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Showing 1 - 11 of
11 matches in All Departments
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Finding Christmas (Paperback)
Lezlie Evans; Illustrated by Yee Von Chan
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R265
R230
Discovery Miles 2 300
Save R35 (13%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Leaf Jumpers (Paperback)
Carole Gerber; Illustrated by Leslie Evans
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R236
R196
Discovery Miles 1 960
Save R40 (17%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Graceful, poetic text celebrates the beauty of autumn leaves, while
the simple text at the end explains why leaves change color.
Readers learn how to identify all sorts of leaves from red maple to
sycamore by their color, shape, and other characteristics. A great
choice for science units and autumn displays.
This second volume of Leslie Evans' Shaggy Man essays offers
fifteen new selections. "On the Track of the Elusive Baron Long"
offers the only extensive biographical sketch of one of Southern
California's most fascinating characters, creator in the little
industrial city of Vernon, California, what is reputed to have been
the first real night club in America. Long later hired a
nineteen-year-old high school dropout to design the most exquisite
and expensive hotel and casino in the Western Hemisphere. Two
pieces look at Peak Oil, challenging today's hype that fracked oil
in North Dakota and Texas will solve America's energy problems.
"Symptoms of U.S. Decline" presents statistics that show the United
States has fallen far behind all the other advanced countries and
even many from the third world on a wide range of indices from
education to infrastructure, poverty, homelessness, healthcare,
upward mobility, economic inequality, and prison populations. "The
Strange Case of Ahmad Kamal" tells how the CIA in the 1950s
foolishly introduced the Muslim Brotherhood into Europe in hopes it
would win over Soviet Muslims, as well as the story of the American
adventurer Cimarron Hathaway, who, under the pseudonym of Ahmad
Kamal, devoted his life to fighting for the independence of the
Muslim peoples of Turkestan. "The Left and the Jews," traces the
attitude of the Marxist and anarchist left toward the Jews.
Originally antisemitic, the socialist and Marxist Left came to
welcome assimilationist Jews, while remaining hostile to Jewish
national aspirations, calling on the Jews to disappear as an
identifiable people. "Why the Middle East Is Always in Crisis"
traces the fatal decisions of the Western Powers at the end of
World War I to create states in the former Ottoman Empire that
threw together peoples with profound religious and ethnic
hostilities, making the Middle East a region of perpetual violent
turmoil. "Bygone Days in West Adams" looks at some of the people
and their homes in this once vaunted community on the edge of
Downtown Los Angeles, from the days when a former gunslinger and
singing waiter could become the richest man in America and an
Italian immigrant farm worker could found the largest winery in the
country. "The Hunger Ahead" looks at the end of the Green
Revolution as population continues its geometric growth, while
arable land erodes, aquifers are drained, and global warming
increasingly imperils food supplies. Others look at the modern
dictators and their opponents, the rightward evolution of the
Republican Party, recent discoveries about the ancient religion
known as Gnosticism, and L. Frank Baum's Oz books.
Here from The Shaggy Man's Place (www.shaggyman.com), everything
from ecological crises and religious wars to Edwardian authors, the
scandal plagued city of Vernon, early computer games, and local Los
Angeles history.
International oil production has been frozen since 2005 while
demand from our 7 billion and growing global population continues
upward, forcing prices of oil, gasoline, and food ever higher. Our
political leaders stake our future on a strategy of economic growth
just as the planet is hitting its physical limits on nonrenewable
resources, from oil to farmland to potable water. Here is a close
look at what we really are up against - along with a review of the
really bad experience with the Marxist alternative system.
Since the Enlightenment we have expected religion to fade away.
Instead it has become central to the identity of millions, from the
Christian Right to Jihadi Islam, with ominous consequences. The
media treats each outbreak of violence by jihadi militants as a
separate event. They are also part of a global Islamic awakening
that began after World War II and aspires to world hegemony for
Islam, as Christianity once did a thousand years ago. Here is a
look at the aims of the most famous of the jihadi theorists,
Egyptian martyr Sayyid Qutb, a survey of Islamic battles on a world
scale, and a critique of those who underestimate this foe.
And on a lighter note, pieces on an odd leftist bookstore in
Missoula, Montana, called Freddy's Feed and Read, fabulist author
Lord Dunsany, George Bernard Shaw, western lawman Wyatt Earp, a
Romanian novelist who challenged Ceausescu and survived him,
socialist millionaire John Randolph Haynes who gave California the
ballot box initiative system that has become so troublesome today,
and Doctor Margaret "Mom" Chung, daughter of a prostitute, who took
out Mary Pickford's tonsils and adopted 1500 U.S. airmen and
submariners in World War II into her club, called The Fair-Haired
Bastards.
Leslie Evans, author of Outsider's Reverie and proprietor of The
Shaggy Man's Place website, is a former Trotskyist, one-time iron
miner, erstwhile editor for UCLA's Asian Studies centers, the World
Bank and the World Health Organization, and activist in Los
Angeles' historic inner city West Adams neighborhood. The Shaggy
Man, a wanderer from Kansas, is a character in the Oz books by L.
Frank Baum.
Set against the City Of Angels' glittering facade,
multi-millionaire tabloid publisher, Aaron Rosemont is found dead,
brutally murdered with gunshots to the head...A top movie actor's
image is sabotaged by a smear campaign...False accusations threaten
to derail a detective's brilliant career... An ill-fated love
affair traps a woman in a web of conspiracy and murder. These are
the shocking elements which lead LAPD homicide detectives, Joe
Kellermann and Mike Rodriguez, into a labyrinth of greed,
infidelity, obsession and murder-for-hire...
Like the tiny seed a little boy and his grandpa plant, this rhyming
tale grows and blossoms into a celebration of nature and of family.
Included are "Ten Great Ways" to enhance your Tu B'Shevat
celebration.
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Nadine Gordimer
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R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
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