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Flavour is arguably the most fascinating aspect of eating and
drinking. It utilises a complex variety of senses and processes,
that incredibly work together to generate a unified, and hopefully
pleasurable, experience. The processes involved are not just those
involved in tasting at the time of eating, but also memory and
learning processes - we obviously shun those foods of which we have
a negative memory, and favour those we enjoy. Our understanding of
the science of flavour has improved in recent years, benefiting
psychology, cuisine, food science, oenology, and dietetics.
This book describes what is known about the psychology and biology
of flavour. Written by an authority in the field, it is divided
into two parts. The first explores what we know about the flavour
system; including the role of learning and memory in flavour
perception and hedonics; the way in which all the senses that
contribute to flavour interact, and our ability to perceive flavour
as a whole and as a series of parts. The later chapters examine a
range of theoretical issues concerning the flavour system. This
includes a look at multisensory processing, and the way in which
the mind and brain bind information from discrete sensory systems.
It also examines the broader implications of studying flavour for
societal problems such as obesity. Written in an accessible style,
that assumes little prior knowledge of the field, the book will be
valuable for psychologists interested in perception,
neuroscientists, food scientists, and dieticians.
Advanced English Grammar textbook and reference book covering all
the questions that advanced students might have about sentence
structure, independent and dependent clauses, gerund clauses,
infinitive clauses, noun clauses, adverbial clauses, relative
clauses, and participial clauses. The book also covers modals,
hedging, cohesion, voice, tense, aspect, and word forms. Answers
and examples included. The author has ten years experience
preparing students for university in Australia and in East Asia. He
has an MA TESOL and a Post Graduate Certificate in TESOL. He is
also the author of the Time to Talk Series, popular in elementary
schools in South Korea.
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Shock to the System
Richard Stevenson
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R421
R353
Discovery Miles 3 530
Save R68 (16%)
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Ice Blues (Paperback)
Richard Stevenson
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R425
R359
Discovery Miles 3 590
Save R66 (16%)
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Death Trick (Paperback)
Richard Stevenson; Foreword by Michael Nava
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R428
R362
Discovery Miles 3 620
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India is a modern country of some two hundred million people
intermingled with a timeless country of 800 million souls.
Understanding Modern India is not all that difficult as it is much
like the United States. However, even in modern India, people
retain many of the religious beliefs and superstitions which they
have absorbed from timeless India. "Village Life in Bengal" by Tara
Krishna Basu and "Hindu Customs in Bengal" by Besanta Koomar Bose,
describe part of the life which exists just under the surface of
modern India.
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Cast Adrift (Paperback)
Richard Stevenson
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R473
R405
Discovery Miles 4 050
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Helen Anderson is young, beautiful, wealthy, highly accomplished
but with some emotional wounds from childhood which keep her
isolated and lonely. One evening she sees a young man being mugged.
She rescues him, helps him deal with his subsequent amnesia, loves
him and marries him. Then during a trip to England she loses him.
The love of her life disappears without a trace. Much later, by
sheer chance, she finds him, but he has become someone different,
almost unreachable. A moving story of love and fidelity, set in the
financial world of Boston and the high-tech industry of Waltham and
Route 128.
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The Desk (Paperback)
Richard Stevenson
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R329
R278
Discovery Miles 2 780
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Kenneth Dewar is an accountant, so successful over the years that
he has become a "venture capitalist" or a "financier" with only one
client, a secret one at that, the patrician banker, Ellsworth
Dodge. Dewar specializes in "reorganizing" high technology firms,
to the immense benefit of Dodge and himself.
During the course of his life Dewar had forgotten his wife and
daughter. They are there, and they speak to each other and life
goes forward - it is just that he has forgotten them. One Sunday
afternoon, his wife dies suddenly and unexpectedly while taking a
nap, and Kenneth is forced to remember her again. He also is forced
to look after himself and the apartment and the laundry, and he
starts to remember many things about his life that he had
forgotten, just as he had forgotten his family. He even tries to
make an accounting of his marriage, to draw up a balance sheet. And
he finds out some things that he never knew about his wife and
about human accounting. It is a moving story of what business does
to women and men, set in Boston, Cambridge, and Waltham along Route
128.
The Mafia, rock and roll, high finance. In a story of the conflict
between ages, attitudes and culture, Ellsworth Dodge acquires the
contract of Millie Armor, an up and coming young singer. Hiding a
part, Millie (who yearns for a simple, quiet life) falls in love
with both Dodge and a fellow musician who means her no good. Not
that Dodge does either--he is merely the biggest shark in the tank.
Dodge, the "fleur de mal of The Desk," emerges unscathed from his
involvement with the rock and roll world and the Mob. Does all life
start with grand ambitions that ultimately become failed dreams,
lost illusions?
Set in London, Calcutta, and Ann Arbor, this story is about a group
of friends and their intertwined paths through life. Caroline Grant
- beautiful, well off and completely self-assured; Parker Henry,
the man who loves her, the football star; Amy Gralowicz - sweet,
patient, willing to accept life as it presents itself to her; and
Larry Franklin, more inclined to intellectual and spiritual
pursuits.
This history of the Bengal Famine of 1943 describes the interplay
of politics, economics, sociology and military policy, which caused
a famine due to a lack of cash, not a lack of food. The Famine,
whose story is almost unknown due to wartime censorship by the
British, occurred because of a hyperinflation in the price of rice
caused by the provisioning for the major offensive against the
Japanese on India's eastern borders. Relief efforts were
halfhearted because much of the countryside was in a state of
endemic revolt against the British. The logistical problems caused
by massive gifts of food by the British and Indian troops to the
starving people threatened to stall the forthcoming offensive. The
cause of the Famine was the deadly alienation between the Bengalis
and their British rulers.
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Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
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