![]() A mystery, she was soon adopted by US Army Air Force Corporal William "Bill" Wynne, an air-crewman in a photo reconnaissance squadron, and became something of a lucky charm for Wynne's unit. ![]() The GIs who discovered her thought at first she had been a Japanese army mascot, but it turned out that she didn't understand commands in either Japanese or English. In February 1944, as Japanese military advances threatened to overwhelm New Guinea, a tiny, four-pound Yorkshire Terrier was discovered hiding in the island's thick jungles. ![]() From acclaimed thriller and war dog writer Damien Lewis comes the story of Smoky, the smallest and arguably bravest dog of World War II, who served as the US military's first therapy dog Smoky the Brave is the extraordinary, touching, and true story of a heroic dog and her adoptive masters in the jungles of the Pacific War. ![]()
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![]() Important this was, I still remember, I even emailed my best friend Mark about ![]() Two planes together, phew sorry, metadata lol…I knew that I had to remember how Solid, something tangible in time and space, something that I can close my eyes and recallĪs if I was back then and there, an actual point of recognition binding more Profound within the book that I felt jarred into this column of being something To look up from the text, look around me and recognize that moment, it was so ![]() ![]() The good news is that a decade into knowing each other we’re happily togetherīut this time in Queens, Kew Gardens instead of Manhattan ( I strangely like itĪs it feels like a quaint village here) but I can still recall the Manhattan homeĪfter work bus ride uptown when I was reading page 30 or something, and I had It’s funny to see your life in these ribbons of time, when a bookĬan be a bookmark to your life instead it certainly made me remember mine but Totally different neighborhood, my first real step away from my parents with a young ![]() Believe that I read Duma Key over three years ago, a time when I lived in a ![]() ![]() ![]() “Do you know how to use an iPad?” I asked slowly. She still had a nice body, despite looking like she could use a good meal or three. ![]() Help sat down, and my eyes glided over her legs briefly. After my response, she never did it again. Shortly before the accident that stole her freedom. Emilia stared at me defiantly, not even offering a hello. She’d tied her hair into a loose French twist. Great, that meant she’d made an effort for me since my visit last night. ![]() Good, I liked it that she no longer reminded me of Jo. At least they were the right size this time. I also saw that the heel to one of her shoes was glued on crooked. She came in wearing a red-and-white ladybug dress-I shit you not-and yellow leggings. After ten seconds, I leaned back in my seat and knotted my fingers together. ![]() ![]() ![]() Unfortunately, there are no source notes to support blanket statements such as, “Everything you put in your body ends up in your blood,” and “Your blood is more responsible for keeping you alive than anything else in your body.” This book’s content is similar to that in Trudee Romanek’s Squirt: The Most Interesting Book You’ll Ever Read About Blood (Kids Can, 2006), although it covers some topics in greater depth and has more of a narrative format. Spillover: Animal Infections and the Next Human Pandemic The Book of Blood: From Legends and Leeches to Vampires and Veins by H.P. The Book of Blood: From Legends and Leeches to Vampires and Veins 92. The conversational tone and the faux blood-spattered pages, replete with sidebars, color photos, archival drawings, and medical illustrations, are sure to pull in readers. HP Newquist, author of This Will Kill You: A Guide to the Ways in Which We Go. The chapters on the physiology of the circulatory system and the components of blood are more readable than those in many textbooks. ![]() Information about early medical practices such as bloodletting (including the use of leeches) will grab students’ interest, as will the sections on hematophagous (blood-drinking) animals and vampire legends. ![]() Several chapters cover its importance in ancient cultures and explain how our knowledge about its role in the body developed over time. Gr 5-8–Blood, writes Newquist, “is one of the most fascinating and fabled substances in history.” In this compendium, readers will learn about the red fluid’s biological function as well as its historical and cultural significance. ![]() ![]() Ilsa will also be debuting in New York Times best-selling author Susan Stoker’s SPECIAL FORCES: OPERATION ALPHA (March, 2018).Ĭurrently a cheesehead-in-exile, Ilsa lives in Alabama with the husband and several furry creatures. Ilsa’s book, SOLDIER’S HEART: PART ONE, will be available Jto be followed by Part Two (September 7, 2017) and Part Three (January 11, 2018), with two additional BroPro titles to follow in 2018. Most recently, Ilsa’s proud to be included in the launch of New York Times best-selling author Elle James’s BROTHERHOOD PROTECTORS Amazon Kindle Worlds Series. Her YA works include the critically acclaimed DRAW THE DARK (winner of the Westchester Fiction Award, a VOYA Perfect Ten, and Bank Street College 2011 Best Book). The first novel in her DARK PASSAGES series, White Space, was long-listed for the Stoker, and the concluding volume of the series, The Dickens Mirror, is now out in paperback. Ilsa's work spans established universes such as Star Trek, Battletech, Battlecorps, Mechwarrior Dark Age, and Shadowrun while her original novels include such critically acclaimed and award-winning books as The ASHES Trilogy, Drowning Instinct, The Sin-Eater’s Confession, and Draw the Dark. ![]() (Really, no one is more shocked about this than she.unless you talk to her mother.) ![]() ![]() Bick is a child psychiatrist, as well as a film scholar, surgeon wannabe, former Air Force major-and an award-winning, best-selling author of dozens of short stories and novels. