The Making of a Tudor
- 384 páginas
- 14 horas de lectura
1421 - Trouble is brewing in Henry V's England. The Earl of Salisbury is to remarry and his daughter Alice is panic-stricken.






1421 - Trouble is brewing in Henry V's England. The Earl of Salisbury is to remarry and his daughter Alice is panic-stricken.
By 1397 Richard II's reign has descended into a nightmare world of execution, banishment and murder. Only those whom the king loves are safe and much of his fury is directed at the Arundel family of Nell Holand's mother. When Henry of Lancaster seizes the throne from his tyrannical cousin, no-one could be happier than Nell.
It is 1474 and England is finally at peace after 25 years of internecine bloodshed where Yorkists and Lancastrians battled for the crown. On the throne sits Edward IV with his beautiful queen, Elizabeth Woodville, at his side.
England is in a state of turmoil and the Wars of the Roses are about to begin. On the throne sits Henry VI, a weak and unstable king married to a dangerously vindictive woman.
The Mirror of Naples is Caroline Newark's ninth novel in a series based on the women in her family and follows the life of Mary Tudor, Queen of France.
The Theory and Practice of Re-evaluation Counselling
The theory behind Co-Counselling argues that emotional expression should be welcomed and that human beings can help each other recover from past distress by taking turns giving and receiving attention. Benefits of the method include the acceleration of personal growth and the reduction of the stresses inherent in the practitioner's role.This accessible book offers a serious challenge to much of what is currently considered good practice in mental health services, and succeeds in developing a dialogue between co-counselling and other therapeutic approaches. It provides a thorough introduction to the method, incorporating recent developments in the field and providing a comprehensive account of both the theory and practice. The reader also benefits from inclusion of clinical material outlining the experiences of people from a range of backgrounds offering evidence of the value of Co-Counselling.Co-Counselling offers a model that has many implications for anyone struggling with emotional problems, particularly those recovering from discrimination, prejudice and oppression. Counsellors and psychotherapists will find this book to be an invaluable resource which both challenges and stimulates.