Browse all books

Books with author HTR Williams

  • Don't Let The Pigeon Drive The Bus!

    Mo Williams

    Paperback (Scholastic Inc., March 15, 2003)
    book about don't let the Pigion drive the Bus
  • Capitalism and Slavery

    Williams

    Paperback (The University of North Carolina Press, Oct. 14, 1994)
    Slavery helped finance the Industrial Revolution in England. Plantation owners, shipbuilders, and merchants connected with the slave trade accumulated vast fortunes that established banks and heavy industry in Europe and expanded the reach of capitalism worldwide. Eric Williams advanced these powerful ideas in Capitalism and Slavery, published in 1944. Years ahead of its time, his profound critique became the foundation for studies of imperialism and economic development. Binding an economic view of history with strong moral argument, Williams's study of the role of slavery in financing the Industrial Revolution refuted traditional ideas of economic and moral progress and firmly established the centrality of the African slave trade in European economic development. He also showed that mature industrial capitalism in turn helped destroy the slave system. Establishing the exploitation of commercial capitalism and its link to racial attitudes, Williams employed a historicist vision that set the tone for future studies. In a new introduction, Colin Palmer assesses the lasting impact of Williams's groundbreaking work and analyzes the heated scholarly debates it generated when it first appeared.
  • Fifty Things You Need to Know About World History

    Hugh Williams

    eBook (Collins, Sept. 2, 2010)
    What are the key 50 events you really need to understand to grasp the developments of our world?In this highly entertaining read Hugh Williams distils world history into an insightful overview. By selecting fifty key people, places, battles, objects and events, he casts a clear eye over the way the world has developed and how we live today.Injecting life into familiar historical landmarks as well as bringing lesser-known events to the forefront, Hugh shapes the fifty things into themes as all-encompassing today as they were over two thousand years ago: wealth, religion, conquest, discovery and freedom.The Fifty Things include…Origin of SpeciesModel T FordThe Russian RevolutionPlatoConquest of MexicoMao Tse TungCrucifixion of JesusVia EgnatiaWorldwide webOzymandias9/11Nelson MandelaCoronation of CharlemagneAmerican Declaration of IndependenceFranco-Prussian WarMahabharataThe Black DeathAnd many more…
  • Moonscript

    H.S.J. Williams

    eBook (Trillium Press, May 7, 2020)
    "It is said that Darkness is empty and whatever vanishes into its depths is lost forever. I know this better than anyone. For I have suffered here in the shadows, and there are none who might find me.”Seventy years. Seventy years the elven prince has been lost to the darkness, assumed dead by his people and endlessly broken for a book that connects to the hidden realm of his ancestors, a land untouched by evil.And now a light in the shadows. A chance for freedom. But those willing to help him come from the unlikeliest of worlds.The orphan girl, yearning for a loving family, and the boy who won’t leave her side. A healer maiden given an unexpected chance for a life beyond narrowed expectations. A grieving creature flown far from home.They all search for something and now their fates are tied to his. If their quest for life can pull him from the dark mire in which his soul drowns, then perhaps he can be saved.Or else he will drag them all down to a fate worse than death.The beginning of an epic saga, MOONSCRIPT is a journey of innocence, despair, and redemption.
  • Diatomaceous Earth: The Humdrum Life of the Lackadaisical Barry: A Field Guide for the Birds

    H. Williams

    eBook (Perry Wynkle Publishing, Dec. 16, 2016)
    Summer is winding down and strange days have hit the town of Needles, Massachusetts. Barry Drinkwater, a pool-boy for his parents, is unsure how to proceed when cryptic messages land in his lap while floating in the backyard. Whenever Barry thinks he is alone, he catches someone spying on him from behind shrubbery, gazing at him from around the corner, or peering at him over a newspaper. Then, one day, he happens upon a peculiar help wanted ad: an open position for a Courtroom Abstract Artist via Mirro Enterprises. Meanwhile, his guilt-ridden, morbid, and eccentric friend, Wayne, is obsessed with preparing for the impending apocalypse and introduces Barry to a fantastical realm – a realm that raises more questions than answers. While pursuing the truth, Barry finds himself haunting the local cemetery, wandering through an abandoned mental hospital, and exploring a mysterious highway off-ramp. Important questions remain: Can Barry exist as a pool boy forever? Will Wayne perish as he fears? Will their fates intertwine? And, most importantly, what is the story behind Exit-Thirty-Three-B?
  • The Restless Northwest: A Geological Story

