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A First Course in Game ProgrammingMost of today's commercial games
are written in C++ and are created using a game engine. Addressing
both of these key elements, Programming 2D Games provides a
complete, up-to-date introduction to game programming. All of the
code in the book was carefully crafted using C++. As game
programming techniques are introduced, students learn how to
incorporate them into their own game engine and discover how to use
the game engine to create a complete game. Enables Students to
Create 2D GamesThe text covers sprites, animation, collision
detection, sound, text display, game dashboards, special graphic
effects, tiled games, and network programming. It systematically
explains how to program DirectX applications and emphasizes proper
software engineering techniques. Every topic is explained
theoretically and with working code examples. The example programs
for each chapter are available at www.programming2dgames.com.
Dan J. Marlowe (1914-1986), author of The Name of the Game is
Death, was one of the finest paperback suspense novelists of the
1960s and 1970s, so good that Stephen King dedicated a book to him.
But Marlowe's life was full of strange drama, some featuring his
friendship with bank robber Al Nussbaum, a partner of the murderous
sociopath Bobby "One-Eye" Wilcoxson. This biography interweaves the
stories of Nussbaum, who became a mystery-story writer, Wilcoxson,
who committed a savage murder after being released from prison, and
Marlowe, who, stricken with amnesia, was haunted by the ghosts of
his past, some of whom roamed the world of kinky sex. Book contains
16 photos.
"Fantastic...This biography is almost as wild, compelling, dark
and surprising as one of Marlowe's books...Highly recommended "-Lee
Goldberg, author and TV writer/producer who has scripted Diagnosis:
Murder, Monk, Hunter and Spenser: For Hire.
"A brilliant biography of the great noir and hardboiled
paperbacker Dan J. Marlowe, written with novelistic flair by
Charles Kelly."--James Reasoner, celebrated western/mystery writer
and author of Texas Wind. Reasoner called Gunshots in Another Room
one of his ten favorite books of 2012.
"I still remember buying The Name of the Game is Death on a
metal spin rack when I was in college. No novel except They Shoot
Horses, Don't They? had ever shocked me to the same degree. Marlowe
had created a masterpiece. So has Charles Kelly."--Ed Gorman,
legendary mystery writer and editor of The Big Book of Noir.
"Kelly relates (the details of Marlowe's life) with a sharp and
sympathetic eye and a hardboiled style. Informative and
well-written, Gunshots in Another Room makes for quite a
story."--Woody Haut, author of Pulp Culture: Hardboiled Fiction and
the Cold War, Neon Noir, and Heartbreak and Vine: The Fate of
Hardboiled Writers in Hollywood.
"For anyone interested in the history of crime fiction, or the
evolution and devolution of the paperback original industry,
Gunshots in Another Room is an indispensable volume."-Cullen
Gallagher, in the Los Angeles Review of Books.
"(The book) demonstrates impeccable (and imaginative) research,
perhaps not surprisingly since Kelly is an award-winning
journalist."-Marvin Lachman, author of A Reader's Guide to the
American Novel of Detection.
"Kelly's delight in his subject is so palpable that we feel his
excitement as if we're handling the material ourselves...His
biography unfolds like the best stories; truth that reads as
fiction, containing narrative drive, setups and plenty of payoffs
along the way, satisfying and literate."-Jessica Argyle, author of
Arrest Me (before I write again), on KeysNews.com.
The Wild Bunch, the confederation of western outlaws headed by
Butch Cassidy, found sanctuary on the rugged Outlaw Trail.
Stretching across Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, Nevada,
Arizona, and New Mexico, this trail offered desert and mountain
hideouts to bandits and cowboys. The almost inaccessible
Hole-in-the-Wall in Wyoming was a station on the Outlaw Trail well
known to Butch Cassidy. To the south, in Utah, was the inhospitable
Robbers' Roost, where Butch and his friends camped in 1897 after a
robbery at Castle Gate.
Charles Kelly recreates the mean and magnificent places
frequented by the Wild Bunch and a slew of lesser outlaws. At the
same time, he brings Butch Cassidy to life, traces his criminal
apprenticeship and meeting with the Sundance Kid, and masterfully
describes the exploits of the Wild Bunch.
