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Lifestyle & personal style guides

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1.
The Little Book of Hygge23 %
Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd
4.3 (7)
₹699
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01 Sep 2016
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Sharir Rachana Evam Kriya Vighyan40 %
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Excellence40 %
Publisher: Rupa Publications
3.6 (7)
₹195
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10 Jan 2017
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THE RISE AND FALL OF THE EMERALD TIGERS TEN YEARS OF RESEARC35 %
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5.
SKIN SENSE: Dr. Kiran's Guide to Being Beautiful35 %
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07 Mar 2022
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Your Life is Your Message: Discovering the Core of Transformational Leadership17 %
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A Gluten-free Diet My Celiac15 %
Publisher: HarperCollins
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09-Mar-18
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Get Gorgeous36 %
3.4 (7)
₹1,121
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20 Sep 2016
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9.
Constructs25 %
Publisher: Bulfinch
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₹1,709
₹1,282
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30 Sep 1985
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10.
Jumping the Broom21 %
Publisher: Henry Holt & Co
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11.
Decorating Ideas40 %
By: NA
Publisher: Na
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12.
Weddings (Everything You Need to Know)42 %
Publisher: Collins
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₹651
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02 Apr 2001
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13.
The Multifacial Book: Make-up for Every Skin-tone Under the Sun40 %
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05 Nov 1987
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14.
Beauty UK (Conran Octopus General)42 %
Publisher: Conran Octopus Ltd
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₹1,908
₹1,107
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15 Oct 2004
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15.
After You! (Good Manners S.)42 %
Publisher: Cherrytree Books
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27 May 2005
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16.
A Place to Wed: Romantic and Exotic Wedding Destinations from Around the World42 %
Publisher: Conran Octopus Ltd
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15 Feb 2006
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17.
Love Your Home42 %
Publisher: Octopus Pub Group
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₹2,241
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01 Oct 2004
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18.
The Rehearsals: The wedding is tomorrow . . . if they can make it through today. An unforgettable romantic comedy36 %
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19.
Look Ten Years Younger, Live Ten Years Longer: A Woman's Guide42 %
Publisher: Prentice Hall
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₹1,312
₹761
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01 Oct 1995
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20.
Mother Natures Guide to Vibrant Beauty & Health, Revise & Expanded42 %
Publisher: Prentice Hall
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LIFESTYLE & PERSONAL STYLE GUIDES BOOKS