    Hill Williams

    Paperback (Washington State Univ Pr, March 1, 2002)
    In an easy conversational style, The Restless Northwest provides a brief overview of the remarkable geological processes that have shaped the Pacific Northwest. The narrative also is sprinkled with firsthand accounts of the people involved in recent exciting scientific discoveries. Williams enlivens this story of long-ago geologic events with a variety of fascinating asides, on everything from enormous undersea tubeworms to the Willamette meteorite.
  • INFJ and Driving Jobs: Why You Can, And Why You'll Love It!

    HTR Williams

    language (HTR Williams, Jan. 23, 2020)
    **Written by an INFJ who’s worked for years as a professional driver . . . and loved it!**Are you an INFJ who feels stuck in first gear, wondering which direction to go in life? This book is a road map, offering an alternative route.Driving work might be an unexpected way to help better engage all the rare, unique power that’s supposedly lurking under your INFJ bonnet.It’s simply not true that INFJs can’t become excellent drivers, or that people designated ‘Sensing’ types by MBTI theory make better drivers.Whether you’ve already considered driving as a possible occupation, or you’re simply struggling for ideas, if you enjoy driving, there’s no good reason why you couldn’t start driving for a living. Find out why with this book.You’ll discover:•Why driving jobs can be a great way to support your creative vocation, further study, meaningful volunteer work, or a spiritual calling•How you can gain more confidence if you’re a nervous INFJ driver•The main reasons why driving for a living is suited to the INFJ temperament•The main obstacles you’ll likely face if working in the transport industry Informed by MBTI theory and quality research, you’ll get a realistic idea of what it’s like to be an INFJ working as a professional driver, ‘straight from the horse’s mouth.’You won’t get slowed down by pages full of annoying, redundant ‘filler’ content, hollow self-help platitudes, or a mash-up of information already freely available to everyone on the internet.Peppered with useful insights and anecdotes from the author’s lived experience, INFJ and Driving Jobs is a great way to start a journey which could grow your self-esteem and enable your ultimate goals. About the author: HTR Williams is an award-winning writer and former journalist with an interest in depth psychology stretching back more than a decade. Other works include INFJ and Journalism: Is This the Right Career For You? and Vampires Analysed. You can also check out his You Tube channel, Psyche Tree.
  • Moonscript

    H.S.J. Williams

    Paperback (Trillium Press, May 7, 2020)
    "It is said that Darkness is empty and whatever vanishes into its depths is lost forever. I know this better than anyone. For I have suffered here in the shadows, and there are none who might find me.”Seventy years. Seventy years the elven prince has been lost to the darkness, assumed dead by his people and endlessly broken for a book that connects to the hidden realm of his ancestors, a land untouched by evil.And now a light in the shadows. A chance for freedom. But those willing to help him come from the unlikeliest of worlds.The orphan girl, yearning for a loving family, and the boy who won’t leave her side. A healer maiden given an unexpected chance for a life beyond narrowed expectations. A grieving creature flown far from home.They all search for something and now their fates are tied to his. If their quest for life can pull him from the dark mire in which his soul drowns, then perhaps he can be saved.Or else he will drag them all down to a fate worse than death.The beginning of an epic saga, MOONSCRIPT is a journey of innocence, despair, and redemption. Seven illustrations by the author exclusively included in the paperback edition!
  • With The Border Ruffians

