Margaret Skea's fascination with 16th Century history led to her debut novel,
Turn of the Tide, which won the Historical Fiction prize in the 2011 HarperCollins/Alan Titchmarsh People's Novelist Competition.
So because Dubai residents have been at the mercy of some of the worst landlords and excruciatingly exorbitant rents for more than a decade, the
turn of the tide suits Kipp very well indeed.
They are featured with three colour films shot for the council,
Turn of the Tide, Liverpool Sounding and Rates for the Job, from the mid-1960s.
Those who have never experienced it will be surprised at the speed of a rising tide and an important point to remember is that the fastest tide flow occurs three to four hours after the
turn of the tide - usually about the time that the wildfowler comes into contact with it.
Having failed to secure distribution for a religious film called The
Turn of the Tide, he began his own production, distribution and exhibition of films in 1933.
The consolidation and the emergence of the new Green Federation in the coming months may well mean a very positive
turn of the tide.
Among his novels are Gallions Reach (1927), All Our Yesterdays (1930), and Morning Light (1946), but he is perhaps better known for his travel books: London River (1921), The
Turn of the Tide (1945), and Malay Waters (1950).
Sources: Bryant, Sir Arthur, The
Turn of the Tide, 1939-43.
"I've been working dead hard on my snooker and getting nothing for it but it's the turn of a new year so maybe it's the
turn of the tide."
The weather was fine with a light wind that eased at the
turn of the tide.
But hopefully the National Assembly's decision to provide up to pounds 3m to preserve the ship recently unearthed in Newport signals the
turn of the tide.
"The dolphins were just waiting for the
turn of the tide before moving in to snap up the salmon.