Bad Lies In Business The Commonsense Guide To Detecting Deceit In Negotiations Interviews And Inve - [PDF]

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Bad Lies In Business The Commonsense Guide To Detecting Deceit In Negotiations Interviews And Inve - [PDF]

Bad Lies In Business The Commonsense Guide To Detecting Deceit In Negotiations Interviews And Inve - [PDF]

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Bad Lies In Business The Commonsense Guide To Detecting Deceit In Negotiations Interviews And Inve - [PDF]

Please try again.Please try again.Please try again. Please try your request again later. Then you can start reading Kindle books on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required. Full content visible, double tap to read brief content. Videos Help others learn more about this product by uploading a video. Upload video To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzes reviews to verify trustworthiness. Please try again later. Markie Mark Twain 5.0 out of 5 stars. We also use these cookies to understand how customers use our services (for example, by measuring site visits) so we can make improvements. This includes using third party cookies for the purpose of displaying and measuring interest-based ads. Sorry, there was a problem saving your cookie preferences. Try again. Accept Cookies Customise Cookies Please try again.Please try your request again later. A comprehensive illustrated guide to all that is most remarkable or curious in North and East Yorkshire. Where are the ?Virgin Viaduct? and ?Beggar?s Bridge?? Who weighed 29 stone and who died aged 169. Where did pigs make their home in a Greek temple. What inspired Dracula and what is the Penny Hedge. Where are Yorkshir?s oldest maltings and finest windmill. More than 80 extraordinary places to visit; instructions on how to find each ?curiosity?; map and photographs; other places of local interest. Create a free account Also check our best rated Travel Book reviews Then you can start reading Kindle books on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required. Get your Kindle here, or download a FREE Kindle Reading App.To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. It also analyses reviews to verify trustworthiness. Please try again later.

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Jon Morrison 5.0 out of 5 stars. Used: Very GoodThe cover may have some limited signs of wear but the pages are clean, intact and the spine remains undamaged. This book has clearly been well maintained and looked after thus far. Money back guarantee if you are not satisfied. See more of our deals.Please try again.Please try your request again later. Download one of the Free Kindle apps to start reading Kindle books on your smartphone, tablet, and computer. Get your Kindle here, or download a FREE Kindle Reading App.To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. It also analyzes reviews to verify trustworthiness. Something went wrong. The item may have some signs of cosmetic wear, but is fully operational and functions as intended. This item may be a display model or store return that has been used.All Rights Reserved. User Agreement, Privacy, Cookies and AdChoice Norton Secured - powered by DigiCert. Sorry, there was a problem saving your cookie preferences. Try again. Accept Cookies Customise Cookies Used: Very GoodPlease try again.Please try your request again later. Hier kaufen, or download a FREE Kindle Reading App.To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. It also analyses reviews to verify trustworthiness. Condition: Very Good. North and East Yorkshire Curiosities: A Guide to Follies and Strange Buildings, Curious Tales and Unusual People This book is in very good condition and will be shipped within 24 hours of ordering. The cover may have some limited signs of wear but the pages are clean, intact and the spine remains undamaged. See all our books here, order more than 1 book and get discounted shipping.Shipped within 24 hours from our UK warehouse. Clean, undamaged book with no damage to pages and minimal wear to the cover. Spine still tight, in very good condition. Remember if you are not happy, you are covered by our 100 money back guarantee.

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But how to tell if the signature is real. Find out how you can avoid common pitfalls in identifying an author's signature. Learn about collecting P. T. Barnum books and ephemera here. Read the rules here. A comprehensive illustrated guide to all that is most remarkable or curious in North and East Yorkshire. Who weighed 29 stone and who died aged 169. Where are Yorkshir’s oldest maltings and finest windmill.Condition: Very Good. See all our books here, order more than 1 book and get discounted shipping.Condition: UsedLikeNew. Daily dispatch from the UK.Condition: UsedLikeNew.Condition: UsedLikeNew.Condition: UsedVeryGood.Condition: UsedVeryGood.Condition: UsedLikeNew. Daily dispatch from the UK.Condition: UsedLikeNew.Condition: UsedLikeNew. Daily dispatch from the UK.Condition: UsedLikeNew.All Rights Reserved. We sell quality used books at competitive prices to millions of customers worldwide each year. Established by a group of dedicated book lovers, with an ethos to do good, over the past 10 years World of Books has grown to hold over 3 million in stock.We are a circular economy, for profit company, that supports charities and protects the planet by enabling more goods to be reused. We don't believe that books should only be read once or have a single owner. By choosing to buy a great value second hand book, you're helping to continually recycle and share the love of literature in rereading and reusing it.Our prices are low to help millions of used books find new homes in over 190 countries worldwide every year. World of Books purchases significant volumes of donated books from UK charities, taking the titles they don't want or haven't got space for.Our customers are helping to support good causes too - boosting revenues for charities and saving waste disposal costs. Our business model has generated over 12m for charities in the last 5 years.