    R H Williams

    eBook (Endeavour Compass, April 18, 2017)
    Those who have not personally watched the growth of that marvellous country cannot realise the changes those fifty years have wrought, so long in a man’s life, so short a span in a nation’s history.In the summer of 1831, Robert Hamilton Williams was born to the family of a country clergyman – yet he was not destined to continue the religious tradition of his father and the quiet life in England never called him. Starting as a Liverpool seaman aged seventeen, enduring brutal captains, a dislocated shoulder and a near fatal bout of scurvy, he remained undaunted in his pursuit of adventure on the high seas. After a period of hospitalisation in Cork and a short farming apprenticeship, he departed for Adelaide and then Virginia, where his journey truly began.On arrival in Western Virginia, he encountered farmers living in near total isolation, leading a pastoral life, far from the cities and towns he grew up with. Clothes were spun and food was hunted, but this simple life didn’t hold Williams for long as he was always chasing his next voyage. He then found himself in the wildest of the Wild West, fighting for his life in Kansas in the prelude to the Great War of Secession where murder and lawlessness prevailed. He was forced to commit acts which would change his outlook forever. Witnessing the gold rush, ranch life in Texas, fighting with the Commanchés, the fierce Indian tribes practising scalping warfare in the Indian country, his story ends in 1865 with the close of the American Civil War. With the Border Ruffians is a remarkable true tale of courage and discovery from a time of frontier gun-slinging, now lost to the past. It is the life of a youth thirsting for adventure who became a man during one of the most exciting and transformative times in American history.Robert Hamilton Williams was a lieutenant in the Kansas Rangers and went on to become a captain in the Texan Rangers.
  • Diatomaceous Earth: The Humdrum Life of the Lackadaisical Barry: A Field Guide for the Birds

    H. Williams

    Paperback (Perry Wynkle Publishing, Nov. 11, 2016)
    Summer is winding down and strange days have hit the town of Needles, Massachusetts. Barry Drinkwater, a pool-boy for his parents, is unsure how to proceed when cryptic messages land in his lap while floating in the backyard. Whenever Barry thinks he is alone, he catches someone spying on him from behind shrubbery, gazing at him from around the corner, or peering at him over a newspaper. Then, one day, he happens upon a peculiar help wanted ad: an open position for a Courtroom Abstract Artist via Mirro Enterprises. Meanwhile, his guilt-ridden, morbid, and eccentric friend, Wayne, is obsessed with preparing for the impending apocalypse and introduces Barry to a fantastical realm – a realm that raises more questions than answers. While pursuing the truth, Barry finds himself haunting the local cemetery, wandering through an abandoned mental hospital, and exploring a mysterious highway off-ramp. Important questions remain: Can Barry exist as a pool boy forever? Will Wayne perish as he fears? Will their fates intertwine? And, most importantly, what is the story behind Exit-Thirty-Three-B?
  • Saraland

    GL Williams

    Paperback (CADEJANT Media & Entertainment, Dec. 6, 2019)
    Amanda Jane Rush didn't plan to be a New York socialite. But here she was, owner of a beauty and fashion boutique, living in a cute, cozy bachelorette pad in SoHo that was the envy of her friends, and sharing life with her lovable dog. But when an unexpected letter arrives, she is reluctantly summoned back to a place she fought hard to forget, and to the family that she abandoned long ago. She hasn’t seen or talked to her mother, family and friends in a decade. With coaxing from her squad, she returns to Alabama to discover that everything she knew growing up had changed, her family was keeping scandalous secrets, and everything she knew was a total lie. Saraland is a sweeping, sexy, humorous story about friends, family, loss, love and identity, and how one woman's world is completely turned inside out.
  • Personal Reminiscences of Charles Haddon Spurgeon

    William Williams

    language (, June 4, 2018)
    The author, William Williams, became pastor at Upton Chapel, Lambuth, in 1877. He was a close friend of C. H. Spurgeon. In his introduction to the book, Williams stated, “I do not propose to write another life of Mr. Spurgeon. I propose writing of the great preacher as I knew him, and as I saw him, under a great variety of circumstances and conditions; giving, I trust, no offence in anything, that this ministry be not blamed. I hope in the ensuing chapters each reader may participate to some extent in the joy I experienced when in company with one of the master minds and most gracious characters of this or indeed of any age.” Williams also complied a book of sermons: Upton Chapel Sermons. A Centenary Memorial, which was published in 1885. Charles Haddon Spurgeon wrote the Foreword.