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Books with author Robert E.

  • Deep Change: Discovering the Leader Within

    Robert E. Quinn

    eBook (Jossey-Bass, March 11, 2008)
    Don't let your company kill you! Open this book at your own risk. It contains ideas that may lead to a profound self-awakening. An introspective journey for those in the trenches of today's modern organizations, Deep Change is a survival manual for finding our own internal leadership power. By helping us learn new ways of thinking and behaving, it shows how we can transform ourselves from victims to powerful agents of change. And for anyone who yearns to be an internally driven leader, to motivate the people around them, and return to a satisfying work life, Deep Change holds the key.
  • McGraw-Hill's Conquering the New GRE Math

    Robert E. Moyer

    eBook (McGraw-Hill Education, )
    None
  • What's Smaller Than a Pygmy Shrew?

    Robert E. Wells

    language (Albert Whitman & Company, Jan. 1, 1995)
    This book is specially designed in Amazon's fixed-layout KF8 format with region magnification. Double-tap on an area of text to zoom and read. A pygmy shrew is among the tiniest of mammals. A ladybug is even smaller. But in this book you will find small things you could not ordinarily see.
  • McGraw-Hill's Conquering the New GRE Math

    Robert E. Moyer

    Paperback (McGraw-Hill Education, )
    None
  • How Do You Know What Time It Is?

    Robert E. Wells

    Paperback (INDPB, Jan. 1, 2002)
    What would life be like with no clocks and no calendars? How would you know when to get up in the morning? Long, long ago, all people could do was watch the sun and moon and try to figure things out. Eventually, they made simple clocks like sundials.
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  • Quests of the Kings: The Quests of the Kings Trilogy - Book One

    Robert Evert

    eBook (Diversion Books, )
    None
  • Can You Count to a Googol?

    Robert E. Wells

    Paperback (INDPB, Jan. 1, 2000)
    You may be able to count all the way to one hundred, but have you ever counted to a googol? It's impossible! In this fun book of numbers, Robert E. Wells explores the wonderful world of zeros and tells how the googol came to be named.
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  • What's Faster Than a Speeding Cheetah?

    Robert E. Wells

    eBook (Albert Whitman & Company, Jan. 1, 1997)
    This book is specially designed in Amazon's fixed-layout KF8 format with region magnification. Double-tap on an area of text to zoom and read. What's faster than a cheetah?--no animal on earth can run faster. But a peregrine falcon can swoop faster than a cheetah can run. And the falcon can't compare to an airplane, a rocket, or the speed of light.
  • Wild Kingdoms

    Robert Earl

    eBook (Black Library, Nov. 15, 2016)
    Florin and Lorenzo journey across the vast wilderness beyond the Empire in search of a rich merchant's daughter who disappeared many years ago. A straightforward rescue mission becomes rather more dangerous when they journey into the heart of the Ogre Kingdoms.
  • Blackbeard the Pirate: A Reappraisal of His Life and Times

    Robert E. Lee

    Paperback (Blair, Jan. 1, 1974)
    Edward Teach, better known as Blackbeard, was one of the most notorious pirates ever to plague the Atlantic coast. He was also one of the most colorful pirates of all time, becoming the model for countless blood-and-thunder tales of sea rovers. His daring exploits, personal courage, terrifying appearance, and fourteen wives made him a legend in his own lifetime. The legends and myths about Blackbeard have become wilder rather than tamer in the 250 years since his gory but valiant death at Ocracoke Inlet. It is difficult for historians, and all but impossible for the general reader, to separate fact from fiction. Author Robert E. Lee has studied virtually every scrap of information available about the pirate and his contemporaries in an attempt to find the real Blackbeard. The result is a fascinating and authoritative study that reads like an exciting swashbuckler. Lee goes beyond the myths and the image Teach so carefully cultivated to reveal a new Blackbeard―infinitely more interesting as a man than as a legend. In the process, he has captured the spirit and character of a vanished age, "the golden age of piracy." Robert E. Lee was a former law professor who traced his own ancestry to a possible link with Blackbeard. A native of Kinston, North Carolina, he earned degrees from Wake Forest, Columbia, and Duke universities. The author of sixteen law books, Lee wrote the newspaper column "This is the Law".
  • Polar Bear, Why Is Your World Melting?

    Robert E. Wells

    eBook (Albert Whitman & Company, Sept. 1, 2008)
    This book is specially designed in Amazon's fixed-layout KF8 format with region magnification. Double-tap on an area of text to zoom and read. In the Arctic, the summer ice is melting, making it hard for polar bears to survive. Why is the world getting warmer? The heat of the sun is trapped by the "greenhouse" gases that surround Earth--carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, and water vapor.
  • Blackbeard the Pirate: A Reappraisal of His Life and Times

    Robert E. Lee

    eBook (Blair, Jan. 1, 1974)
    Edward Teach, better known as Blackbeard, was one of the most notorious pirates ever to plague the Atlantic coast. He was also one of the most colorful pirates of all time, becoming the model for countless blood-and-thunder tales of sea rovers. His daring exploits, personal courage, terrifying appearance, and fourteen wives made him a legend in his own lifetime. The legends and myths about Blackbeard have become wilder rather than tamer in the 250 years since his gory but valiant death at Ocracoke Inlet. It is difficult for historians, and all but impossible for the general reader, to separate fact from fiction. Author Robert E. Lee has studied virtually every scrap of information available about the pirate and his contemporaries in an attempt to find the real Blackbeard. The result is a fascinating and authoritative study that reads like an exciting swashbuckler. Lee goes beyond the myths and the image Teach so carefully cultivated to reveal a new Blackbeard—infinitely more interesting as a man than as a legend. In the process, he has captured the spirit and character of a vanished age, "the golden age of piracy."Robert E. Lee was a former law professor who traced his own ancestry to a possible link with Blackbeard. A native of Kinston, North Carolina, he earned degrees from Wake Forest, Columbia, and Duke universities. The author of sixteen law books, Lee wrote the newspaper column "This is the Law".