The Handbook of Logistics and Distribution Management: Understanding the Supply Chain
Alan Rushton, Phil Croucher and Peter Baker
Book
The definitive guide to supply chain philosophy, strategy AND the practicalities of logistics and...
Urban Squares: Spatio-Temporal Studies of Design & Everyday Life in the Oresund Region
Book
Urban Squares suggests a specific and fresh take on agorology the study of urban squares. The...
The Soul's Agenda: The Inner Self Waits Patiently Until We are Ready to Discover it
Book
This inspiring collection of channelled messages will enlighten, encourage and empower you. Michelle...
ICD-10 Pro: Codes of Diseases
Health & Fitness and Utilities
App
Official ICD-10 table for searching and browsing the updated International Classification of...
Biochar for Environmental Management: Science, Technology and Implementation
Stephen Joseph and Johannes Lehmann
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Biochar is the carbon-rich product which occurs when biomass (such as wood, manure or crop residues)...
Cougar: Ecology and Conservation
Maurice Hornocker, Sharon Negri and Alan Rabinowitz
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The cougar is one of the most beautiful, enigmatic, and majestic animals in the Americas. Eliciting...
Piano Hymns: Relaxing Spiritual Devotional Songs
Catalogs and Music
App
Welcome to Piano Hymns: Relaxing Spiritual Devotional Songs, the most amazing collection of...
Haley Mathiot (9 KP) rated So Sad Today: Personal Essays in Books
Apr 27, 2018
It was fascinating, enlightlening, entertaining, and relatable. It was violently truthful and brutally honest.
There are two sides of me responding to this book in two different ways.
The fememist inside me wants every young person to read this book for three reasons:
1. you are not alone in what you think it sweirdness and strangeness.
2. Here is someone who has experienced things you are curious about. Live vicariously throug her and learn from her mistakes but do not make the same choices.
3. This book is both a journal and a love letter, and it’s from her to you, so read it understanding it as both.
The other part of me sees the stuff she’s dealing with and ache for her. Broder is dealing with issues and trying to answer questions with no guidance and no purpose and no direction. It’s a battle I’ve never had to fight because I don’t seek for my fulfillment from me, I find it in my identity in Christ. And that part of me that sees her hungry and seeking and lost and confused really wants to take her out to coffee. So Melissa, if you get a chance to read this, I’d like to take you to coffee. Or we could just text. :)
Content/recommendation: mature and adult content. Lots of swearing and sex. 16+
David McK (3425 KP) rated Staked (The Iron Druid Chronicles, #8) in Books
Jan 30, 2019
And yes, I didn't know that until I read the prelude/authors note, which resulted in me putting this one on hold until I read that particular entry.
When the series started, Atticus was on his own, hiding out in Arizona, until he makes the fateful decision to stand up to rather than run from the Celtic God who believes that Atticus has stolen a magical sword from him.
Since then, events have snowballed out of control, with Atticus now joined by his apprentice Granuaille as well as his own Arch-Druid, who was frozen on a time-island for millenia. This, of necessity, means that the story is no longer told from one point of view: rather, we now have three seperate plot threads (usually told chapter about) that combine into one at the very end of this, when Atticus and co. finally coming face-to-fang with the vampire Theophilus, who was responsible for inciting the Romans to virtually wipe out the Druids in the first place, and who now wants to finish the job.
As always, comiv relief is provided in the form of Atticus faithful hound Oberon, with Granuaille's wolf-hound Orlaith providing the same in her sections of the story while Owen struggles to get to grips with modern living in his.
David McK (3425 KP) rated Star Wars Legends Epic Collection: The New Republic, Vol. 2 in Books
Jan 30, 2019
While understandable in light of their plans to create new movies (of which we have had one so far - 'The Force Awakens' - with another off-shoot to come this year in 'Rogue One') my sense is that there was a bit of a back-lash to this (hence the reason for these 'Legends Epic collections'): I'm even guilty of it myself a bit, in that I would quite have liked to see a movie based on either [a: Timothy Zahn|12479|Timothy Zahn|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1215545810p2/12479.jpg]'s [b: Heir to the Empire|216443|Heir to the Empire (Star Wars The Thrawn Trilogy #1)|Timothy Zahn|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1398253847s/216443.jpg|1133995] trilogy, or even on any of the X-Wing books/comics.
It's those comics that comprise this collection, which consists of the following stories:
X-Wing: Rogue Leader 1-3
X-Wing: Rogue Squadron: The Rebel Opposition (1-4)
X-Wing: Rogue Sqaudron: The Phantom Affair (1-4)
X-Wing: Rogue Sqaudron: Battleground: Tattoine (1-4)
X-Wing: Rogue Squadron: The Warrior Princess (1-4)
X-Wing: Rogue Sqaudron Special
as well as some content from 'Star Wars Tales' #12 and #23
As this is a compilation of such, the art style is not consistent throughout (although it is consistent in-story: I found some tales to have better, clearer art than others. I'm also somewhat surprised that the left out those stories connected to Baron Soontir Fel in this collection!