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Sci-fi action adventure sequel to the 1982 film 'Tron'. Sam Flynn (Garrett Hedlund) is the rebellious technological whizzkid son of leading video-game developer Kevin Flynn (Jeff Bridges). After his father mysteriously disappears, Sam finds himself pulled into the dangerous virtual world that his father has been inhabiting for the past 20 years.
Along with Kevin's loyal confidante, fearless warrior Quorra (Olivia Wilde), father and son embark on a perilous journey across a terrifyingly advanced neon-lit cyber universe created by Kevin himself, populated with state-of-the-art vehicles and weapons - and a ruthless enemy who will stop at nothing to prevent their escape. Beau Garrett and Michael Sheen co-star.
The Story of My Heart, first published in 1883, is one of the
stranger autobiographies in the English language. It describes
almost nothing about the writer's life, education, family or work.
Opening with a mystical experience on a green hill in the south of
England seventeen years before - the date is exact, in a book that
is otherwise so exalted above mere facts - it is the record of the
author's striving for 'soul-life', for communion with the beauty of
nature. In impassioned prose, with echoes of Blake and Shelley,
Jefferies relates the history of his feeling of identification with
the sun, wind, space and the pulse of natural life. The book is a
prayer to the physical world, a pantheistic rejection of modern
urban life and technique: 'the sun was stronger than science; the
hills more than philosophy'. Some of the most striking passages in
The Story of My Heart are descriptions of the controlled chaos of
London, which represented for Jefferies the vortex of modern modern
human life, a force that is 'driving, pushing, carried on in a
stress of feverish force like a bullet'. A neglected classic of
English nature writing, The Story of My Heart speaks to today's
ecological concerns in the language of another era.
If you're at the sharp end of management, juggling conflicting
demands to keep your organization's promises to customers, with
ever-reducing resources whilst implementing the latest digital
change programme and keeping your team happy - this is the book for
you. Active Operations Management gives you the framework and tools
to help you take control and make the most of the evolving world of
service operations. The challenges of robotics, remote working and
lean operations demand a new approach to give people and
organizations the confidence they need to thrive and deliver in the
agile age. This ground-breaking playbook specifically addresses the
practical needs of operations managers. Discover: The four critical
activities for effective control, and the daily and weekly rhythms
which make them effective and sustainable. Practical measures of
work and performance which enable like-for-like comparisons and
resource balancing across diverse teams. Real-world examples
showing you how to raise productivity, improve staff engagement and
wellbeing. Online resources which support your control of the truly
agile operation. Neil Bentley and Richard Jeffery have spent over
30 years working with operations managers to simplify and bring
structure to the challenges of managing in complex organizations.
Today their Active Operations Management methodology is used by
thousands of managers, raising performance and ensuring the
wellbeing of those involved.
Richard Jefferies' After London is uncanny and intriguing, an
adventure story, quest romance, dystopia, and Darwinian novel
rolled into one, but also a pioneering work of Victorian science
fiction. Imagining a mysterious natural catastrophe that plunges
its people into a barbaric future, Jefferies remarkable novel
drowns and destroys London and depicts a challenging 'Wild
England'dominated by nature and filled with evolved animals and
devolved humans. Of its time but also distinctively modern, After
London can, in its uneasy expression ofVictorian and post-Victorian
anxieties about industrial development, urbanisation, natural
resources, and climate, be regarded as one of the first novels of
the Anthropocene. This new critical edition provides one of the
earliest examples of a global catastrophe novel that is part of a
flowering of 19th-century science fiction. It situates After London
in a tradition of mid-late Victorian texts that respond to the
evolutionary theories of Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace
and responds to a host of other key social, political, and cultural
issues of the period.
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The Story of My Heart (Hardcover)
Richard Jefferies, Terry Tempest Williams, Brooke Williams; Afterword by Scott Slovic
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R576
R474
Discovery Miles 4 740
Save R102 (18%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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While browsing a Stonington, Maine, bookstore, Brooke Williams
and Terry Tempest Williams discovered a rare copy of an exquisite
autobiography by nineteenth-century British nature writer Richard
Jefferies, who develops his understanding of a "soul-life" while
wandering the wild countryside of Wiltshire, England. Brooke and
Terry, like John Fowles, Henry Miller, and Rachel Carson before,
were inspired by the prescient words of this visionary writer, who
describes ineffable feelings of being at one with nature. In an
introduction and essays set alongside Jefferies' writing, the
Williams share their personal pilgrimage to Wiltshire to understand
this man of "cosmic consciousness" and how their exploration of
Jefferies deepened their own relationship while illuminating
dilemmas of modernity, the intrinsic need for wildness, and what it
means to be human in the twenty-first century.
Terry Tempest Williams is the author of fourteen books including
"Refuge: An Unnatural History of Family and Place" and "When Women
Were Birds." Recipient of numerous fellowships and awards, she
teaches at Dartmouth and the University of Utah where she is the
Annie Clark Tanner scholar in the environmental humanities graduate
program. Her work has been anthologized and translated
worldwide.
Brooke Williams has spent thirty years advocating for wildness,
most recently with the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance and as
executive director of the Murie Center in Moose, Wyoming. He is the
author of four books including "Halflives: Reconciling Work and
Wildness," and dozens of articles. Brooke and Terry have been
married since 1975. They live with their dogs in Jackson, Wyoming,
and Castle Valley, Utah.
Praise for Terry Tempest Williams' "When Women Were Birds"
"Williams displays a Whitmanesque embrace of the world and its
contradictions...As the pages accumulate, her voice grows in
majesty and power until it become a full-fledged aria." --"San
Francisco Chronicle"
Praise for Brooke Williams' "Halflives: Reconciling Work and
Wildness"
..".a compact yet breathtaking treatise." --"Publishers
Weekly"
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book
may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages,
poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the
original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We
believe this work is culturally important, and despite the
imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of
our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works
worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in
the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
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The Scarlet Shawl
Richard Jefferies
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R2,020
R1,892
Discovery Miles 18 920
Save R128 (6%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The Scarlet Shawl
Richard Jefferies
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R1,502
R1,421
Discovery Miles 14 210
Save R81 (5%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Richard Jefferies' After London is uncanny and intriguing, an
adventure story, quest romance, dystopia, and Darwinian novel
rolled into one, but also a pioneering work of Victorian science
fiction. Imagining a mysterious natural catastrophe that plunges
its people into a barbaric future, Jefferies remarkable novel
drowns and destroys London and depicts a challenging 'Wild England'
dominated by nature and filled with evolved animals and devolved
humans. Of its time but also distinctively modern, After London
can, in its uneasy expression of Victorian and post-Victorian
anxieties about industrial development, urbanisation, natural
resources, and climate, be regarded as one of the first novels of
the Anthropocene. This new critical edition provides one of the
earliest examples of a global catastrophe novel that is part of a
flowering of nineteenth-century science fiction. It situates After
London in a tradition of mid-late Victorian texts that respond to
the evolutionary theories of Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel
Wallace and responds to a host of other key social, political, and
cultural issues of the period.
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