The Journal of Ann McMath Literary essaysAn account of an ordinary young woman coming of age in the "Burned Over District" of Western New York during the Second Great Awakening. In 1851, fourteen year old orphan Ann McMath was sent to live with her uncle and his family in their parsonage in Horseheads, New York. Lonely and full of self doubt, anxious to establish female friendships in a new place, and questing for intellectual and moral perfection, she began keeping journal when she was
Rip Van Winkle introduces the famed literacy title character
including the self-sufficiency of concentrated feeds and the effect of organic methods on udder health
These stories speak not simply to women
the Pentlands are a proud and wealthy family with a rich history dating back to the founding colony of Massachusetts Bay
This innovative volume harnesses the interdisciplinarity and flexibility of ‘encounter’ to provide dynamic readings The Book of Margery Kempe in the twenty-first century
This book reviews the current range of crop models
and sheds light on the specific status of the concept in contemporary theory and practice in the humanities
Different combinations of feed intake and body weight gain can provide the same FCR value and may have the same economic outcome but with different underlying biological causes
built by the Jewish king Herod the Great at the end of the first century BCE
Chuck Winrich explores the topic of semiconductors from a qualitative approach to understanding the theories and models used to explain semiconductor devices
optimistic and practical clinical wisdom within the practitioner across the spectrum of health and illness
Cold War dynamics