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Disconnected
Charles Kelly; Greg Ansel
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R268
Discovery Miles 2 680
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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As a navigator/bomb aimer in a Hampden bomber, Jack was shot down
during a daring low level raid on the "Admiral Sheer" in 1940. This
is the story of that raid and of his subsequent internment in
Stalag Luft 3 POW camp made famous by the "Great Escape". It
includes Jack's own story of his experiences and his time spent on
the "Long March" to eventual release, five years later. All profit
from the sale of this publication is being donated directly to the
'Help for Heros' military charity.
Includes The Stories Spanish And Mexican Exploration And Trade
Northwest From New Mexico Into The Great Basin; Jedediah Smith On
The Salt Desert Trail; And American Posts.
We've all met people who made a difference for us, who stepped up
at just the right time with advice and wisdom. Finnegan, a
mysterious, congenial man who may or may not be British, is just
such a person. He's the focus of this life-changing fable:
Finnegan's Way: The Secret Power of Doing Things Badly. Finnegan is
not dispensing advice on how to grind the last bit of work out of
underpaid employees. Instead, he has a life-affirming message for
everyone: the manager, the employee, the lonely man seeking a
relationship, the stressed-out woman seeking to lose a few pounds,
the dispirited person trying to get going again. Finnegan forgives.
He understands human failings. He doesn't chide us for complaining
that someone moved our cheese. Instead, he shows us a way to use
our mistakes to get us where we want to go. Once you meet Finnegan,
your life will never be the same again.
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book
may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages,
poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the
original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We
believe this work is culturally important, and despite the
imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of
our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works
worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in
the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
++++ The below data was compiled from various identification fields
in the bibliographic record of this title. This data is provided as
an additional tool in helping to ensure edition identification:
++++ A Handbook Of Practical Treatment: Diseases Of The Circulatory
System, Infectious Diseases, Tropical Diseases, Animal Parasites;
Volume 2 Of A Handbook Of Practical Treatment; Aloysius Oliver
Joseph Kelly; Volume 2 Of A Handbook Of Practical Treatment, By
Many Writers; John Herr Musser Thomas Charles Kelly John Herr
Musser, Aloysius Oliver Joseph Kelly W.B. Saunders Co., 1914
Medicine; Therapeutics
Decades in the desert have made reporter Michael Callan hard as a
sun-bleached skull. But mutilated migrants and his ex-flame keep
causing Callan trouble ... even if they're six feet under. Mix an
innocent beauty with a savage one, add an assembly of killers,
thugs, and a surgeon. Stir vigorously, and you've got a bloody
cocktail-lethal for an Irishman who doesn't drink. This is the
first novel by Charles Kelly, an award-winning reporter for the
Arizona Republic. His in-depth knowledge of criminals, reporters
and the issue of illegal immigration across the Arizona-Mexico
border are all perfect fodder for this shocking crime fiction
debut.
Decades in the desert have made reporter Michael Callan hard as a
sun-bleached skull. But mutilated migrants and his ex-flame keep
causing Callan trouble . . . even if they're six feet under. Mix an
innocent beauty with a savage one, add an assembly of killers,
thugs, and a surgeon. Stir vigorously, and you've got a bloody
cocktail-lethal for an Irishman who doesn't drink. This is the
first novel by Charles Kelly, an award-winning reporter for the
Arizona Republic. His in-depth knowledge of criminals, reporters
and the issue of illegal immigration across the Arizona-Mexico
border are all perfect fodder for this shocking crime fiction
debut.
The second Powell Colorado River exploration, consisting of eleven
men and three boats at the time of launch, departed from Green
River Station, Wyoming, on May 22, 1871. Most members kept
journals, and this volume contains the writings of three men,
Stephen Vandiver Jones, John F. Steward, and Walter Clement Powell,
as well as excerpts from the journals of John Wesley Powell. Taken
together, they provide diverse points of views about the second
expedition, both in terms of its human components and in its
scientific labors.
Originally published from 1948 to 1949 as volumes sixteen and
seventeen of the "Utah Historical Quarterly, " this volume looks to
the larger significance and fruits of the second of Powell's
explorations, a more carefully constituted and better equipped
scientific operation, yet one strangely neglected in historical
records. Copublished with the Utah State Historical Society.
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