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This light-hearted, beautifully illustrated deck and guidebook
brings the spiritual mysticism of sugar skulls to a fresh
interpretation of each of the major and minor arcana to help you
hone your intuition. Sugar skulls, or calaveras, are traditionally
made by hand to celebrate the Mexican celebration of Day of the
Dead, or Dia de Muertos. Colorful and lovingly crafted, they are
offerings for loved ones who have passed into the spirit realm. The
sugar skulls depicted throughout this deck are there to remind us
of our spiritual journey and help us reach our full potential. Just
as the Fool progresses throughout the entirety of the Major Arcana,
we all have our own personal journeys that are represented through
the tarot. Whether it's the Magician shooting the sugar skull
bullseye, the High Priestess seeing her reflection in the water
(thus revealing her inner truth in the form of a sugar skull), or
the Fool feeling confident that he will create and manifest the
perfect sugar skull by the time he finishes his journey, we all
have an unrealized version of our true potential. The Sugar Skull
Tarot Deck and Guidebook offers a refreshing new take on a timeless
tradition and is the perfect tool to recognize the inner potential
inside each of us. Let the brightly colored illustrations offer you
all the inspiration you need to be the best person you can truly be
so you can present a more accurate representation of
yourself-confident, magical, and ready to give and receive love-to
the world.
The oceans cover about 72 percent of our planet (which is named for
the remaining 28 percent). These oceans have fascinated and
challenged the human race for centuries. In the past, the ocean had
been used first as a source of food and later as a means of
transportation. However, the oceans have recently become very
important-they may offer a solution to many of our modern problems.
For example, refuse from land is to be dumped into the ocean never
to be seen again; fish and other biological resources are to be
caught and used to meet the protein deficiency of the world; oil
and gas from the continental shelf and perhaps deeper areas will
eventually solve our energy problems. None ofthese examples is
completely possible, and the at source offood and later as a means
of transportation. However, the oceans social, and ecological
problems in the marine environment. Countries are al ready planning
how the oceans can be divided up, so that they will get their "fair
share." Economists, politicians, and others are producing almost
daily, optimistic or pessimistic views (depending upon your own
viewpoint) about the ocean and its resources. Equally loud reports
come from environ mentalists, conservationists, government sources,
and oil companies con cerning the pollution and potential
destruction of the ocean."
This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC
BY-NC 4.0 International licence. It is free to read at Oxford
Scholarship Online and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and
selected open access locations. Before new interventions are
released into disease control programmes, it is essential that they
are carefully evaluated in `field trials'. These may be complex and
expensive undertakings, requiring the follow-up of hundreds, or
thousands, of individuals, often for long periods. Descriptions of
the detailed procedures and methods used in the trials that have
been conducted have rarely been published. A consequence of this,
individuals planning such trials have few guidelines available and
little access to knowledge accumulated previously, other than their
own. In this manual, practical issues in trial design and conduct
are discussed fully and in sufficient detail, that Field Trials of
Health Interventions may be used as a `toolbox' by field
investigators. It has been compiled by an international group of
over 30 authors with direct experience in the design, conduct, and
analysis of field trials in low and middle income countries and is
based on their accumulated knowledge and experience. Available as
an open access book via Oxford Medicine Online, this new edition is
a comprehensive revision, incorporating the new developments that
have taken place in recent years with respect to trials, including
seven new chapters on subjects ranging from trial governance, and
preliminary studies to pilot testing.
Cooperative research ventures between some new ones, such as a
telemetering pin- oceanographic institutions and nations to- ger
for getting a continuous temperature day frequently start with a
series of official profile and a thermoprobe accurate to meetings,
councils, and so forth, followed 0.005 DegreesC. by several years
of research, and finally a When the R. V. CHAIN returned home,
group of papers ernerging in various techni- there were requests
from many laboratories cal journals. The study of the Red Sea is an
around the world for sediment samples to exception to this
procedure. It is a good analyze. These requests were filled insofar
example of the kind of spontaneous cooper- as was possible without
exhausting all avail- ation that can occur when individual scien-
able sample. tists get excited about a unique problern and Although
the hot brine and heavy metal work together exchanging samples and
data deposits cover an area of less than 100 and publishing their
final results in a single square miles, they are clearly part of a
volume. The problern ofthe hot holes ofthe larger geological
scheme. The world-wide Red Sea required real teamwork from scien-
interest in rift valleys and sea floor spread- tists of many
different disciplines as well as ing with their attendant
hydrothermal and different nationalities.
Recently divorced and made redundant from his job, Julian Crosby
needs a break from reality. That's why he's gone to Hawaii...
If his personal circumstances had been different-if he were
simply on a two-week vacation in Maui with his now former wife-then
he surely would have laughed and said "no" to the outrageous offer
from the funny-looking Hawaiian wearing a loud tropical shirt with
an equally loud, not to mention obnoxious, blue and yellow parrot
named Buenaventura perched upon his shoulder to buy a rundown boat
called Scoundrel.
But that was then and this is now... Or is it?
Meanwhile, sixty years ago, Amelia Earhart is getting ready for
her much publicized flight around the world. Is this daring
adventure to be her final flight, her swan song? Or is she actually
on a reconnaissance mission for President Roosevelt? And what does
her ill-fated flight have to do with Julian, his innocent Hawaiian
holiday and his newly-acquired boat? As Buenaventura reveals, "Only
time will tell" as their two worlds unexpectedly and impossibly
collide.
