Mark Corner
Goodreads Author
Born
London, The United Kingdom
Member Since
May 2019
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The Pied Piper
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published
1911
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6 editions
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We Were a Handful
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published
1946
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24 editions
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Summer of Caprice
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published
1926
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31 editions
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Of Mice and Mooshaber
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published
1970
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13 editions
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The European Union: An Introduction
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published
2014
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6 editions
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Signs of God: Miracles and their Interpretation
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published
2005
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10 editions
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Discover Prague (BERLITZ DISCOVER SERIES)
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published
1992
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Does God Exist?
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published
1990
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4 editions
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The Binding of Nations: From European Union to World Union
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published
2010
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4 editions
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Death be not Proud: The Problem of the Afterlife
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published
2010
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3 editions
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Mark’s Recent Updates
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Mark Corner
wrote a new blog post
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“The second and third were realised by the presence of American forces in Germany. Certainly they were not strong enough to resist a Soviet invasion, but their presence meant that such an invasion would lead to American casualties and a full-scale world war, which even Stalin did not want.”
― The European Union: An Introduction
― The European Union: An Introduction
“Like the proverbial Pushmi-pullyu of Hugh Lofting’s Doctor Dolittle stories, Westminster feels itself pulled in two directions at once by two different ‘heads’. One minute it worries about losing powers to Brussels. The next minute it worries about losing powers to Edinburgh. One minute it talks about a referendum on whether the UK stays in the EU. The next minute it agrees to a referendum on whether Scotland should stay in the UK. Caught between the two centres of power it sometimes seems to be paralysed. When the Scots claim that they can stay in the EU after leaving the UK, the Prime Minister is the first to warn them that this may not be so. But when they hear his stern lectures to the EU and about a possible ‘Brexit’ (British exit), they may well feel that leaving the UK is actually the only way of ensuring that they stay in the EU. Paradoxically, the more UKIP (the United Kingdom Independence Party) calls for the UK to leave the EU, the more Scots may feel that their safest bet is to leave the UK, leaving UKIP presumably to campaign as the Former United Kingdom Independence Party, a situation which at the very least will give it an unfortunate acronym.”
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