![]() ![]() ![]() We’re talking boom box, sing her name in the rain, let the whole damn neighborhood know I’m good and ready this time around. Picture this – I’m ready to win back the love of my life, and I’m going big this time. ![]() ✮✮✮ UNZIPPED is here! Grab your copy today! ✮✮✮ What do you get when you mix a hot nerd, a quirky heroine, and a hilarious meet-cute (featuring a boombox) that goes terribly awry? UNZIPPED!ĭon’t miss this brand new standalone romantic comedy from #1 NYT bestseller Lauren Blakely! Brilliantly funny and spectacularly swoony, UNZIPPED-with its nod to the great silver screen romantic comedies-is available everywhere for your pleasure! Get your copy of UNZIPPED today! 100% of proceeds from the first 5 days of UNZIPPED sales go to California Fire Relief Charities! ![]()
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![]() ![]() Based on his own unrequited love for an older woman, Sentimental Education is one of the greatest French novels of the nineteenth century. ![]() Flaubert described his sweeping story of a young man's passions, ambitions and amours as 'the moral history of the men of my generation'. Through financial upheaval, political turmoil and countless affairs, Mme Arnoux remains the constant, unattainable love of Moreau's life. He befriends her husband, influential businessman Jacques Arnoux, and their paths cross and re-cross over the years. It is the beginning of an infatuation that will last a lifetime. Part love story, part historical novel, part satire, and an evocative tale youthful passion, Gustave Flaubert's A Sentimental Education is translated by Robert Baldick and revised with an introduction by Geoffrey Wall in Penguin Classics.įrederic Moreau is a law student returning home to Normandy from Paris when he first notices Mme Arnoux, a slender, dark woman several years older than himself. ![]() ![]() ![]() Ownership over the means of production allows capitalists to extract surplus from labor, which they can feed back into the production and surplus creation process, or take out for consumption. In what follows, I will summarize the core themes of my book with only scant reference to their critiques, which I reserve for the reply at the end of this issue.Ĭapital is not a thing, but a social relation, as Marx taught us ( Marx, 1974) according to Marxists, the relation between capital and labor as at the heart of this relation. Thanks also to the contributors who read the book and put their thoughts and their critiques in writing. Having the opportunity to engage scholars from philosophy, law, sociology and business/accounting is a wonderful reward for such an undertaking. My hope was to write a book about capital that would open fresh perspectives and also engage readers from different disciplinary backgrounds. I would like to thank the editors of Convivium for putting together this special issue and for inviting me to write a reply to the critiques in this issue. ![]() Theorizing Beyond “The Code of Capital”: A Reply, by Katharina Pistor. ![]() ![]() ![]() I frowned as the messenger followed her into the sunroom at the back of the patio. “Your Majesty.” The messenger barely inclined his head.Ĭaliza’s steel-colored eyes evaluated him quickly, her face an impassive mask. The tension in my shoulders eased as she slipped to my side. ![]() Kiva followed, the sun reflecting off the metal buckles of her silver-and-green guard’s uni- form. I straightened as my sister stepped onto the patio, a striking figure with her immaculate posture and dark hair loose to her waist. Voices filtered out through the open door. The sweet scent of fruit trees hung heavy in the air, pressing in on me from all directions. Without storm crows to manipulate it, the hot, humid summer weather persisted unrelentingly. So read on for royals, politics, and family tensions. Today I’m thrilled to be kicking off the blog tour for The Storm Crow, along with Beth Storm Crow is an immersive new fantasy from Kalyn Josephson, and I’m really excited to be able to share an exclusive extract from the book with you guys. ![]() |