
Cannabis: A Complete Guide
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Cannabis sativa is best known as the source of marijuana, the world's most widely consumed illicit...
Women and Consumer Culture in Early Twentieth-Century Japan: The Department Store, Modernity and Everyday Life
Book
The first thirty years of the twentieth century was a key period in the development of Japanese...

Technically Speaking: Why All Americans Need to Know More About Technology
Committee on Technological Literacy, National Academy of Engineering, National Research Council and G
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Cell phones ...airbags ...genetically modified food ...the Internet. These are all emblems of modern...

The 32 Stops: The Central Line
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Geographer Danny Dorling tells the stories of the people who live along "The 32 Stops of the Central...

Subtly Worded and Other Stories
Robert Chandler, Anne Marie Jackson, Nadezhda Teffi and Clare Kitson
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A selection of the finest stories by this female Chekhov Teffi's genius with the short form made her...
Gun Culture in Early Modern England
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Guns had an enormous impact on the social, economic, cultural, and political lives of civilian men,...

Survivors: the Quest®
Games and Entertainment
App
Three strangers find themselves stranded on a secluded island. Abandoned buildings, an old laptop...

ClareR (5906 KP) rated Stepsister in Books
Sep 29, 2020
Isabelle and Tavi are the ugly sisters, left behind with their unhinged mother, after Cinderella has left with her Prince. The ‘ugly’ sisters actions aren’t excused, in fact they are left to live and struggle with the consequences of their actions. Isabelle has a permanent limp where she sliced off her toes in the hope that she would be able to fit in to the glass slipper. All on the instructions of her mother. Isabelle is a strong character who feels hemmed in by her mother and the restrictions that society has thrust upon her. Her worth is dictated by her looks - something which she falls short on, as does her sister. Instead of the soft mannered, beautiful, obedient girls that society wants, the sisters are clever, resourceful and regrettably ugly. Maman tries to marry them off to the Prince in any way that she can - even making them mutilate themselves. When Cinderella leaves to marry her Prince and the locals discover how she was treated, Isabelle, Tavi and Maman are both ostracised and vilified. Isabelle truly regrets the way that she treated Cinderella, but doesn’t know how she can put right what she did. However, both Fate and Chance have now got an influence over her life, a vested interest, and they have opposing opinions on how Isabelle’s life should play out.
I thought this feminist slant on the after-story of Cinderella was really engaging. I loved it, and if I had a daughter I’d be passing it on to her to read next!
Many thanks to Readers First for my copy of this book.

Russia in Revolution: An Empire in Crisis 1890-1928
Book
The Russian Revolution of 1917 transformed the face of the Russian empire, politically,...
History Politics