We consider ourselves pioneers in the re-use and recycling of unwanted books, recycling 27,000 tonnes of books each year, equivalent to 500,000 trees.We do our best to provide good quality books but there's no escaping the fact that it has been owned and read by someone else before you. It may well show signs of wear and tear, however each one of our books is hand-checked by our dedicated team for defects before shipping.We hope you enjoy browsing through our titles today. The more scarce the book is, the more an autograph adds to its value. Groups Discussions Quotes Ask the Author A comprehensive illustrated guide to all that is most remarkable or curious in North and East Yorkshire. What inspired Dracula and what is the Penny Hedge? Where A comprehensive illustrated guide to all that is most remarkable or curious in North and East Yorkshire. Where are Yorkshir’s oldest maltings and finest windmill.To see what your friends thought of this book,This book is not yet featured on Listopia.There are no discussion topics on this book yet.Having worked for many years in the publishing industry selling other travel writers' books, in 2003 Duncan decided to start writing his own. Duncan has so far traversed four continents in search of unusual places and pe Having worked for many years in the publishing industry selling other travel writers' books, in 2003 Duncan decided to start writing his own. Duncan has so far traversed four continents in search of unusual places and people, from the wartime bunkers of Berlin and the Baroque gardens of Prague to the souks of Damascus and the rock-cut churches of Ethiopia. His findings are being published in a ground breaking series of guidebooks - the Only In Guides - designed specifically for the purpose. Volumes on Berlin, Boston, Budapest, Cologne, Edinburgh, Hamburg, Krakow, London, Munich, Paris, Prague, Vienna and Zurich have been published. The series has garnered considerable press acclaim, with sales in excess of 150,000 units.

As a result of his extensive travels, not only through the storied cities of Old Europe but also in Africa, the Middle East and Asia, Duncan regularly generates original illustrated material for print and digital media. He has great affection for the places about which he has written, as well as an extensive photo library available for commercial usage (his images are also available as limited edition greetings cards and prints). He released his first audio tour CD in 2010. Born in Sheffield, England in 1960 Duncan first got the history bug when his grandfather revealed the grave of a Roman soldier to him in his back garden. Aged just eleven he opened his own private museum before going on to read Ancient History and Archaeology at Birmingham University. Together with his late father, Trevor, he wrote and illustrated four highly successful books on the curiosities of Sheffield and Yorkshire, and later wrote the best-selling topographical book 'Yorkshire: A Portrait in Colour'. Still a passionate collector he tries to restrict his habit to vintage travel books, whilst also enjoying gardening, natural history, and music. Duncan divides his time between England and Central Europe, and is a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society. He is also a member of the British Guild of Travel Writers. We've got you covered with the buzziest new releases of the day. Then you can start reading Kindle books on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required. Learn more Buying and sending Kindle eBooks to others Select quantity Buy and send Kindle eBooks Recipients can read on any device These ebooks can only be redeemed by recipients in the India. Redemption links and eBooks cannot be resold. Please try again.

