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  1. Simple guide to living and working abroad

    Simple guide to living and working abroad

    Most people who have spent any time living and working abroad have a wonderful, positive experience. It can be daunting being away from home and everything you know but travelling does broaden the mind and offers insight and experience you never get by staying put.

     
  2. Simple step guide to opening a UK bank account

    Simple step guide to opening a UK bank account

    You have to be sixteen and a permanent UK resident to open a bank account in the UK. Most people chose a free current account which allows you pay bills, have wages, salary or benefits paid in and save. Some current account charge a fee for extra features so make sure you know what you are getting before making your final decision.

  3. The Herbalist

    The Herbalist

    The Herbalist is the electrifying first novel from Niamh Boyce, winner of the 2012 Hennesssy XO Award for New Irish Writing. A beautiful and gripping story from 1930s rural Ireland, a time when women paid a terrible price for unmarried pregnancy, The Herbalist will appeal to fans of The Midwife's Daughter and The Outcast.

  4. Stoner By John Edward Williams

    Stoner By John Edward Williams

    The winner of the Waterstones Book of the year 2013 is a moving account of a young man falling in love with literature.

  5. Dangerous Women The Guide To Modern Life

    Dangerous Women The Guide To Modern Life

    Authors, Clare Conville, Liz Hoggard and Sarh-Jane Lovett

    Life-enhancing, packed with poetry and philosophical bon mots, Dangerous Women: The Guide to Modern Life draws on the experience of three dangerously knowledgeable women to offer practical but humourous advice, with an understanding of the finer art of living.

    With over 600 entries, from 'Accepting a compliment' and 'Affairs' to 'Entering a covent', 'Family therapy', 'I don't', 'Teenagers' and 'Wolf-whistling', this is the perfect bedside companion for the modern woman.

    Mothers, sisters, daughters and girlfriends are constantly asking themselves, and each other, questions about what it means to be a modern woman. Dangerous Women sparkles with the answers.

  6. Heartbreaker 2010

    Heartbreaker 2010

    Alex and his sister run a business designed to break up relationships. They are hired by a rich man to break up the wedding of his daughter. The only problem is that they only have one week to do so.

  7. Jackson Lane Theatre

    Jackson Lane Theatre

    Jacksons Lane is a multi-arts venue in Highgate North London. Housed in a striking red-bricked gothic church conversion, the building is home to a 160 capacity theatre, a large scale dance and rehearsal studio a cafe and bar and four other multi-purpose spaces.

    The venue has a rich history of innovative work including a wealth of experimental visual theatre companies, as well as a strong history in contemporary dance and circus.

    Jacksons Lane’s artistic vision is in the support of emerging and

  8. Next

    Next

    Next has around 700 stores, of which 540 are in the United Kingdom and Ireland, and around 200 are in continental Europe, Asia and the Middle East. Next is the largest clothing retailer by sales in the United Kingdom, having overtaken Marks & Spencer in early 2012. It is listed on the London Stock Exchange and is a constituent of the FTSE 100 Index.

    The company was founded by Joseph Hepworth in Leeds in 1864 as a tailor under the name of Joseph Hepworth & Son.

    In 1982 Hepworth & Son acquired Kendall & Sons Ltd, a Leicester-based rainwear and ladies fashion company from Combined English Stores. The intention was to redevelop the Kendall's stores as a womenswear chain of shops. Terence Conran, the designer, was Chairman of Hepworth's at this time and he recruited George Davies, who went on to become Chief Executive of Next.

  9. PC World

    PC World

    PC World, established in 1991, it became part of Dixons Retail plc in 1993. Many of its physical stores in the UK now trade under the combined Currys PC World brand, and as PC City in Italy

  10. Behind The Candelabra

    Behind The Candelabra

    Behind the Candelabra is a 2013 American drama film directed by Steven Soderbergh about the last ten years in the life of pianist Liberace and the secret affair he had with the younger Scott Thorson.

  11. Oh Dear Silvia

    Oh Dear Silvia

    The internationally bestselling author and acclaimed comedic actress Dawn French makes her American literary debut with this riveting novel of secrets, forgiveness, guilt, and love.

  12. Los Monteros

    Los Monteros

    Founded by the Salamancan businessman, Ignacio Coca, Los Monteros Hotel was opened in 1962 with 35 rooms, but its high demand caused it to expand on three occasions and became a grand luxurious hotel of 168 rooms, 20 luxurious villas of more than 440 employees. The hotel currently has 173 rooms of which more than half are Junior Suites. Special guests from all social spheres have stayed in these rooms such as Queen Ingrid of Denmark, Michael Jackson, Julio Iglesias, Camilo José Cela, Baroness Von Thyssen, Lola Flores, Sean Connery, Antonio Banderas, Melanie Griffith and Carlos Herrera.

    Its restaurant, “El Corzo” was the first hotel establishment of Spain to receive the Michelin Star. The hotel complex represented a valuable patrimony for Spanish tourism, made up of: Los Monteros Hotel, the “Río Real” golf course, the tennis club, “La Cabane” Beach Club and the equestrian club.

  13. The Daily Mail

    The Daily Mail

    First published in 1896 by Lord Northcliffe, it is the United Kingdom's second biggest-selling daily newspaper after The Sun. Its sister paper The Mail on Sunday was launched in 1982. Scottish and Irish editions of the daily paper were launched in 1947 and 2006 respectively. The Daily Mail was Britain's first daily newspaper aimed at the newly literate "lower-middle class market resulting from mass education, combining a low retail price with plenty of competitions, prizes and promotional gimmicks", and the first British paper to sell a million copies a day.

  14. Pasadena Civic Auditorium

    Pasadena Civic Auditorium

    The Civic has played host to Broadway musicals, world class ballet, symphony orchestras and celebrity speakers as well as the Prime Time Emmy Awards, and the People's Choice Awards.

    The main floor of the Pasadena Civic has 1,922 fixed seats with 98 installable orchestra pit seats. The loge seats 560, the upper balcony seats 449 for a total capacity of 3,029.

    Located on the second floor, the classic Gold Room provides an unforgettable setting for smaller meetings, receptions, or dinner...

  15. Bernie

    Bernie

    We meet Bernie Tiede (1958- ), a chubby undertaker, who takes pride in his work. He's a Gospel-singing tenor. In a series of interviews with townspeople, mixed with flashbacks, we follow Bernie: he arrives in Carthage, Texas (pop. 7,000), where old ladies adore him; he befriends a wealthy, mean-spirited widow named Marjorie Nugent; they become companions in both daily routines and expensive vacations.

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