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Lorna Collins

    Lorna Collins verfasst Erzählungen, die ein breites Spektrum an Genres abdecken, von historischen Memoiren und gemütlichen Krimis bis hin zu romantischen Anthologien und Fantasy-Romanen. Oft in Zusammenarbeit mit ihrem Ehemann erforscht sie Themen wie Liebe, Geheimnisse und menschliche Verbindungen und verwebt komplexe Handlungen mit unverwechselbaren Charakteren. Ihre Werke beschäftigen sich häufig mit der Komplexität von Beziehungen und den Geheimnissen, die unter der Oberfläche liegen, sei es in historischen Epochen oder in der Gegenwart. Collins' Schreiben bietet den Lesern fesselnde Geschichten, die Elemente von Spannung, Romantik und tiefgründiger Beobachtung verbinden.

    Making sense
    Squawk: A Book of Bird Adventures
    The Modern Family Business
    Lola: The Parrot Who Saved the Mission
    • Did you know a parrot lived at Mission San Juan Capistrano for many years? Did you know she greeted thousands of visitors to the mission? Did you know her name was Lola? This book is the true story of Lola, who arrived at Mission San Juan Capistrano with Father O

      Lola: The Parrot Who Saved the Mission
    • The Modern Family Business

      • 252 Seiten
      • 9 Lesestunden

      Provides real world studies of the family in business, by observing typical firms rather than dynasties. It looks at how the nature of family business is changing in our times and provides insight into the lessons we can learn from this. The book focuses on the impact for the professional non-family manager.

      The Modern Family Business
    • Making sense

      • 230 Seiten
      • 9 Lesestunden

      This volume of texts and images has evolved from papers given at the inaugural Making Sense colloquium, which was held at the University of Cambridge in September 2009. The chapters collected here reflect the multi-dimensional and interdisciplinary sense made at this event, which became something of an artistic installation in itself. The essay ‘Making Sense’ by Jean-Luc Nancy provided the grand finale for the colloquium and is also the culmination of the volume. The collection also includes articles that expound and critique Nancean theory, as well as those that provide challenging manifestos or question the divide between artist and artisan. The volume contrasts works that use texts to make sense of the world with performance pieces that question the sense of theory and seek to make sense through craft, plastic art or painting. By juxtaposing works of pure theory with pieces that incorporate poetry, prose and performance, the book presents the reader with a distillation of the creative act.

      Making sense