Confusion

  • Confusion: The Making of the Australian Two-Party System
    By Nicholas Dyrenfurth

    Deakin refused, and on 23 April 1904 Watson took office. Amid howls from the conservative press, Watson declared that his government would govern 'in the interests of the whole people'.24 Watson's four-month administration passed just ...

  • Confusion
    By J. Sarah Duflo

    J. Sarah Duflo. friend around the farm again. It ended up the boy JoAnn's cousin wanted JoAnn to date for was one ... Actually I really only remember the names of two of her cousins, this one was Keith and her other cousin was Johnny.

  • Confusion
    By Elizabeth Jane Howard

    Filled with profound reflections on a country torn apart by war and intimate glances into the lives of those left behind, this is a must-read novel for fans of Downton Abbey and lovers of wartime historical fiction.

  • Confusion
    By Stefan Zweig

    An NYRB Classics Original Stefan Zweig was particularly drawn to the novella, and Confusion, a rigorous and yet transporting dramatization of the conflict between the heart and the mind, is among his supreme achievements in the form.

  • Confusion
    By J. Sarah Duflo

    Joann sat shocked and then said she did love me but she needed time to think about Sarah and me. Ann told me to go out to the creek while she and Joann discuss the situation alone. I left the house knowing I had lost the love of my life ...

  • Confusion
    By Stefan Zweig

    A new pocket edition of this tale of intense friendship and suppressed passion from the master of the novella

  • Confusion: Nothing Is What It Seems
    By Peter De Vos

    Confusion is the first book in Peter de Vos’ ‘Nothing Is What It Seems’ four-part series, a gritty crime drama with erotic and mystic undertones.

  • Confusion
    By Stefan Zweig

    In the autumn of his days, a distinguished privy councillor contemplates his past and looks back at the key moments of his life.

  • Confusion
    By Joseph L. CAMP

    Camp rejects this notion; his fundamental claim is that confusion is not a mental state. To attribute confusion to someone is to take up a paternalistic stance in evaluating his reasoning.