Follies, towers, arches, grottoes, monuments, arches, obelisks, garden buildings, eyecatchers — exuberant architecture that makes you catch your breath in delight — all these wonderful buildings are enthusiastically described, illustrated with many colour photographs. Tap on a location and a map will show you precisely where the building stands. Find out the astonishing, crazy, passionate, lunatic and loving stories behind Britain’s most bizarre buildings. This is an engaging and amusing interactive guide book to the eccentric, strange, bizarre, odd and obscure architectural curiosities, landmarks and monuments of the county. Heavily illustrated in full colour, with digital online maps to guide you precisely to the location of each building. Enhanced with many brilliant brand new photographs and images from fotoLibra.com photographers. To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Sorry, there was a problem saving your cookie preferences. Try again. Accept Cookies Customise Cookies Please try again.Please try your request again later. A comprehensive illustrated guide to all that is most remarkable or curious in South and West Yorkshire. Where are ?Pie Hall? and ?Shoddy Temple?? Who was killed by a falling gravestone. Where was tea drinking forbidden. Where are England?s tallest maypole and oldest railway. What happened to the ?Running Man? and Egypt in Yorkshire. Photoholic 4.0 out of 5 stars It makes fascinating reading. Please try again.Please try again.Please try again. Follies, towers, arches, grottoes, monuments, arches, obelisks, garden buildings, eyecatchers — exuberant architecture that makes you catch your breath in delight — all these wonderful buildings are enthusiastically described, illustrated with many colour photographs. Enhanced with many brilliant brand new photographs and images from fotoLibra.com photographers.

Then you can start reading Kindle books on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required. Full content visible, double tap to read brief content. Para detalhes, por favor, acesse os Termos e Condicoes dessas promocoes.Por favor, tente novamente.Por favor, tente novamente.Follies, towers, arches, grottoes, monuments, arches, obelisks, garden buildings, eyecatchers — exuberant architecture that makes you catch your breath in delight — all these wonderful buildings are enthusiastically described, illustrated with many colour photographs. Enhanced with many brilliant brand new photographs and images from fotoLibra.com photographers. Para calcular a classificacao geral de estrelas e a analise percentual por estrela, nao usamos uma media simples. Em vez disso, nosso sistema considera coisas como se uma avaliacao e recente e se o avaliador comprou o item na Amazon. Ele tambem analisa avaliacoes para verificar a confiabilidade. Become a Member.Become a Member.Become a Member.Become a Member.Become a Member.Become a Member.Contact Us Offer available only in the U.S. (including Puerto Rico). Offer subject to change without notice. See contest rules for full details. Please click below to consent to the use of this technology while browsing our site. To learn more or withdraw consent, please visit our cookie policy. With its stunning National Parks and a population as big as Scotland’s, Yorkshire has long been attracting droves of tourists each year, seeking if only but a glimpse of what it has to offer.But, without a doubt, its most stunning architectural feature has to be the breathtakingly beautiful Tiled Hall. This jewel of Victorian design is decorated with ornate and colourful Victorian tiles and it’s most dazzling section is the vaulted ceiling with its bursts of speckled colour. What is most apparent as you explore Markenfield Hall is the almost palpable sense of total tranquillity in every corner.

The gates of this unique place are only opened to the public for 30 precious days annually, so make sure you’re amongst the few each year to catch a glimpse of it! Just to the right of the glittering waters is a small cave said to be the home of Janet, the queen of the fairies, who gives her name to this enchanted place. Don’t forget to leave your own behind and make a wish to Janet and her fairy subjects. The impressive rock formation is amazing to behold and has inspired many fictional phenomena: as well as being a film location for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1, it is also said to have been the inspiration behind the description of Helm’s Deep in J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings trilogy. However, the city is full of narrow, medieval alleys or Snickelways which are hidden in plain sight and each of which have their own fascinating tales to tell. It’s said that Alice became insane and murdered her husband, for which crime she was hanged at York Castle. To this day, her ghost has reportedly been seen lingering in the passage. Visitors, beware. Hidden behind the facade of an ugly, modern office block, it was only rediscovered during demolition work in 1984, after which it was lovingly restored to its former glory so that visitors can experience how its 15th-century residents lived. No one can quite say for sure what the origin of this tiny stretch of pavement’s name is. Some believe it comes from the whipping post that once stood nearby, while others think it’s derived from an Anglo-Saxon term meaning “neither one nor the other.” Whatever the case, it’s a wonderfully unusual name you certainly won’t forget in a hurry. What’s more, the novel’s supernatural villain actually lands in Whitby on a ship before bounding up the town’s well-known 199 Steps in the form of a spectral dog towards the clifftop churchyard of St Mary’s, where he later goes on to attack one of the central characters in a horribly frightening scene.

