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The book's inherent value, currently, is in its uniqueness. There
are few books on Integrative Oncology (IO). There are few books on
the entirety of traditional Chinese medicine in the treatment of
cancer. There are even fewer, if any, books that deal with the
topics of Integrative Oncology and the use of traditional Chinese
medicine as a whole in the treatment of people with cancer. While
very broad and deep topics, this makes for a varied audience of
interest that includes not just the TCM practitioner or student,
but Western health practitioners and patients as well as laypeople
interested in the topic of oncology.For those interested in the
topic of IO, it gives one of the few non-biased, honest and
critical views of the state of IO in contrast to what is promoted
by various institutions and societies.For the Western health
practitioner and/or patient, many of whom are completely unfamiliar
with TCM and how it works or can be used, it provides information
on the breadth of TCM and how it can be applied in various ways to
help improve outcomes.For the TCM practitioner or student, it
provides much needed information on how to go about caring for a
patient with cancer to include clinical pearls and important
Western medical information and terminology.
The First World War has survived as part of our national memory in
a way no previous war has ever done. This collection of letters -
which lay untouched for almost ninety years - allows a unique
glimpse into the war as experienced by one family at the time,
transporting us back to an era which is now slipping tantalizingly
out of living memory. The Slaters - the family at the heart of
these letters - lived in Oxford. Like most families, they were both
typical and unique. Gilbert, the father of the family, had been
head of Ruskin College in Oxford, and during the war found work as
the first Professor of Indian Economics in Madras. His wife,
Violet, grew to detest the war and became an increasingly vocal
pacifist as the slaughter continued. Owen, their eldest son, a
schoolboy in 1914, was fighting in France by war's end. In the
letters they wrote to each other and their friends at this time we
see how the war increasingly impacted upon each of their lives and
the life of the world around them - rationing, Violet's increasing
involvement in radical politics, the deaths of friends, the fear of
Zeppelin raids when in London, the endless discussions between
Violet and Gilbert about how to keep their son out of the trenches
- and the growth of Owen from schoolboy to soldier, serving as a
junior officer on the Western Front. Above all, in their privacy
and immediacy, their inconsistencies and false hopes, these letters
bring us as near as we can ever be to understanding what people
thought, feared, and hoped for during these momentous years.
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Noah and His Times... (Paperback)
James Munson Olmstead; Created by Noah (the Patriarch )
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R893
R750
Discovery Miles 7 500
Save R143 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone
With A Translation Of His Letter To Doctor Price.
With A Translation Of His Letter To Doctor Price.
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