02452nam 22004453u 450 991015745230332120230807205554.00-7551-3798-1(CKB)3710000000534809(EBL)4187748(MiAaPQ)EBC7298504(Au-PeEL)EBL7298504(OCoLC)935249495(EXLCZ)99371000000053480920151221d2015|||| u|| |engur|n|---|||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierA Sharp Rise in Crime1st ed.Looe, Cornwall House of Stratus20151 online resource (113 p.)Inspector West ;v.43Description based upon print version of record.0-7551-3630-6 Cover Page -- John Creasey - Master Storyteller -- Inspector West Series -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Chapter One: The Man Who Looked Like West -- Chapter Two: Majority Report -- Chapter Three: Orders -- Chapter Four: Search -- Chapter Five: Reunion -- Chapter Six: Joy to Anger -- Chapter Seven: Blow Hot, Blow Cold? -- Chapter Eight: Evidence or Proof? -- Chapter Nine: Steps -- Chapter Ten: Impersonation - Dead or Alive -- Chapter Eleven: Chase and Scramble -- Chapter Twelve: Intensive Care -- Chapter Thirteen: The Fourth Attack -- Chapter Fourteen: Three Days' 'Rest' -- Chapter Fifteen: Tension of Waiting -- Chapter Sixteen: The Switch -- Chapter Seventeen: Recall -- Chapter Eighteen: No Time Like The Present -- Chapter Nineteen: The Long Arm of the Police -- Chapter Twenty: Things That Happen -- John Creasey -- Gideon's Day -- Gideon's Fire -- The Creepers -- The House of the Bears -- Introducing the Toff.A deception is planned to try and stop corruption and deal with vice crimes that reach up to the highest levels. Scotland Yard announces its best detective, Roger West, is dead. The story is credible, as West has recently been the target of would-be assassins. Meanwhile, West attempts to penetrate the circles in which the conspirators operate.Inspector WestInspector West Inspector West, 43 Creasey John1374134AU-PeELAU-PeELAU-PeELBOOK9910157452303321A Sharp Rise in Crime3407049UNINA04212nam 2200553z- 450 991050430750332120250326152202.097823749613302374961338(CKB)5590000000629396(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/72295(PPN)271623853(EXLCZ)99559000000062939620||||||d2020 |y 0freurmn|---annantxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierGrandes et petites mythologiesI - Monts et abîmes : des dieux et des hommesReimsEPURE, Éditions et presses universitaires de Reims20201 electronic resource (368 p.)9782374961194 2374961192 If the "great" mythology, the Olympian one in particular, has always been studied by scholars, the same cannot be said of the "small" mythology (a name attributed to the Grimm brothers): readily relegated to the nursery and the sphere of children, an almost universal consensus considers it to be a "sub-genre", even though it is the repository of a mythical and poetic memory that is just as precious as that of its classical "sister". The oral traditions, conveyed in particular by the tales, represent an inexhaustible breeding ground of patterns which very often join, by the structure, the themes and the meanings, the "great" mythology: the two maintain intimate relations, speak the same language, it is true with multiple variants, but with the same great heart. The main objective of the works gathered in this volume is to highlight this ancestral memory and to build bridges between the two continents of "scholarly" and "popular" culture, wrongly separated by an invisible frontier that has long been considered impervious. But a "learned" theme almost always has its "popular" counterpart, and vice versa... Si la « grande » mythologie, l’olympienne en particulier, est depuis toujours l’enfant chéri des savants et la muse des artistes, il n’en va pas de même avec la « petite » mythologie (dénomination attribuée aux frères Grimm) : volontiers reléguée dans la chambre des nourrices et la sphère des enfants, un consensus quasi ­universel la considère comme un « ­sous-genre » alors qu’en réalité, elle est dépositaire d’une mémoire mythique et poétique aussi précieuse que sa grande sœur classique. Les traditions orales, véhiculées en particulier par les contes, représentent un vivier inépuisable de motifs qui rejoignent bien souvent, par la structure, les thématiques et les signifiances, la « grande » mythologie : les deux entretiennent des relations intimes, parlent un même langage, il est vrai aux variantes multiples, mais au même grand cœur. L’objectif principal des travaux réunis dans ce volume est de porter non seulement à la lumière du jour toute cette mémoire ancestrale, mais d’établir des ponts entre les deux continents du « savant » et du « populaire », à tort séparés par une frontière invisible et longtemps considérée comme étanche : une thématique « savante » a presque toujours son pendant « populaire », et inversement.Grandes et petites mythologies. I. Monts et abîmesGrandes et petites mythologiesAncient religions & mythologiesbicsscCeltic religion & mythologybicsscWitchcraftbicsscLiterary studies: classical, early & medievalbicsscEuropebicsscMythologyLiteraturePopular cultureReligionAncient religions & mythologiesCeltic religion & mythologyWitchcraftLiterary studies: classical, early & medievalEuropeUeltschi Karinedt223086Verdon FloreedtUeltschi KarinothVerdon FloreothBOOK9910504307503321Grandes et petites mythologies3025611UNINA