Those looking to sink their fangs into a touch of the 19th century’s marvellously macabre ambience away from the tourists’ beaten track should look no further than Whitby Museum. Its Victorian collection of objects is positively brimming with all manner of weird and wonderful oddities. Interestingly, during World War II, these carvings often had to be camouflaged, so they wouldn’t aid the German Air Force navigating their way around Britain. Yet, at 318 feet long and 220 feet tall, it hides a secret! However, unlike other geoglyphs, this mysterious equine was sculpted out of a limestone hill instead of the traditional chalk and for this reason; some hill figure purists claim it is a fake. In the past, new chips have been added, however it was feared if any more were brought in, the sheer weight of them would lead to a helpless horse melting down the hillside. However, this “Old Gray Mare” still holds its nickname, true to its original colouring. Escape to this forbidden corner, and uncover a surreal fantasy; with no map to follow, these gardens will take you on a magnificent, worldly adventure! Explore the flourishing herb garden and even stop off for a tasty treat in the Corner Cafe. Discover a whole new day out with a difference. Even find your own hidden gem to stay in during your visit, with our selection of handpicked Yorkshire Cottages. With its stunning National Parks and a population as big as Scotland’s, Yorkshire has long been attracting droves of tourists each year, seeking if only but a glimpse of what it has to offer.Favourite UK. Why not join them for a bracing walk or a fireside drink in a cosy inn? Whether you want to enjoy award winning Fish and Chips beside the seaside or trying something more challenging such as cycling in the countryside, it’s the ideal location for your next UK Staycation.

We’ve got fun-fuelled breaks for families, holidays for flocks of friends, romantic getaways for love birds, city breaks for culture vultures and rural escapes for tree huggers - think of us as your England travel guide. Get filtering to find your perfect holiday in England. Grab a free walking trail and off you go! Enjoy long country walks and relax together in a hot tub under the stars. Recover your account Don't have an account. Register an account. However, where space is available on weekdays, pre-booking isn't always necessary. See what's open near you. The ancient abbey ruins echo with centuries-old stories. Follow paths to find the awe-inspiring Georgian water garden, with mirror-like ponds, statues and follies. The view of the hall as you turn on to the long drive evokes images of an intriguing past. Wander through eight acres of formal gardens, amongst herbaceous borders and a walled kitchen garden. Nostell's parkland and gardens stretch over 300 acres, taking in wildlflower meadows, lakes and woodland. There are surprises along every avenue, including a castle that is not what it seems. Explore the organic walled garden bursting with colour including snake's head fritillary, camassias and blossom. This classic Georgian mansion is surrounded by 250 acres of parkland, which offer year round seasonal walks with a colourful Victorian formal garden. Once a thriving farming estate, the gardens can be enjoyed all year round with seasonal spring highlights including the scented herb border. Learn about his creative vision and see how he mixed different architectural styles and time periods alongside a fascinating collection of antiques and art. See formal areas of lawn, ponds and herbaceous borders, surrounded by mature trees and a wildlife area. Stroll through woods, before emerging out on to the terrace, with its stunning views down over the Cistercian ruin of Rievaulx Abbey.

See if you can spot the the Gorilla, the Eagle and the Turtle, whilst the more nimble can crawl through the Smartie Tube and balance on the Rocking Stones. There are many footpaths that criss-cross the valley, and at its heart, you'll find Gibson Mill - a former cotton mill that's now home to our takeaway cafe and second hand bookshop. But how do monuments, statues and buildings help us truly understand the history of this place? The Beningbrough estate has a past as varied and changeable as the people who lived here. The ?2.5 million scheme will start later in 2021 and run to 2024. Find out how we manage our renewable energy and our plans for future green technologies. Carry on browsing if you're happy with this, or find out how to manage cookies. We find from the following extract from an old poem on this subject, that the confirmed scold occasionally vented her angry clamour as soon as she recovered her breath after the first plunge, in which case, the immersion was repeated till exhaustion caused silence: No brawling wives, no furious wenches, No fire so hot but water quenches. Castle Hill is a Scheduled Ancient Monument and is the site of an Iron Age fort, and the summit of Castle Hill is by far the most prominent landmark in Huddersfield. In 1897, Queen Victoria had reigned for sixty years, which made her the longest-reigning monarch in English history. To honour this, it was decided to build a permanent memorial on Castle Hill in the form of a tower. Designed by Isaac Jones, a London architect, it was built using stone from Crossland Hill. Victoria Tower stands 106ft high, which added to the hill itself makes the top of the tower exactly 1,000ft above sea level. Victoria Tower was opened by the Earl of Scarbrough on 24 June 1899. The folly known as Boston Castle was built on land belonging to the 3rd Earl of Effingham, on the south-western outskirts of Rotherham at one of the highest points in the area.

