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This practical 2003 handbook provides an extremely comprehensive
and highly illustrated guide to micromanipulation techniques in
assisted conception in a clinical setting. It includes detailed,
illustrated descriptions of all the common micromanipulation
systems currently in use in IVF laboratories around the world and
clearly explains how to optimise their successful use. The volume
covers state-of-the-art techniques including intracytoplasmic sperm
injection (ICSI), and procedures such as assisted hatching and the
blastomere biopsy (for preimplantation genetic diagnosis PGD).
Valuable information on troubleshooting the potential mechanical
and technical difficulties that can arise is provided to help all
the practitioners of these techniques, including trainee
embryologists and consultant obstetricians, and technicians and
scientists involved in animal transgenesis and cloning. It will
undoubtedly be of immense value to all doctors and scientists
working with assisted reproductive technologies.
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Rains Rain
Robert S King; Matthew Roth
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R377
Discovery Miles 3 770
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Weatherings (Paperback)
David Chorlton, Robert S King; Multiple Authors
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R502
Discovery Miles 5 020
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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A selection of poems from authors nationwide describing American
society from a personal point of view. Collectively, they add up to
a critical look at the way things are, expressed in poems whose
fine quality makes them deserving of attention. Note: A PDF version
is available for viewing at the FutureCycle Press website. All
proceeds from the sale of the paperback and Kindle editions help
support FutureCycle Press's Good Works Project.
The Hunted River is a book of poems dealing with phases of life and
mind. The poems examine the struggle between status quo and growth,
comfort and change, control and freedom. The voice in these poems
ranges from mystic tenor to bass blue collar, all the while asking
if nature is what we see, what we cannot see, or what we want to
see.
The Gravedigger's Roots is told by the gravedigger himself, a man
who is at the lowest point of the social totem pole. He is,
however, also a man with spiritual (but not religious) leanings. He
tries to understand the work he does and why things happen (or
don't happen). He is undeniably a cynic, yet he suspects that life
goes on beyond the grave, that after death he may be reborn to a
life he'd rather not live, finally to succeed or to fail once
again. The gravedigger could be described as a pessimist who is not
bereft of hope.
Developing a Photograph of God by Robert S. King is a wonderfully
cohesive and morally serious examination of the topic he evokes in
the poem When the Road Curves Back "to find out why I'm here." This
collection engages the 'dark night of the soul' and the
presumptions of optimism; that life has meaning as King says in the
last poem "that my small telescope can pull both past/and future
back to show me how far/the curious soul has traveled." With a
maturity of vision and a language drenched in lyric, King leaves us
with remarkable images such as "Serpents of rain/ puzzle of noise
and clumsy dance." "the places/where regret nags, dreams freeze and
hope crackles down in fire" and "Smell the feathers of the angels
burning." These poems, intimate and agonized, swinging between the
horns of hope and despair, shed illumination on the grave and
haunting philosophical questions. Joan Colby, author of Joan Colby:
Selected Poems and other collections"
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Enough (Paperback)
Robert S King; Carole Richard Thompson
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R233
Discovery Miles 2 330
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This small book of poems with much to tell holds poignant vignettes
of one woman's life. From the humor and empathy of character
studies about people whose lives touched hers to the terror of a
nocturnal tornado; from the depth of her love for nature to the
life-long love that survived despite wartime separations that often
left her to raise four children alone, Thompson heralds the unique
joys and struggles of being a woman that embraces all of life.
As a talented young poet and small press editor/publisher (Ali Baba
Press), Diane Kistner was right in the thick of the 1970s creative
ferment that became the Atlanta Little Five Points "scene." She
performed her own work and published the work of other poets,
writers, and artists of her day. These poems represent the best
from her 1979 book (published under the name D. Kistner Katz by
Bootlaig Press), long out of print.
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