“The Furies make pleasingly vicious villains” (Kirkus Reviews) in this second book of a chilling paranormal trilogy where revenge rules the day—and “sorry” isn’t going to cut it. Spring is coming, and the ice is slowly melting in Ascension…revealing the secrets buried beneath. Emily Winters knows the Furies have roots in Ascension, Maine—but she’s about to discover that they’re deeper than she ever imagined. With the help of her new friend Drea, she vows to dig them out. But it’s hard to focus when she’s desperate to make up with JD, and to figure out why Crow, a mysterious Ascension High dropout, seems to be shadowing her. Meanwhile, new girl Skylar McVoy is determined to leave her own dark past behind. So she’s thrilled when popular Gabby takes her under her wing, and the stunning and sophisticated Meg offers to give her a major makeover. But everyone knows what happens to the vainest girl of all… It’s tempting to be naughty. But beware: the Furies are always watching, and their power grows stronger by the day.
Envy was first published in German in 1966, then in an English translation in 1970. This classic study is one of the few books to explore extensively the many facets of envy--"a drive which lies at the core of man's life as a social being.
The best-selling author of Snobbery: The American Verson offers a lively, philosophical treatise on the deadly sin of envy, examining the diverse faces and manifestations of envy, the thoughts of the great philosophers, and discussing the ...
It's rare for an unsolicited manuscript to pique her interest, but a new submission with blockbuster potential inspires her to search for the book's elusive author.
Jealousy and envy permeate the practice of psychoanalytic and psychotherapeutic work.
This book introduces envy theory, a conceptual exploration of hypotheses and conjectures about the mind's fundamental cognitive and emotional makeup.
The analyst Melanie Klein believed that even infants feel envy . She theorized that infants envy their mothers ' ability to give food . Although not everyone agrees with Klein , most people who study child development think envy does ...
This volume includes chapters from nearly every major contributor to the psychological literature in this area.
The book explores the role of envy in society and its nature as a social emotion that is deeply concerned with both the self and others.
Huxley's Evolution and Ethics with New Essays on Its Wctorian and Sociobiological Context, ed. James Paradis and George C. Williams (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1989), p. 85. 44. Waters, “A Chapter on Ideals,” p. 566.
It's Manhattan, 1899, and all of society is eagerly watching the Hollands, the Hayeses, and the Schoonmakers to see what kind of drama the great families' sons and daughters will stir up next.