  • The Deerslayer, or The First War Path, is the final book in James Fenimore Cooper's Leatherstocking Tales series, published in 1841. In this book, Natty Bumppo is introduced as ""Deerslayer,"" a juvenile outlaw in early 18th-century New York. Deerslayer opposes the practice of scalping, arguing that all living beings should adhere to ""nature's gifts."" Henry March and ""Floating Tom"" Hutter are two individuals that genuinely want to kill people. To slaughter and scalp as many Hurons as they can, Hutter and March sneak into their camp, but they are caught in the process.After Hutter passes away, Judith sets out to identify her biological father, but her investigation only reveals that her deceased mother was of noble lineage and had wed ""Floating Tom"" after an extramarital affair failed. Later, Judith tries to save Deerslayer but is unsuccessful. Finally, everyone is saved when March appears with English troops and massacres the Hurons while terminally wounding Hetty. When Bumppo and Chingachgook revisit the location fifteen years later, they discover Hutt's home in ruins.
  • The Ebb-Tide a trio and Quartette is written by two authors who are Robert Louis Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd Osbourne. The book came out the year Stevenson passed away. In Tahiti's port city of Papeete, there are three beggars at work. They are Huish, a dishonest Cockney with several jobs, Herrick, a failing English businessman, Davis, an embittered American sea captain, and Herrick. One day, a champagne-carrying schooner sailing from San Francisco to Sydney off course lands in port with its crew members dead from smallpox. The American consul hires Davis to take charge of the ship for the duration of its journey because no one else is ready to take a chance on getting sick. Davis introduces the other two guys with a plan to take the ship, sail it to Peru, sell the cargo and ship, and then vanish with the proceeds. Once at sea, Davis and Huish begin consuming the cargo and are drunk virtually the entire time. Herrick, who has no prior experience at sea and whose conscience is much unsettled by the scheme but feels he has no other means to escape poverty, is left on his own to oversee the ship.
  • H. G. Wells wrote and published the book, Ann Veronica a modern love story in 1909. It talks of Ann Veronica Stanley's uprising against her middle-class father's strict patriarchal control as "a young woman of about two-and-twenty." The New Woman's issue in modern society is dramatized in the book. Except for a vacation to the mountains, it takes place in Victorian-era London and its surroundings. Ann Veronica provides snapshots of the British women's suffrage struggle and includes a chapter that was motivated by the suffragettes' failed effort to storm Parliament in 1908. The story revolves around her father who forbids her from attending a ball, she leaves home to live independently. She borrows money from an older man to study and falls in love with Capes, the laboratory's "demonstrator". Due to the heroine's feminist sympathies and the romance Wells was having with Amber Reeves, the woman who served as the inspiration for Ann Veronica, the book caused a sensation when it was released in the autumn of 1909. Even though the book now seems fairly mild-mannered, Ann Veronica was criticized as "capable of poisoning the minds of people who read it" by The Spectator in its day as being a scandalous work.
  • Essentially, this is a collection of three short stories that are connected by a select few common characters. The sum of its parts tells a tale about a person and a location at the same time. The prose is frequently lyrical without being emotional; the characters are sharply defined; and the action is fresh, unorthodox, and free of clichés. This book ought to be mandatory reading for anyone who loves the Old West and wants to know how it actually was. The turquoise blue of the Arizona sky had been filmed over the day as the ring surrounding the sun became thicker. The turquoise blue of the Arizona sky had been filmed over the day as the ring surrounding the sun became thicker. Finally, we came across an adobe home, a fruit tree, and a circular corral widening beneath a rounded hill. With soda biscuits, Charley and Windy Bill welcomed us. The elderly man fit the stereotype of "long hair." He had arrived in the Galiuro Mountains in 1969 and had stayed ever since.
  • Robert W. Service's book of poetry, Ballads of a Cheechako, was first released in 1909. These poems are a fascinating collection of poetic tales of northern gold rush life that provide amazing insights into the lives and perspectives of the men and women of the region. They are a definite must-read for fans of Service's work and will appeal to any poetry lovers. To The Man of the High North, Men of the High North, The Ballad of the Northern Lights, The Ballad of the Black Fox Skin, The Ballad of Pious Pete, The Ballad of Blasphemous Bill, The Ballad of One-Eyed Mike, and many other poems are included in this collection. British-Canadian poet and author Robert William Service are best known for his poems "The Shooting of Dan McGrew" and "The Cremation of Sam McGee." The Ballads of a Cheechako has beautiful poetry that provides amazing conclusions.
  • William Hope Hodgson, an English author, collected occult detective short stories under the title Carnacki the Ghost-Finder.The Grey Room, a chamber in an old mansion, was the scene of a gruesome murder many years ago. He underestimates the strength of the manifestation, and he spends a wretched, terrifying night within his electrified pentacle. In Ireland, a derelict home exhibits paranormal activity, including what seems to be blood falling from the roof. Carnacki assembles a team of strong neighborhood guys and many dogs for the investigation. According to a Celtic tradition, a court jester was once burned to death while whistling in the fireplace of the chamber. The chamber is then completely destroyed, with all of its components being burnt in a blast furnace inside of a protective pentacle that features an old Celtic inscription. There is a female firstborn for the first time in seven generations, and her fiancée has just had her arm shattered by an unidentified attacker. Carnacki looks into a haunting that has occurred at his mother's home. The tenant informs Carnacki about the house's enigmatic past and rumours of a ghostly woman. Carnacki spends the night at the chapel dressed in armour, his camera at the ready to capture any enigmatic occurrences. He had been hearing strange noises all night.
  • Dubliners, a collection of James Joyce's fifteen short stories, was first published in 1914. It provides a realistic portrayal of Irish middle-class life in Dublin and the surrounding area in the early 20th century. When the stories were written, Irish nationalism was at its peak, and there was a huge desire for a sense of national identity and mission. Standing at a nexus of history and culture, Ireland was being jolted by numerous converging ideas and forces. They focus on the paralysis theme and Joyce's concept of an epiphany, which is a character's transformational self-understanding or illumination (Joyce felt Irish nationalism stagnated cultural progression, placing Dublin at the heart of a regressive movement). Following Joyce's categorization of the collection into childhood, adolescence, maturity, and public life, the following stories are written in the third person and deal with the lives and concerns of progressively older individuals. The first three stories in the book are narrated by children. Many of the Dubliner's characters later made cameos in Ulysses by James Joyce.
  • James Oliver Curwood's book Flower of the Night is filled with adventure, intrigue, and love. The author demonstrated the heights of both heroism and baseness as well as the avarice of people that portray lovely love tales of devotion and faith. Philip Whittemore is on an expedition in Flower of the North that takes him up the Churchill River in northern Canada to a place he thought he knew. A mysterious outpost known as Fort o' God, whose occupants and history are shrouded in mystery, is located among the rocks and hills, though, and he has been told that it is called Fort o' God. He learned about this location through Jeanne D'Arcambal and her guardian Pierre, but they withheld a lot of information from him, including their true identities, origins, and murky pasts. He had saved enough money by 1909 to take a trip to the Canadian Northwest, which served as the basis for several of his wild-west adventure tales. Because of the popularity of his works, Curwood was able to write more than thirty of them while spending several months each year in the Yukon and Alaska.
  • American author Max Brand's Gunman's Reckoning is a famous work of western action literature. In the story Gunman's Reckoning, a tough person meets an evil man who has an angel daughter, and the tough guy ends up falling for the bad man. It tells the tale of a vagrant who is assigned the task of making things right and retrieving the gold mine claims she and her father formerly owned. While performing this, he becomes aware that what he was asked to accomplish was not entirely accurate. However, the drifter disregards this since he has found the solution to a long-running desire by accepting this job. It should not be assumed that he approached this situation with a broken heart and a sneery, uncomfortable emotion similar to how a man may be supposed to feel as he prepared to murder a sleeping enemy. Because Lefty did not feel anything like it. Instead, he was overcome by extreme joy. The thought that he was about to get rid of this nuisance could have made him sing with glee. The novel Gunman's Reckoning is a superb illustration of Max Brand's writing. The combination of love, lies, adventure, and humor creates a story that is immensely readable.
  • John Dene of Toronto : arrives in England with a fantastic innovation and plans to bolster the Admiralty. The bureaucrats in Whitehall, where, in his words, most of the roles are held by those ""whose great-grandfathers had a lovely manner of saying how-do-you-do to a prince,"" is confused and embarrassed by his directness and unusual techniques. Suddenly, John Dene vanishes, and an offer of £20,000 for information about him astounds the whole civilized world. Thousands of calls and reams of letters have left Scotland Yard disorganized.Dorothy wondered what she would do without John Dene. He was her boss, and when he returned to Canada in a few months, she would never see him again. She awoke weeping one morning from a dream in which she had boarded a boat headed for Canada. The Government grows concerned when questions are raised in the House, but only Department Z maintains its composure. What happened to Toronto native John Dene.

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