Download Free The Overseer Book in PDF and EPUB Free Download. You can read online The Overseer and write the review.

(Book 2 of The Firstborn series) Beginning a year after the events of The Firstborn, the story follows Hannah Rice as she attempts to recover three teenage girls who have been abducted by a human trafficking ring and Devin Bathurst as he attempts to thwart the racially motivated assassination of an African-American politician.
Brilliant thriller writer, published in the UK for the first time. The Overseer will prove to be one of the best political thrillers of the decade.
The first of The Overseer's Favorite Trilogy. The Overseer lives alone at the apex of Atlantis's dome. Through cameras and microphones, he monitors every aspect of Atlantean life, and he's grown bored with it. The only people he lets in are his Favorites - a string of prostitutes and Mistresses who break up the monotony of his life, but never for very long. Enter Marten. A man too clever to be a prostitute and too strange for words. He is unlike every other Favorite The Overseer has ever had. Will Marten bring out the last bit of humanity in The Overseer or will they both fall into the abyss...
The first book-length study of the overseer in four decades, Wiethoff's study bridges historical, legal, and rhetorical scholarship to present a provocative investigation into the multifaceted roles of this oft-forgotten figure in plantation society. Wiethoff canvasses the period from 1650 through 1865 and across a southern expanse that stretches to include the Upper and Deep South. Overseers left scant written evidence about their lives and times, but Wiethoff unearths characterizations constructed by friends and enemies, neighbors and strangers. He also mines the legal record to gauge the impact of legislative and case law rhetoric on public memory.
Born in 1929, I ushered in the Great Depression which kept my family in relative poverty until after the Second World War in 1945. Nevertheless I was given a good education by my greatly honoured self-sacrificing parents to whom I am overwhelmingly thankful. Educated at Scotch College, Melbourne and at Melbourne and Monash Universities, I was privileged to be able to gain two Masters degrees (Science and Education) and a Doctorate (Education) by 1979. I hold membership in the Royal Society of Victoria, and am a Member of the Australian College of Education. As a professional educator I initially worked with High School students in Chemistry, Biology and Mathematcs, and developed a special interest in Science education for girls at a time when the conventional wisdom was that girls by and large did not possess the mental infrastructure to handle the complex theoretical Sciences. Fifteen years in the classroom with boys and girls ‘doing Science’ convinced me of the folly of such a generalisation. In my subsequent University career I was mainly concerned with undergraduate education in the Biological Sciences (Cytology, Genetics and Biochemistry). In the academic world where much time is given to research in one’s specific field, undergraduate teaching is frequently given short shrift. My own field became the academic well-being of the students in my own University, The Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology. Accordingly I was able to research the personal and cultural influences on academic attainment and attitude formation. Statistical studies revealed a variety of factors which University administrators could well consider in their endeavours to improve the performance of their students. Since retirement my educational interests have turned to the Scientific education of young children. In response to media criticism of that area of education in Australia, I worked with Primary School teachers in their classrooms to develop Science curricula which are sensitive to the intellectual developmental stages of children in terms of Piagetian psychology and the foundational mental constructs necessary to build a good Scientific understanding in Secondary School. I am passionate about Jesus Christ’s notion of a perfect society (Kingdom of God), and for most of my non-professional life have been engaged in charitable activities in Victoria. My Principal contribution in this field has been through Habitat for Humanity Australia, a Christian organisation which helps the economically disadvantaged to build and to purchase their own simple, decent affordable homes. For this I was awarded an Australia Day Award (Deakin) for Community Service in 1999. At the age of eighty one years I have a wife, three married sons, and eight delightful grand children to whom this novel is dedicated. I enjoy walking, music (solo voice and choral conducting) and, of course, writing - especially essays about life in Australia. “Stranger in Dixie” is my first venture into historical fiction. Indeed “Stranger in Dixie” may never have been written had I not had correspondence with one of my late relatives, Bill Wannan. Bill was one of Australia’s leading authorities in Australian folklore. His magnum opus , “Australian Folklore - A Dictionary of Lore, Legends and Popular Allusions”, achieving international recognition in 1970. It was Bill who pointed out that he and I had a common ancestry which had been profoundly influenced by the American Civil War. “Somebody”, he said to me, “should write a novel about it”. Several years of painstaking research into the history of the last four generations of my family have provided a picture of lives full of colour and adventure which had been lived out in dramatic periods of history in three different countries - England, Australia and America - in that order. Sarah Johnson, Assistant Professor of History at Eastern Illinois University
The artworks, manuscripts, and scraps of information gathered throughout Dunwall are collected at last. It has been a long and difficult journey to archive these tales of our cursed city, but it is my hope that you, reading this now, will take heed, and learn from those gone before you to forge your own destiny. The Dunwall Archives are now yours--what will you do with them now that you know the truth in these pages?
Explores the representation of slave revolt in video games--and the trouble with making history playable Kill the Overseer! profiles and problematizes digital games that depict Atlantic slavery and "gamify" slave resistance. In videogames emphasizing plantation labor, the player may choose to commit small acts of resistance like tool-breaking or working slowly. Others dramatically stage the slave's choice to flee enslavement and journey northward, and some depict outright violent revolt against the master and his apparatus. In this work, Sarah Juliet Lauro questions whether the reduction of a historical enslaved person to a digital commodity in games such as Mission US, Assassin's Creed, and Freedom Cry ought to trouble us as a further commodification of slavery's victims, or whether these interactive experiences offer an empowering commemoration of the history of slave resistance. Forerunners is a thought-in-process series of breakthrough digital works. Written between fresh ideas and finished books, Forerunners draws on scholarly work initiated in notable blogs, social media, conference plenaries, journal articles, and the synergy of academic exchange. This is gray literature publishing: where intense thinking, change, and speculation take place in scholarship.