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() However, Cather soon realized that she would have greater success writing about the kind of people she had grown up with on the Great Plains, and in 1913 she published O Pioneers!, which was about immigrant efforts to homestead in Nebraska. Her first novel was Alexander’s Bridge (1912), a novel patterned after Henry James. After five years at the magazine, during which she published a collection of poetry ( April Twilights in 1903) and another of short stories ( The Troll Garden in 1905), Cather devoted herself to writing full-time. ![]() There she met Edith Lewis, who would be her partner for nearly forty years. Later, after a stint teaching high school English, she took a job as managing editor for the muckraking McClure’s magazine in New York City and became the most powerful woman in magazine publishing at the time. After graduating, she moved to Pittsburgh to edit a women’s magazine, in which many of her essays and early fiction appeared under pseudonyms. Originally a pre-med major, Cather soon changed to an English major and began to regularly contribute theater and book reviews to the local newspaper. After a precocious childhood, she enrolled at the University of Nebraska in Lincoln in 1890. Born in Virginia, Willa Cather (b. 1873–d. 1947) and her family moved to a homestead in Red Cloud, Nebraska, when she was nine. ![]() ![]() ![]() It examines the evolution of the idea of 'Celtic Scotland', tracing the. It is the first such volume to scrutinise in detail the history of the Highlands and Islands incorporating the most up-to-date research. Imprint East Linton, East Lothian, Scotland: Tuckwell Press, A group of distinguished Scottish medievalists examines various aspects of the history of Celtic or Gaelic-speaking Scotland from the sub-Roman period to the sixteenth century. This book is the first such volume to scrutinise in detail the history of the Highlands and Islands incorporating the most up-to-date research. GOLDSTEIN, J., Writing in Scotland, 1058-1560, in Wallace, Cambridge History. Imprint East Linton, East Lothian, Scotland: Tuckwell Press, Alba: Celtic Scotland in the Middle Ages edited by Edward J. geography or imaginary map of ancient Alba, in Cowan and McDonald. > CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD EBOOK > CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD EBOOK <<<<Īlba: Celtic Scotland in the Middle Ages edited by Edward J. _Alba Celtic Scotland in the Medieval Era by Edward J Cowan Ebook Epub PDF zga ![]() ![]() Or try this link to use Google to search the subreddit. Find a Bookįind all-time favorites and popular recommendations on our subreddit resources page and check out our New Reader guide. No standalone request posts for anything that is not a genre romanceįor more detail on the rules, please click here.įor our guidelines on how to write a book request that follows the rules, please click here. No complaints about author identities or over-generalizing about author or reader genders ![]() Mark your spoilers and warn us about books without a HEA/HFN ![]() No discrimination, bigotry, or microaggressions towards marginalized groups Requests must be text posts and post titles must be specificīook requests must be specific and follow our guidelines ![]() A place to discuss M/M romance books, including book requests, reviews and recommendations, non-book media, and general discussions of the genre. ![]() ![]() ![]() One of the greatest rewards of writing this book was reading most of Muir’s work. Even though I am sure many anachronisms slipped through, with its millions of dated quotations, the unabridged OED was an invaluable resource. I tried to restrict the novel’s lexicon to ordinary words that had been widely in use by 1850, hoping that over the course of the book this would create a certain historical atmosphere that the reader would simply (and involuntarily) feel. The unabridged Oxford English Dictionary.These were some of my sources of inspiration: And for this, my references were not always from the nineteenth century. My main goal was to be inconspicuously accurate.Īll this was in the service of conveying a feeling of vastness and desolation (in the novel, the major events that shaped our country during those years take place just beyond the horizon), of being utterly lost in a monotonous, indifferent landscape. In fact, I did not want the novel to feel researched at all. I steered away from archaisms, colloquialisms, and technical terms, knowing that fetishizing certain words would make the narrator sound like a tourist or an anthropologist. To achieve a reality effect, more than westerns, I read travel narratives and essays by naturalists. In the Distance takes place during the second half of the nineteenth century in what was known, at the time, as the unorganized territories-vast expanses not yet part of the Union. ![]() ![]() ![]() But private insurers’ many efforts to restrain spending earn nothing but criticism from him.ģ. Gruber’s happy to blame “Cadillac” health insurance policies for raising medical costs. He even reassures readers that, under Obamacare, the government’s “comparative effectiveness research” cannot legally be used by private insurance companies to restrict health insurance coverage. He frowns on insurance policies that place any ceiling on annual or lifetime payouts. He brags that Obamacare will close the “enormous gaps” in many private insurance policies. He repeatedly panders to the populist view that near-total insurance is good. Gruber doesn’t just ignore the indirect effects of Medicare and Medicaid on health costs. Imagine how much more affordable health care would be if these programs had never been adopted – or if they were abolished.Ģ. Medicare and Medicaid vastly increase demand for health care. ![]() But he almost totally neglects the connection between the two. Gruber explains the basic facts about health care costs: they’re rising, and government picks up much of the tab. Yet he omits a long list of crucial, damaging points.ġ. He’s careful to avoid outright mistakes, and makes a couple of awkward disclosures. ![]() Gruber crafts his argument like a salesman, not an economic educator. Given my interest in health economics and graphic novels, I was initially hopeful about Jonathan Gruber‘s graphic novel, entitled Health Care Reform: What It Is, Why It’s Necessary, How It Works. ![]() |