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But this is no ordinary story. It tells the tale of an orphan girl wrenched from a life of luxury to live in a 'smuggler's den'. Marguerite's discovery of a family she never knew exsisted is a richly interwoven with schoolday escapades, childhood games and squabbles, the warmth of family love and the dawning realisation of hardships ahead.
Sheila Williams lives in St. Maarten in the Dutch Antilles and is also the author of Safety at Home in the Read Awhile series.
Contains complete answers to the questions set on the Chemistry Paper 02 in the May/June series of examinations between the years 2012 and 2016.
Provides explanations alongside the question answers, so you do not just get the right answer but, more importantly, you can see how it has been worked out.
Indicates how the marks are distributed so you can see how you can get partial credit for an answer, even is the answer isnt totally correct.
There have been many great and enduring works of literature by Caribbean authors over the last century. The Caribbean Contemporary Classics collection celebrates these deep and vibrant stories, overflowing with life and acute observations about society.
Sunrise Orphanage is a happy place until the great sickness comes to the country, when the ten orphan children are left to fend for themselves. Normal life breaks down, and people do what they can to survive. Threatened with being taken to a labour camp, the children's only alternative is a perilous journey across the island. Sanctuary awaits them at Last Man Peak, but will they be able to reach it? Unforeseen danger waits at every turn. No one can be trusted. The arduous trek would be challenging enough even without the need to avoid capture - capture which would mean the labour camp, or possibly something much worse. The journey, with only their wits and courage to help them, will change their lives for ever.
Suitable for readers aged 11 and above.
There have been many great and enduring works of literature by Caribbean authors over the last century. The Caribbean Contemporary Classics collection celebrates these deep and vibrant stories, overflowing with life and acute observations about society.
Fifteen-year-old Shell tells his story directly and we see things through his eyes - his confused feelings first for Rosalie, and then for Joan, his distress about the illness and death of his father, and his admiration tempered by fear of Mr Gidharee, Rosalie's father. This iconic, universal 'coming of age' novel conveys the confusion of a teenager growing to maturity, and the difficult choices that have to be made. Shell is gradually led out of childhood and into a deeper understanding of the human condition.
Suitable for readers aged 14 and above.