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David Stevenson

    David Stevenson fue un ingeniero escocés reconocido por diseñar más de 30 faros en toda Escocia. Continuó la dinastía familiar de ingeniería de faros establecida por su padre. El legado de Stevenson reside en su extensa obra, que mejoró la seguridad marítima y dejó una marca imborrable en la costa escocesa.

    The Hunt for Rob Roy
    The Financial Times Guides. Exchange Traded Funds and Index Funds
    Investing in Shares For Dummies
    1914-1918
    1914-1918. The History of the First World War
    Points of Astonishment: Alpine Stories
    • Points of Astonishment: Alpine Stories

      • 156 páginas
      • 6 horas de lectura

      In the new and previously uncollected stories that make up Points of Astonishment, Stevenson follows through on the promise of his Letters from Chamonix, winner of the Banff Mountain Book Award for Fiction and Poetry . These eight short stories describe the fates of their fictional climbers on stages as intimate as their own living room and as vast and unforgiving as the remote Himalaya. Stevenson stirs up a mix of humanity, language, and mountainous terrain and lays bare the answers to the question every fiction writer what if? In the words of Katie Ives, long-time editor of Alpinist and author of Imaginary Peaks, “. . . one of the great prose stylists of modern climbing literature.”

      Points of Astonishment: Alpine Stories
      4,0
    • 1914-1918

      • 784 páginas
      • 28 horas de lectura

      In the summer of 1914 Europe exploded into a frenzy of mass violence. The war that followed had global repercussions, destroying four empires and costing millions of lives. Even the victorious countries were scarred for a generation, and we still today remain within the conflict's shadow. In this major new analysis, published some ninety years after the First World War began, David Stevenson re-examines the causes, course and impact of this 'war to end war', placing it in the context of its era and exposing its underlying dynamics. His book provides a wide-ranging international history, drawing on insights from the latest research. It offers compelling answers to the key questions about how this terrible struggle questions that remain disturbingly relevant for our own time.

      1914-1918
      4,2
    • Investing in Shares For Dummies

      • 403 páginas
      • 15 horas de lectura

      Get your slice of the economic pie and then some, in the UK and beyond. Investing in shares can help build anyone's financial standing--move over, economic elite! People from all walks of life can easily grow their wealth and secure money for the future. Investing in Shares For Dummies takes a friendly, non-jargony approach for new and not-quite-advanced-yet shareholders. This book walks you through the investment orchard so you can cherry-pick shares that will turn you a tidy profit (mmm, tasty.) You'll also learn to stay calm and ride the unavoidable waves of the markets. Over the long term, you stand to earn greater returns (translation: more money) than if you invested in real estate or bonds alone. And who isn't keen on the idea of more money? This latest edition is up-to-date with the top investing apps, investing with ETFs, thematic investing, trading shares in the US and other nations, and everything else you might be curious about as you start building a rock-solid portfolio. Investing in Shares For Dummies gives you the sound advice and proven tactics you need to play the markets and watch your profits grow.

      Investing in Shares For Dummies
      3,9
    • Exchange traded funds (EFTs) are huge business in the US, forcing the traditional mutual funds sector on to the back foot. This revolution is now starting here in the UK, with a concerted market push by the index fund providers. This book addresses the ETF the revolution, explaining how to run a modern portfolio.

      The Financial Times Guides. Exchange Traded Funds and Index Funds
      3,5
    • The Hunt for Rob Roy

      The Man and the Myths - Uncorrected Book Proof

      • 339 páginas
      • 12 horas de lectura

      Rob Roy (Robert MacGregor, 1671 - 1734) bears a name that is well known through the heroic images created for him by tradition, by Sir Walter Scott and by Hollywood.In this biography David Stevenson strips away the myth and challenges many long-held assumptions about Rob. The picture that emerges is one of a remarkable life - but not a heroic one. The image of a man deeply wronged and forced into outlawry has to be modified by the evidence that he was only outlawed after formulating a plan to swindle his creditors. The staunch Jacobite is revealed as a man who supplied intelligence to the government against those he had supported. The supposed warrior leader never fought in a battle. The reputed great duellist avoided violence whenever possible and is only known to have fought one duel - which he lost.Yet Rob remains an attractive figure. That he survived, in spite of the odds against him, is a remarkable tribute to his tenacity of both body and spirit, and to his ability to make people like and trust him. With this book Scotland may lose a hero of the old-fashioned, unreal sort, but it possesses in Rob Roy a man whose true life-story as it emerges is dramatic and human.

      The Hunt for Rob Roy