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A beautiful, thoughtful guide to finding your perfect next read, no matter what life’s throwing at you, from the founder of Aphra a.k.a. ‘your inclusive AF feminist book club’.
Through turbulent times, stories keep us afloat. Books, particularly, console and guide us, feed our souls, and open our eyes to worlds, possibilities and experiences we may never have considered before. Many of us have been self-medicating with books for years without identifying the practice as ‘bibliotherapy’.
This carefully curated collection will help you to identify the right reads for the right time. Whether you are in the throes of first love or the depths of heartbreak, embarking on a new beginning or questioning which path to take, use this guide to lose yourself in literature and find yourself anew, and discover the books that will always matter to you.
Includes celebrated classics, as well as overlooked modern masterpieces, with a focus on underrepresented voices. Recommended reads, include:
You Made a Fool of Death with Your Beauty by Akwaeke Emezi
Good Morning, Midnight by Jean Rhys
A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara
Letter to my Daughter by Maya Angelou
The Days of Abandonment by Elena Ferrante
Be Not Afraid of Love by Mimi Zhu
Successfully navigating the data-driven economy presupposes a
certain understanding of the technologies and methods to gain
insights from Big Data. This book aims to help data science
practitioners to successfully manage the transition to Big Data.
Building on familiar content from applied econometrics and business
analytics, this book introduces the reader to the basic concepts of
Big Data Analytics. The focus of the book is on how to productively
apply econometric and machine learning techniques with large,
complex data sets, as well as on all the steps involved before
analysing the data (data storage, data import, data preparation).
The book combines conceptual and theoretical material with the
practical application of the concepts using R and SQL. The reader
will thus acquire the skills to analyse large data sets, both
locally and in the cloud. Various code examples and tutorials,
focused on empirical economic and business research, illustrate
practical techniques to handle and analyse Big Data. Key Features:
- Includes many code examples in R and SQL, with R/SQL scripts
freely provided online. - Extensive use of real datasets from
empirical economic research and business analytics, with data files
freely provided online. - Leads students and practitioners to think
critically about where the bottlenecks are in practical data
analysis tasks with large data sets, and how to address them. The
book is a valuable resource for data science practitioners,
graduate students and researchers who aim to gain insights from big
data in the context of research questions in business, economics,
and the social sciences.
Successfully navigating the data-driven economy presupposes a
certain understanding of the technologies and methods to gain
insights from Big Data. This book aims to help data science
practitioners to successfully manage the transition to Big Data.
Building on familiar content from applied econometrics and business
analytics, this book introduces the reader to the basic concepts of
Big Data Analytics. The focus of the book is on how to productively
apply econometric and machine learning techniques with large,
complex data sets, as well as on all the steps involved before
analysing the data (data storage, data import, data preparation).
The book combines conceptual and theoretical material with the
practical application of the concepts using R and SQL. The reader
will thus acquire the skills to analyse large data sets, both
locally and in the cloud. Various code examples and tutorials,
focused on empirical economic and business research, illustrate
practical techniques to handle and analyse Big Data. Key Features:
- Includes many code examples in R and SQL, with R/SQL scripts
freely provided online. - Extensive use of real datasets from
empirical economic research and business analytics, with data files
freely provided online. - Leads students and practitioners to think
critically about where the bottlenecks are in practical data
analysis tasks with large data sets, and how to address them. The
book is a valuable resource for data science practitioners,
graduate students and researchers who aim to gain insights from big
data in the context of research questions in business, economics,
and the social sciences.
This book describes the PREMISS system, which enables readers to
overcome the limitations of state-of-the-art battery-less wireless
sensors in size, cost, robustness and range, with a system concept
for a 60 GHz wireless sensor system with monolithic sensors. The
authors demonstrate a system in which the wireless sensors consist
of wireless power receiving, sensing and communication functions in
a single chip, without external components, avoiding costly
IC-interfaces that are sensitive to mechanical and thermal stress.
Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
The Foundations of Mind presents a new theory of cognitive
development in infancy, focusing on the ways that perceptual
information becomes transformed into conceptual thought. Mandler
tackles issues such as how babies form concepts and begin to think
before they have language, and how they can recall the past and
make inductive inferences. Drawing on her extensive research, she
illustrates how these processes form the conceptual basis for
language and advanced thought, stressing the importance of
distinguishing automatic perceptual processes from
conceptualizations about what is perceived. She argues that these
two kinds of learning, though sometimes confounded in psychological
experimentation, follow different principles, and that it is
crucial to specify the particular kind of learning required by a
given task. Early preverbal concepts, although typically more
general than infant perceptual categories, allow infants to make
the inductive generalizations necessary for them to form theories
about the world and organize their developing conceptual system
into a recognizably adult form. Mandler also addresses the
neglected issues of how concepts such as animacy, inanimacy,
agency, goal, containment, and support are represented in the mind.