In this award-winning novel a weekend sailor shipwrecked on an
uncharted atoll in the South Seas eventually discovers the island's
only other human inhabitant-a woman who bears an uncanny
resemblance to 1930s lost flying ace Amelia Earhart.
Motivated to expatriate by guilt after helping to design guidance
systems for the U.S. Military, Doran Seeger has lived the past
decade in Europe. Wandering from country to country, he has
encountered new societies and new ideas, though he still struggles
to appease his conscience. Living in Prague and working as an
underground art dealer, a chance encounter with the sister of his
former lover persuades him to return to Greece, where a society
that embraces real civility tenderly draws the habitual itinerant
out of reticence and cynicism. With his longtime Greek friend
Modestos Thromos by this side, Doran plants a winter garden; and as
he patiently tills the Grecian soil, he reclaims his integrity, his
sense of joy, and his humanity.
Sometimes the only way to find yourself is to leave behind
everything you've ever known... and become a stranger.
Abandoning a life filled with loss of family, love, and personal
integrity, Doran Seeger is flying through a blinding storm on his
way to a political awakening in Amsterdam, an unexpected affair in
the Swiss Alps, a brush-by encounter on a train platform and the
serendipitous discovery of a wadded up handbill that will lead him
into a land where a gleefully absurd culture still embraces real
civility: Greece.
Meet Fizzy Oceans-archivist, researcher, environmentalist and
adventurer. On her travels she witnesses The Exodus, the Battle of
Gettysburg and Hurricane Katrina, as well as many other historical
and real time events. She meets notable individuals including
Gandhi, Mark Twain, Jacques Cousteau, The Dalai Lama, Saddam
Hussein and even a new species called the Quinngen. Such unique
experiences and encounters spanning the world and time as we know
them would not be possible for a single individual-especially not
for a woman named Amy Birkenstock who works as a medical clerk in
Seattle, Washington-but Fizzy Oceans, Amy's digital alter ego, is
not in Physical Life. She lives, works and travels in the virtual
world where the dead are very much alive, places like ancient
Babylon and Pompeii have been reconstructed, and with the click of
a button-WHOOSH -one is transported throughout the Ages to events
and destinations that make up our human history. Even as Amy's
physical life existence is challenged by encroaching environmental
disaster, economic instability, and societal breakdown, Fizzy's
virtual world offers instant realization of vision and inspiration.
The Virtual Life of Fizzy Oceans imagines the bridging of two
worlds-the literal and the metaphorical-and questions what it is we
have created, what has been lost, and what might be possible for us
as individuals and for the Human Race.
The Island of Corfu in Greece is known as the Emerald Isle. William
Shakespeare's metaphorical play, "The Tempest," was derived from
the island's thunderous autumnal storms. Henry Miller, as well as
Gerald and Lawrence Durrell, once called Corfu home. It is an
island of intense beauty with fertile green land, golden beaches,
turquoise waters, a beautiful Venetian-built city, and one of the
most gregarious - and sometimes one of the most treacherous -
cultures in Europe. More than a million people from all over the
world visit Corfu each year, and over 30,000 expatriates live year
round on the island. GOOD MORNING CORFU: LIVING ABROAD AGAINST ALL
ODDS chronicles the experiences and observations of an American
expatriate living on this Mediterranean outpost of dizzying
extremes. From wide-eyed wonder to cultural and personal confusion,
from unbridled joy to deep despair, and from empathy to outright
loathing, these short essays examine both local and expatriate
lifestyles through the lens of one deeply immersed yet forever
removed, fundamentally involved yet perpetually on the perimeter of
a most curious culture. Even more than a journal of events and
experiences, the essays consider many of life's more profound
issues and concerns with insight, optimism and humor.
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Silent Stages (Hardcover)
Ken Dreyfack; Introduction by David A. Ross
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R786
Discovery Miles 7 860
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The Photographs in Silent Stages are platforms specifically built
as settings for narratives; they are akin to theatrical stages or
movie sets. At the same time, they are artifacts from various
stages of my life, visual traces of the sedimentary layers that
have quietly accumulated over time, each atop its predecessors. As
stage or movie settings, these images aim to spark viewers’
imagination, to spur them to conjure up a story, a narrative laced
with mystery and alienation. That’s why I make the lighting
dramatic, why I shoot in black and white, why some elements may be
too dark and/or fuzzy to see clearly. I generally start with the
background, searching the streets for a suitably dramatic setting.
Then I wait for something to happen, perhaps for players to enter
or exit. Sometimes I arrive too late; the last player has exited.
As artifacts from my own story, the images give voice and body to
times, experiences and feelings I hardly knew subsisted within me.
It was only years after the project was undertaken that I began to
understand how the choices I make – of subjects, settings,
lighting, composition – reflect the particularities of my life
and sensibility. In this sense, these images are relics from a
personal archeological dig, a visual memoir of sorts -- an
unsurprising undertaking perhaps for a septuagenarian. All of the
images were shot over the past five years, either in or around New
York or Paris. This reflects the dual nature of my life and
culture, split between my native home and my adopted one. I have
spent half of my adult life in France and identify as both French
and American. My objective is not to highlight the Franco-American
split but rather to demonstrate the parallels and how they compose
into a single identity.
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