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A world-renowned cancer specialist puts his love for his wife
before all that he has learned in medical school and journeys with
her into the world of alternative medicine when she is given only a
few months to live, in this compassionate and elegantly written
memoir.
If History is written by the victors then this is His-Story, as
corrected by the losers. The Parable of His-Story is a telling of
the age where men have been in charge. Inspired by ideas of
feminism and spirituality, it suggests that eternal rules are
temporary examples of a one sided story, repeatedly told to glorify
the masculine and denigrate the feminine. Charting the origin of
this story at the dawn of civilization, the book details how
his-story spread across the world through successive
masculine-driven empires and affected our ideas of sex, gender,
sexuality and race. As the financial system crumbles, as religious
and political ideologies grow more extreme and as more of us
contribute to a collective consciousness through the Internet, The
Parable offers suggestions as to what we need to remember in order
to bring ourselves, and our relations with our planet, back into
balance. If you ve ever wondered why zero has been taught to mean
nothing, why gay has come to be synonymous with rubbish, and why
all the major monotheistic gods are blokes, then this book is for
you.
This visually extraordinary book presents the history of medicine
as it has never been seen before... perfect for readers aged 9+.
From potions and ointments to modern day bionics, the journey
through medicine has been one full of experiments, trials and
breakthroughs. Humankind's battle to stay alive has been
horrifying, bizarre and exhilarating, and there is still a long way
to go. Uniquely presented through a series of posters, comic-strip
retellings, timelines, newspaper articles and much more, this
strikingly illustrated book charts the history of medicine in
engaging and unusual ways - guaranteed to keep children gripped.
With expert text written by pharmacy historian, Briony Hudson and
stunning graphic artwork by Nick Taylor.
Bailey, Harris and Jones is an indispensable text that facilitates
a thorough understanding of this complex subject area. It supplies
the reader with an unrivalled collection of materials and
commentary on all major aspects of the law relating to civil
liberties in England and Wales, and is firmly established as a
superb resource for students on civil liberties and constitutional
law courses.
This sixth edition has been substantially revised and updated to
reflect the wealth of new statutory and case law that has developed
since publication of the fifth edition. The content has been
significantly re-organized to ensure the book remains accessible
and fully focused on meeting the needs of the modern law student.
The combination of a wide range of source material together with
extensive analysis, commentary and thorough referencing to other
sources of information makes Civil Liberties - Cases, Materials,
and Commentary an essential resource for all students of civil
liberties and human rights law.
Online Resource Center
This book is accompanied by an Online Resource Center, featuring
regular updates to the text, and web links.
A touching and beautifully written story of Nick Taylor's journey
with his parents to the end of their lives. Millions of children
are taking similar journeys, which is why the Washington Post
called A NECESSARY END "one of the key stories of our time."
Living and working in London, it can sometimes be difficult to
escape into the great outdoors. These 12 rural feeling walks are
all accessible from London's Underground network, meaning that the
great outdoors is closer than you think. These 12 walks are well
suited to a morning or an afternoon stroll. Ideal for dog walkers,
families or individuals, this guide with Open Street Maps, is the
perfect companion to take with you.
Being a teenager is difficult enough, you are under a lot of stress
starting high school, going on dates, getting along with your
parents, fitting in, and being popular. Well that's stress for a
mortal teenager. Kosan Carter thought he had everything under
control and was looking forward to spending a fun, leisurely summer
hanging out with his best friend. All of that changed the night
before his fifteenth birthday when he is told he was actually an
alien from another planet. He quickly discovers his birth mother is
alive and he alone holds the key to rescuing her and the other
refugees from Alcedonia, his home world that had been ravaged in a
devastating war. His existence is turned upside down as he is
forced to accept that he is a descendant of the mythical god, Zeus
and that he is capable of wielding some dangerous magic. But power
never comes without a price, and soon Kosan discovers that his
nightmares are real and that the demons from his dreams are hunting
him. For they feel with his death, a prophecy written 800 years ago
by Merlin will finally come true, bringing about the demise of both
Alcedonia and Earth. With only a month to discover who he is, what
he is capable of doing, and what he needs to do to rescue them,
time is rapidly running out.
It is April 17, 1861 -- the day that Virginia secedes from the
Union and the sixteenth birthday of John Alan Muro. As the
Commonwealth erupts in celebration, young Muro sees his dream of
attending medical school in Philadelphia shattered by the sudden
reality of war.
Muro's father, believing that the Disagreement will pass, sends
his son instead to Charlottesville. Jefferson's forty-year-old
University of Virginia has become a haven of rogues and
dilettantes, among them Muro's roommate, Braxton Baucom III, a
planter's son who attempts to strike a resemblance to General
"Stonewall" Jackson. Though the pair toasts lightheartedly "To our
studies " with a local corn whiskey known as "The Bumbler," the war
effort soon exerts a sobering influence. Medical students like Muro
are pressed into service at the Charlottesville General Hospital,
where the inexperienced Dr. Muro saves the life of a Northern
lieutenant, earning the scorn of his peers.
As the war progresses, Muro takes up yet another cause -- winning
the affections of the beguiling Miss Lorrie Wigfall. Here, too,
Muro faces a cunning adversary. Just as the fighting is closing in,
Muro is forced to make a choice that will shape the rest of his
life. In this story of love, loyalty, and unimaginable sacrifice, a
doctor struggles to balance the passions of youth with the weight
of responsibility.
Seventy-five years after Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal, here for
the first time is the remarkable story of one of its enduring
cornerstones, the Works Progress Administration (WPA): its
passionate believers, its furious critics, and its amazing
accomplishments.
The WPA is American history that could not be more current, from
providing economic stimulus to renewing a broken infrastructure.
Introduced in 1935 at the height of the Great Depression, when
unemployment and desperation ruled the land, this controversial
nationwide jobs program would forever change the physical landscape
and social policies of the United States. The WPA lasted eight
years, spent $11 billion, employed 81/2 million men and women, and
gave the country not only a renewed spirit but a fresh face. Now
this fascinating and informative book chronicles the WPA from its
tumultuous beginnings to its lasting presence, and gives us cues
for future action.
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Ray Scott founded the Bass Angler Sportsman Society (B.A.S.S.) and
launched a series of tournaments that created a new brand of sports
hero: the professional bass fisherman. Roland Martin and Rick Clunn
won big tournaments and grew into legends. They inspired countless
anglers who dreamed of fishing their way to fame and fortune. BASS
WARS vividly describes the beginnings of B.A.S.S. as it follows
Clunn, his top rivals, and two of the young dreamers, Randy Blaukat
and Randy Moseley, during one grueling and fascinating year in the
high-stakes, high-pressure sport of big-league bass fishing. Bass
anglers and fishing fans alike consider it a classic.
Gordon Gould woke up one night in his Bronx, New York, apartment,
opened a laboratory notebook and wrote: "Some rough calculations on
the feasibility of a LASER: Light Amplification by Stimulated
Emission of Radiation." That was November 1957, and the 37-year-old
graduate student had coined the name for a world-changing
invention. Before he stopped, he had written the first description
of a working laser and how it could be used. What he didn't know
was how to get a patent. So Gould, even as a radical background
denied him a security clearance to work on his own invention, would
spend the next thirty years fighting to prove he, and not the Nobel
laureate Charles Townes, was the inventor. Finally, by 1988,
Gould's legal war had won him four basic laser patents that upheld
his claim. LASER is the dramatic story of a brilliant lone inventor
who took on the establishment and triumphed in the end.
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