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David Nicholson

    Crisis of the British Empire
    Breaking Bread
    The Barbarians are Coming
    Peoples of the Inland Sea
    If He Had Not Come
    The Garretts of Columbia
    • An engrossing family tale and an exploration of the African American freedom struggle, written by the great grandson of the main figure in the story - Casper George Garrett, known as ‘Papa’.

      The Garretts of Columbia
    • If He Had Not Come

      An Updated Version of Nan Weeks' Classic Story

      4,4(6)Abgeben

      A young boy embarks on a perilous dream journey that explores the profound implications of a world without Jesus. This thought-provoking narrative raises the challenging question, "What if Jesus had not come?" prompting deep discussions among readers of all ages, whether during family meals, bedtime, car rides, or classroom settings. The book encourages reflection on faith, existence, and the impact of Jesus' life on humanity.

      If He Had Not Come
    • Peoples of the Inland Sea

      • 286 Seiten
      • 11 Lesestunden
      3,6(16)Abgeben

      David Andrew Nichols offers a fresh history of the Lakes peoples over nearly three centuries of rapid change. As the people themselves persisted, so did their customs, religions, and control over their destinies. Accessible and creative, this book is destined to become a classroom staple for Native American history.

      Peoples of the Inland Sea
    • Poetry and prose are as much about observation as they are about the romance or the travails of life. In this volume, the poems range over a number of topics, mostly concerned with the human condition, the world in vision, the harsh reality of parting and the joy that is love. Some of the verse within these pages is of a personal nature but there to be shared as much of human experience is enacted in the full view of the world. But whilst experience is there to be passed on, learned from and ultimately provide guidance, it is also, as Oscar Wilde so accurately put it, "Something one can do without "

      Breaking Bread
    • In 1880 the British empire was at its peak of stability. no other people – not Rome, nor Spain nor Russia – had spread their power so substantially over all five continents. And yet within less than a century, the vast imperial system had crumbled leaving the Commonwealth as the mere ghost of its predecessor. In this groundbreaking new study, David Nicholson asks if this decline was inevitable, or – had Britain’s rulers taken different decisions, encouraged trends or sought to prevent them – whether the strength and cohesion of the Empire could have been maintained. He examines, in particular, a series of turning points which he believes to have been crucial to this process: the failure to deal with Irish Home Rule; over-extension in Africa; the failure to adopt Tariff reform; the British inability to reach an accommodation with Germany before the First World War; the strategic and tactical mistakes of the Great War culminating in overextension in the Middle East and ignoring of warnings about a one-sided interpretation of the Balfour Declaration; the errors in the build-up to the Second World War and its opening phase, especially those leading to the break with Japan and Italy. David Nicholson traces the real damage done by the 1939-45 War, leading to the final collapse of British power in India, then the Middle East and finally in Africa, as well as the weakening of the links with the “Old Commonwealth”. He asks, provocatively, if the Empire had not failed would Britain have been so attracted by membership of the European Community. Crisis of the British Empire: Turning Points After 1880 is a significant contribution to imperial studies and should be required reading for anyone wishing to understand Britain’s position in the world on the brink of Brexit --Publisher

      Crisis of the British Empire