It became a commodious two-storey structure, with a well-appointed interior, its exterior battlemented and ornamented with Gothic pinnacles. Today Boston Castle is a private residence but it can still be viewed at close quarters from the public park surrounding it, which was formally opened in 1876. It was built in 1791 on a site where the 1758 turnpike road from Sheffield diverged to Fox House and Chapel-en-le-Frith. It is in fact not round, but octagonal, allowing those inside good views over the three roads it once collected tolls for travelling along. The tollhouse was converted into a dwelling in 1821, having been redundant from about 1812, after the A625 road from Banner Cross to Fox House was made. The pillar marks the site where a 56-ton meteorite fell in 1795. The meteorite is now an exhibit at the Natural History Museum in South Kensington, London. In 1871 the architect Isaac Booth drew up plans for a chimney which would be fed by the work’s smoke by means of a pipeline. Work commenced on the chimney but in 1874 Wainhouse sold the dye works to his manager, who refused to undertake the completion of the chimney and pipeline owing to the tremendous costs involved. Wainwright took back ownership of the chimney and set about a new project. Wainhouse’s Tower, sometimes known as Wainhouse’s Folly or the Octagon Tower, was completed at a cost in excess of ?14,000. The tower rises to a height of 253ft from the bottom of the door to the top of the cupola and at the back of the structure drops away a further 24ft to the level of the sloping ground below, making the tower 277ft high at its greatest extremity. There is an observation platform which affords magnificent views. This is reached by climbing 403 steps. Access to Wainhouse’s Tower is limited but it is usually open on Bank Holidays. It is visible on the skyline for miles around. Constructed of stone and standing 120ft high an inscription reads: The tower was gifted to the town in 1877.

Its creator was was the Paris architect R. Renee Spiers and the local building firm of Robinson and Son undertook the construction. The tower offers commanding views over Barnsley itself and over the Worsborough Valley. Originally known as the temple of Diana, it was not completed by the time of Vanbrugh’s death in 1726. The temple is a cube with a dome and four porticos, surmounted at the corners of the pediments with urns. It is partly modelled on Andrea Palladio’s Villa Rotunda at Vicenza. It was used as a place for taking refreshments and for contemplation and reading. Beneath the principal chamber is a cellar. Here the servants store, prepare and serve food for members of the Howard family and their guests. In the early 1720s, His Lordship writes his will, in which he states: Having destroyed his family’s traditional burial place, Lord Carlisle no doubt feels himself morally obliged to provide a suitable repository for his own bones as well as those of his descendants. The foundations for this stupendous structure were laid in 1729. It stands on a low hill, just under a mile from the mansion. It is a great domed rotunda, standing 76ft high, surrounded by twenty tightly spaced Doric columns. Other architects carry out work on the massive stone platform on which the mausoleum stands on the double flight of entrance stairs. Within the mausoleum, beneath the ground floor chapel is the crypt, containing sixty-three niches for receiving coffins. The delay in the mausoleum’s completion results in Lord Carlisle’s remains not being interred in it until several years after his death. His Lordship’s coffin is temporarily interred in St Martin’s Church, Bulmer, before being taken to be interred in the mausoleum in 1741. The mausoleum remains the burial place for members of the Howard family. Lord Strafford wanted to create the illusion that his branch of the Wentworth family had been living on the estate for centuries, instead of as recently as 1708.

Originally the structure had four towers, two have been recently restored. It overlooks the south lawn of Wentworth Castle. It serves as a summer house for the 2 nd Earl of Strafford and his family. Platt was commissioned to carve the four Corinthian columns which grace the temple. They match those of the Palladian wing of the mansion. In 1717 Lady Mary, wife of the British Ambassador in Constantinople, returned to England. In England she had her five-year-old daughter inoculated in the presence of several physicians. They noticed the mildness of the attack of smallpox that followed. Smallpox was a major killer, particularly of children. Lady Mary’s bold act lays the foundations for an inoculation programme that is widely implemented later in the century. An inscription reads: Learn how your comment data is processed.

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