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''A woodland in full color is awesome as a forest fire . . . but a single tree is like a dancing tongue of flame to warm the heart.'' --Hal Borland. Let this brilliant journal ignite your creativity -- 192 lightly lined pages provide plenty of space for personal reflection, sketching, or jotting down favorite quotes or poems. Opaque acid-free archival paper takes pen or pencil beautifully. Touches of gold foil illuminate the cover image of an autumnal tree. Raised embossing lends dimensional detailing. Journal includes a satin ribbon marker with which to keep your place. Gilded-gold page edging is a classic touch. A larger size: 7-1/4 inches wide by 9 inches high. Bookbound, with complementary bronze endsheets.
160 lined pages 5 wide x 7 high (12.7 cm wide x 17.8 cm high) Bookbound hardcover Elastic band place holder Archival/acid-free paper Inside back cover pocket Gold foil, embossed
Night-blooming flowers blossom across the covers of this serene journal. A dusting of gorgeous gold foil illuminates the intricate details. 192 lightly lined pages provide plenty of space for personal reflection, sketching, or jotting down favorite quotations or poems. Smooth-finish, acid-free archival paper takes a variety of pens beautifully. A satin ribbon marker keeps your place. A classic feature: gilded-gold page edging. Journal is a larger size: 7-1/4'' wide x 9'' high. Substantial hardcover binding. Raised embossing lends dimensional detailing to our cover design. Complementary endsheets. Illustration by Nansei Sakagami.
192 lined pages ] 7-1/4" wide x 9" high (18.4 cm wide x 22.9 cm high) ] Bookbound ] Hardcover books lie flat for ease of use ] Archival/acid-free paper.
Featuring the Preamble to the Constitution, this journal's cover strikes a timely chord, affirming in our lives and for posterity the value of justice and liberty. 192 lined pages 7-1/4 wide x 9 high (18.4 cm wide x 22.9 cm high) Bookbound Hardcover books lie flat for ease of use Archival/acid-free paper.
This journal's cover reproduces an Ottoman-era Turkish silk hanging. The ornate design was first drawn on cloth in ink, then embroidered with fine silk thread to bring the flowering tree to life. Gold foil, embossed, gold gilded edges. 192 lined pages - 7-1/4" wide x 9" high (18.4 cm wide x 22.9 cm high) - Bookbound - Ribbon bookmark - Hardcover books lie flat for ease of use.
A history of mentalities, emotions, and attitudes rather than of policies and ideas, it analyses responses to the scaffold at all social levels: among the crowds which gathered to watch executions; among 'polite' commentators from Boswell and Byron on to Fry, Thackeray, and Dickens; and among the judges, home secretary, and monarch who decided who should hang and who should be reprieved. Drawing on letters, diaries, ballads, broadsides, and images, as well as on poignant appeals for mercy which historians until now have barely explored, the book surveys changing attitudes to death and suffering, 'sensibility' and 'sympathy', and demonstrates that the long retreat from public hanging owed less to the growth of a humane sensibility than to the development of new methods of punishment and law enforcement, and to polite classes' deepening squeamishness and fear of the scaffold crowd.
One of the greatest hopes and expectations that accompanied American colonialism – from its earliest incarnation – was that Atlantic settlers would be able to locate new sources of raw silk, with which to satiate the boundless desire for luxurious fabrics in European markets. However, in spite of the great upheavals and achievements of Atlantic plantation, this ambition would never be fulfilled. By taking the commercial failure of silk seriously and examining numerous experiments across New Spain, New France, British North America and the early United States, Ben Marsh reveals new insights into aspiration, labour, environment, and economy in these societies. Each devised its own dreams and plans of cultivation, framed by the particularities of cultures and landscapes. Writ large, these dreams would unravel one by one: the attempts to introduce silkworms across the Atlantic world ultimately constituted a step too far, marking out the limits of Europeans' seemingly unbounded power.
It happens to us all: we think we’ve settled into an identity, a self, and then out of nowhere and with great force, the traces of our parents appear to us, in us—in mirrors, in gestures, in reaction and reactivity, at weddings and funerals, and in troubled thoughts that crouch in dark corners of our minds. In this masterful collection of new essays, the apple looks at the tree. Twenty-five writers deftly explore a trait they’ve inherited from a parent, reflecting on how it affects the lives they lead today—how it shifts their relationship to that parent (sometimes posthumously) and to their sense of self. Apple, Tree’s all-star lineup of writers brings eloquence, integrity, and humor to topics such as arrogance, obsession, psychics, grudges, table manners, luck, and laundry. Contributors include Laura van den Berg, S. Bear Bergman, John Freeman, Jane Hamilton, Mat Johnson, Daniel Mendelsohn, Kyoko Mori, Ann Patchett, and Sallie Tisdale, among others. Together, their pieces form a prismatic meditation on how we make fresh sense of ourselves and our parents when we see the pieces of them that live on in us.