bosnia, Mark Peceny shows how the United States has encouraged the institution of free elections and other liberal reforms—often at the point of bayonets. Peceny applies statistical analysis to ninety-three cases of intervention and presents six case studies: Cuba and the Philippines after the Spanish-American War, Vietnam during the Kennedy administration, El Salvador during Reagan's first term, and Clinton's interventions in Haiti and Bosnia. By forging a synthesis of realist and domestic liberal approaches, Peceny illuminates the roles that both security concerns and liberal values play in the formulation and implementation of foreign policy. He shows how presidents often initially choose proliberalization policies to serve U.S. security interests and how Congress exerts pressure when presidents fail to take the initiative. Under these circumstances, he shows, presidents use the promotion of democracy to build domestic political consensus and to legitimize interventions. Although the United States has failed to promote democracy in most interventions, Peceny demonstrates that it has often had a profound and positive impact on the democratization of target states. His study offers new insight into the relationship between American power, the promotion of democracy, and prospects for the liberal peace in the decades to come.




Collier's


Book Description




The Point of No Return


Book Description

How Donald Trump laid waste to American politics, culture, and social order After Donald Trump’s rise to power, after the 2020 presidential election, after January 6, is American politics past the point of no return? New York Times columnist and political reporter Thomas Byrne Edsall fears that the country may be headed over a cliff, arguing that the election of Donald Trump was the most serious threat to the American political system since the Civil War. In this compelling and illuminating book, Edsall documents how the Trump years ravaged the nation’s politics, culture, and social order. He explains the demographic shifts that helped make Trump’s election possible, and describes the racial and ethnic conflict, culture wars, rural/urban divide, diverging economies of red and blue states, and the transformation of both the Republican and Democratic parties that have left our politics in a state of permanent hostility. The Point of No Return brings together a series of Edsall’s columns, bookended by a new introduction and conclusion, which show how we got to this dangerous point. These dispatches from our new political landscape chronicle the emergence of what Edsall calls “the not-so-silent white majority” and show how Trump deployed fears about race and immigration to appeal to voters. Edsall examines Trump’s construction of an alternate reality, discusses why we don’t always vote according to our own self-interest, and explores the Democrats’ calibrated response. Considering the 2020 election and its violent aftermath, Edsall looks at the Capitol insurrection and warns that American democracy is under siege. The forces behind Trump’s election, and the “stop the steal” true believers, have pushed the nation to the brink.




Municipal Record


Book Description







Standard Poland-China Record


Book Description