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Emma Hart

    Emma Hart est une auteure à succès, réputée pour ses récits intelligents et pleins d'esprit, débordant de répliques cinglantes et sarcastiques, mais aussi de beaucoup de cœur... et de sexe. Son style d'écriture se caractérise par un humour pince-sans-rire qui complète sa capacité à créer des récits captivants. Hart se concentre sur l'offre d'histoires qui sont non seulement divertissantes, mais aussi émotionnellement parlantes pour ses lecteurs. Elle ajoute souvent des rebondissements inattendus, éliminant parfois même des personnages pour maintenir la dynamique de l'intrigue.

    Emma Hart
    Building Charleston
    Trading Spaces: The Colonial Marketplace and the Foundations of American Capitalism
    Dead and Breakfast (The Fox Point Files, #1)
    The Dating Experiment
    The Hook-Up Experiment
    4 jours de folie
    • 4 jours de folie

      • 213pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      3,8(37)Évaluer

      Imaginez la situation : vous êtes sur le point de quitter incognito l'appartement du garçon avec lequel vous venez de passer la nuit. Quand, soudain, vous décidez de laisser votre numéro de téléphone. L'instant d'après, vous vous retrouvez face à une omelette et un café et vous demandez au bel inconnu d'être votre faux petit ami pour le mariage de votre sœur le week-end suivant. C'est comme ça que Poppy arrive au mariage de sa sœur au bras d'un garçon dont elle ne sait rien. Ni son nom de famille, ni comment elle l'a rencontré, ni où il a grandi, ce qu'il a étudié à l'université, ni combien de frères et sœurs il a. Elle ne sait pas non plus que c'est Adam Winters, la star de l'équipe de hockey d'Orlando, qui s'avère être le joueur préféré de son père, mais aussi l'idole de son petit-neveu. Et là, c'est parti pour quatre jours de quiproquos, de malentendus, de situations ubuesques que Poppy et Adam vont devoir gérer tant bien que mal. Et si ce petit jeu les rapprochait... Une comédie romantique drôle et pleine de rebondissements.

      4 jours de folie
    • The Hook-Up Experiment

      • 262pages
      • 10 heures de lecture
      3,6(7)Évaluer

      1.Hate-screw my high school nemesis.2.Remember to hate him.3.Prove my brother wrong.It should be easy.It isn’t.As the owner of Pick-A-D*ck, New Orleans’ premier hook-up website, my job is simple. Connect two people for a no-strings, no-expectations hook-up. The plus for my clients is that I’m the one who gets to sift through the d*ck pics—except this time, they're required.My problem? My brother, co-owner of Pick-A-D*ck’s sister dating site, doesn’t believe it’s possible to hook up with someone three times and not fall in love. I disagree. I know it’s possible.And my disagreement is exactly how I end up reconnected with my high school nemesis, Elliott Sloane. The guy who asked me to junior prom and then stood me up. Who egged my car when I rejected him, and convinced my senior homecoming date to ghost me. It should be easy to hate-screw him. If only he was still that person, instead of a hot-as-hell single dad, working as a builder to make ends’ meet, fighting for custody of his daughter. Three hook-ups.One outcome.Right?(The Hook-Up Experiment is book one of the Experiment series and is a STANDALONE. If you've read The Upside to Being Single, this is Peyton's story.)

      The Hook-Up Experiment
    • The Dating Experiment

      • 252pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      3,1(9)Évaluer

      1.Get over my best friend’s brother.2.Remember that I’m over him.3.Prove I can date other people.It should be easy.It’s not.Setting up a dating website with the guy I’ve been in love with since I was five wasn’t my smartest idea.Especially since he’s my best friend’s brother—thankfully, she’s okay with the fact I’m pulling a Sandy and I’m hopelessly devoted to him.Which is why it’s time to get over him.So I do something crazy and ask Dominic Austin to find me a date. He does—if I find him one, too.Since we own Stupid Cupid, it should be easy, right? And it is.My date is perfect. His date is perfect. Everything is perfect. Until he kisses me…Three dates.One kiss.And a big-ass mess…

      The Dating Experiment
    • From New York Times bestselling author, Emma Hart, comes an addictive new romcom mystery series that fans of her Holly Woods Files series will adore. It's all the heat, heart, and snark you love-just deadly. Welcome to Fox Point-not everyone leaves this town alive. I remember the first time I ever saw Detective Inspector Noah George. We were seven, stupid, and he threw sand in my eye. I'm pretty sure that's when I fell in love with him. Hey-I did say I was stupid. Summers in Fox Point, my grandfather's seaside hometown, were all we had together. Then we turned eighteen, life happened, and he never spoke to me again. Until my grandfather's death calls me back to the small town, only for his lawyer to tell me he's left me my family's dilapidated bed and breakfast that was home to many things-my first sleepover party, where my grandma taught me to cross-stitch, my first kiss with Noah... And apparently, my first dead body. My name is Lottie O'Neil, and I'm on the hook for the murder of a man I've barely met. And the one who'll have to arrest me is the only man I've ever loved. Unless I find the real killer first.

      Dead and Breakfast (The Fox Point Files, #1)
    • The book explores the transformation of the marketplace from a physical location to a conceptual framework that shaped the early American economy. Emma Hart highlights Britain's colonization of North America as pivotal in this evolution, leading to a more liberated form of capitalism. By examining various trading venues of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, such as shops and auction sites, Hart illustrates how these spaces fostered new trade practices and contributed to the development of a market economy resembling today's systems.

      Trading Spaces: The Colonial Marketplace and the Foundations of American Capitalism
    • Building Charleston

      Town and Society in the Eighteenth-Century British Atlantic World

      • 288pages
      • 11 heures de lecture

      Focusing on the colonial era, this comprehensive study explores Charleston's rapid growth from 1700 to 1775, highlighting its significance as the largest city in the American South. It examines the city's pivotal role in shaping South Carolina and the broader British Atlantic, providing insights into its development and influence during a critical period in early American history.

      Building Charleston
    • This Element, traces the emergence of the Atlantic city as a site of contact, an agent of colonization, a central node in networks of exchange, and an arena of political contestation. Cities of the Atlantic World operated at the juncture of many of the core processes in a global history of capitalism and of rising social and racial inequality.

      Early Modern Atlantic Cities
    • This book constitutes the thoroughly refereed post-conference proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Bio-Inspired Models of Network, Information, and Computing Systems (Bionetics). The event took place in the city of York, UK, in December 2011. Bionetics main objective is to bring bio-inspired paradigms into computer engineering and networking, and to enhance the fruitful interactions between these fields and biology. The papers of the conference were accepted in 2 categories: full papers and work-in progress. Full papers describe significant advances in the Bionetics field, while work-in-progress papers present an opportunity to discuss breaking research which is currently being evaluated. The topics are ranging from robotic coordination to attack detection in peer-to-peer networks, biological mechanisms including evolution, flocking and artificial immune systems, and nano-scale communication and networking.

      Bio-inspired models of network, information, and computing systems