Richard Kerridge Libros
Richard Kerridge es profesor de inglés y director del curso de Máster en Escritura Creativa en el Bath College of Higher Education. Su trabajo profundiza en la comprensión de los estilos y temas literarios, animando a los lectores a reflexionar sobre sus propios procesos creativos. Su enfoque de la enseñanza y la escritura enfatiza la importancia del pensamiento crítico y la expresión innovadora en la literatura.






Cold Blood
- 304 páginas
- 11 horas de lectura
As a boy, Richard Kerridge loved to encounter wild creatures and catch them for his back-garden zoo. There were Smooth Newts, mottled like the fighter planes in the comics he read, and the longed-for Great Crested Newt, with its huge golden eye.
Cicero: Phillipics II
- 248 páginas
- 9 horas de lectura
~Cicero's great polemic against Antony, a literary masterpiece, is here made available to Latin students early in their reading programme and to students of classical civilisation. The introduction to this edition deals with the historical setting, Roman rhetoric and Cicero's style while the notes are mainly literary; not historical.
GCSE OCR B: Modern World History Student Book and CDROM
- 392 páginas
- 14 horas de lectura
Tailored to the OCR GCSE History B: Modern World specification, this book focuses on exam preparation. It covers various options of the specification.
A/AS Level History for AQA The Age of the Crusades, c1071-1204 Student Book
- 118 páginas
- 5 horas de lectura
A new series of bespoke, full-coverage resources developed for the AQA 2015 A/AS Level History. číst celé
The English Civil War in 100 Facts
- 192 páginas
- 7 horas de lectura
The English Civil War pitted Parliament against the Crown following a breakdown in their relationship, ultimately caused by a struggle over power, religion and control. The Civil War split the country and resulted in the execution of Charles I and the exile of his son, and the English monarchy was replaced first by the Commonwealth of England and then the Protectorate. Oliver Cromwell dominated the politics of the new rule and still divides opinion today, with some seeing him as a brutal dictator and others seeing him as a hero of liberty. The English Civil War in 100 Facts examines the twenty years of intermittent warfare, covering the first, second and third wars, from the initial conflict with Charles I to the fight of Charles II's supporters with the Rump Parliament. Dr Andrew Lacey guides us through some of the key figures and their stories as well as some of the key battles and politics in this period that drastically altered the structure of English rule.
Germ Wars
- 134 páginas
- 5 horas de lectura
Richards Lacey's autobiography describes a life of science and medicine over seventy years. Abuse at boarding school is followed by optimism as a Cambridge student marred by the realisation fifty years later of the involvement of his aunt with spy Kim Philby, whom he now believes was the character on which James Bond was based. After early clinical medicine, basic research at Bristol on antibiotics created conflict with the pharmaceutical industry. Academic malice forces a move to Kings Lynn as NHS consultant when Richard is delighted that a toxic antibiotic is virtually banned. The move to Leeds as Professor provokes disputes over the rise of food poisoning. After exposure of the BSE cover-up, readers will question whether Richard's forced early retirement was a conspiracy. Finally, a way to remove our beloved NHS from party politics is suggested.