She suggests that image-schemas, used by cognitive linguists to
represent underlying linguistic meanings, also format the basic
concepts used by infants for inferential thought and language
learning. She also shows how a mechanism that analyzes spatial
displays leads to mini-theories about how various objects interact
with one another. Countering strong nativist and empiricist views,
Mandler provides a fresh and markedly different perspective on
early cognitive development, painting a new picture of the
abilities and accomplishments of infants and the development of the
mind.
The Church of Solitude tells the story of Maria Concezione, a young
Sardinian seamstress living with breast cancer at the cusp of the
twentieth century. Overwhelmed by the shame of her diagnosis, she
decides that no one can know what has happened to her, but the
heavy burden of this secrecy changes her life in dramatic ways and
almost causes the destruction of several people in her life. This
surprising novel paints the portrait of a woman facing the unknown
with courage, faith, and self-reliance, and is the last and most
autobiographical work of Grazia Deledda, who died of breast cancer
in 1936, shortly after its publication. An afterword by the
translator offers additional information on the author and examines
the social and historical environment of that time.
Through Homelessness Prevention in Treatment of Substance Abuse and
Mental Illness: Logic Models and Implementation of Eight American
Projects, psychiatrist, psychologists, and social workers will
discover the results of eight, three-year long development projects
funded by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration (SAMHSA) designed to prevent homelessness in high-
risk populations who have problems with alcoholism, drug abuse,
and/or mental illness. Through this informative book, you will
examine the theory or logic guiding each program, including an
up-to-date review of the literature supporting each theory. You
will also find a description of the implementation of the program
as well as its history, the practical issues involved in delivering
services, the pitfalls, lessons learned, and recommendations for
the future so you can use the best ideas to implement in your own
community and stop these individuals from reaching the
streets.Homelessness Prevention in Treatment of Substance Abuse and
Mental Illness provides insight into how to deal with many common
issues that you are faced with every day, such as matching clients
to appropriate services, preventing relapse, case management,
training in independent living skills and money management,
acquiring and maintaining housing, and benefits and employment for
your disadvantaged clients. Compelling and informative, this unique
book provides you with many tips and suggestions on how you can
help the disadvantaged in our population avoid the added trauma of
becoming homeless, such as: examining a new modified therapeutic
community (TC) intervention program for mothers recovering from
substance abuse who live with their children so you can learn to
treat the family as a whole and not just treat the person with a
"problem" gaining insight into a new intervention program for
families caring for another family member with serious mental
illness or substance abuse disorders so you can address such issues
as the importance of respite for the family and home visits for
relationship building among the entire household discovering a new,
independent living model which allows clients with serious mental
illnesses to select their own apartments learning about a new
program in Philadelphia that offers support services to clients
with serious mental illnesses and substance use disorders and
provides several levels of housing from emergency shelter to highly
supportive permanent housing discovering a community counseling
center in Chicago that operates a "bank" that helps mentally ill
clients or those with substance use disorders develop skills to
independently manage their financial affairs through the use of
"vouchers" that can be redeemed for cash for the payment of monthly
billsHomelessness Prevention in Treatment of Substance Abuse and
Mental Illness provides you with new insights into how you can help
your clients overcome political, economic, and environmental
barriers to treatment that can lead to homelessness. This essential
book will help you improve your services to your clients as well as
give you step-by-step guide to implement these new programs in your
community.
From Knowledge to Beatitude is a collection of original essays on
the intersection between Christian theology and spiritual life
primarily in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, especially in
the Parisian School of St. Victor, which honors the influential
work of Grover A. Zinn, Jr. Written by distinguished scholars from
various fields of medieval studies, these essays range from the
study of the exegetical school of twelfth-century St. Victor and
medieval glossed Bibles to the medieval cultural reception of women
visionaries, preachers, and crusaders. Although focused on St.
Victor, they provide analyses of Christian themes up to the modern
period. A common thread is Zinn's careful attention to the
connections between medieval spirituality and biblical studies, the
origin of these ideas, and their lasting influence in Christian
culture. The essays take us from Hugh of St. Victor's
foundation-material culture-to the "beatitude" of a wider
understanding of Victorine culture and its lasting legacy. This
volume is a fitting tribute to a generous scholar, teacher, and
mentor. It will appeal to historians, scholars of religion and
theology, and art historians. Contributors: Raymond Clemens,
Catherine Delano-Smith, Walter Cahn, William Clark, Thomas Waldman,
Franklin T. Harkins, Lesley Smith, Hugh Feiss, Boyd Taylor Coolman,
Dale M. Coulter, Marcia L. Colish, Dominique Poirel, Barbara
Newman, Rachel Fulton Brown, Jeremy Adams, Frans van Liere, E. Ann
Matter
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