martes, 12 de octubre de 2010

PERSONAL RESPONSE JOURNALS.

Lindsey's stories are known for her feisty heroines and domineering heroes. Lindsey heroes are always Alpha-males, who are self-reliant, powerful, and overtly sexual.
 And my point of view  the most important  of the story  is  that  Nicolas after  all thing  that  happened,  they  chanced  his  develop  and  Reggie  found  the love  in place that she never imagine, I like this story because    author wrote   the  things  that  happened  in  the  life the some  relatives.  And also    this author many books. So    I learned may thing whit this lecture

PLOT.

In the   Malory mansion,  was  prepare a  ball ,  of Lord Edward and Lady Charlotte Malory that they  care  when  she  was a child, because   her parent  died and  she  was  exquisite niece. Regina Ashton is abducted by Nicholas Eden- an arrogant seducer hardened by a painful secret from his past,  that he had a  relationship  whit Selena  was  had been a widow for two year,  but  Nicolas  won't   had  that relation  and  same time Selena  bought  the  affair  of Nicola, after  that, Nicolas  wont to  kill her. 
Nicolas devilishly handsome, hardened   by a painful secret  from his past,  the  rogue has  besmirched Reggie  good  mane  and  worse still, Reggie has vowed to marry the golden haired rogue who has besmirched her good name- and who arouses her womanly desires to an unendurable level. One night, Nicolas kidnap at Reggie and after the ball but Nicolas though   that was Selena. This night Reggie was dishonest. 
But her beauty only stirs Nicholas’s passion- giving rise to dangerous misunderstandings.  After that the uncle’s of Reggie wanted   that Reggie and Nicolas get married, they had a child, and a love that can live only once in a lifetime.


THE SETTING.

LONDON 1817
While economic historians of medieval and early modern England have placed considerable emphasis on the importance of London, this has not generally been true of historians of the industrial revolution. When London has been discussed it has sometimes been portrayed as a backward economic area characterised by sweated labor and as a drag on the rest of the economy. A number of historians including Leonard Schwarz, Paul Johnson and Ranulph Mitchie have recently begun to reconceptualise London’s role in national economic development in a more positive fashion. Although widely neglected the historiography of London has the edge over the economic historiography of other regions during the industrial revolution in one respect. A marked feature of most regional studies is that the relationship between the  region and the nation tends to get relatively little attention whereas this has always been central to the way economic historians have thought about London.

The principal aim of this report is to provide a preliminary overview of the development of London’s male occupational structure between 1817 and 1871. I want to begin by considering what was distinctive about the London economy in the mid-nineteenth century. As Leonard Schwarz and others have emphasised, London was the largest manufacturing town in Britain and thus the world during the industrial revolution.