Language eng Summary Gus, a nine-year-old animal/human hybrid, grapples with some newfound abilities and the harsh reality of his existence when he starts exploring the world beyond his family's home after his father's death Member ofĬataloging source DLC Out of the deep woods Lemire, Jeff Dewey number 741.5/971 Illustrations illustrations Index no index present LC call number PN6733. The item Sweet tooth, 1, Out of the deep woods, Jeff Lemire, story & art Jose Villarrubia, colors Pat Brosseau, letters represents a specific, individual, material embodiment of a distinct intellectual or artistic creation found in DC Public Library System. End of the world - Comic books, strips, etc.Animal mutation - Comic books, strips, etc.Label Sweet tooth,, Out of the deep woods Title Sweet tooth Title number Title part Out of the deep woods Statement of responsibility Jeff Lemire, story & art Jose Villarrubia, colors Pat Brosseau, letters Title variation Out of the deep woods Creator
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Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex (PS2)) With a weighting on Existentialism and Humanism, Consumerism, economic class disparity, Industrial political corruption, and Politically radicalised splinter groups. Ghost in the Shell expands its scope beyond the narrative by exploring many rich Philosophical, Economic, Social, and Political themes. This unit specializes in combating tech-based crimes, with a lean toward Spec Ops weapons and tactics, as well as an investigative focus on hacking, data mining, and more traditional methods of information sleuthing, and detective work. The narrative follows the covert operations division of the Japanese National Public Security Commission Section 9. Ghost in the Shell is a futuristic, police/noir thriller, set around the mid-21st Century, dealing with the reality of corporate power structures, and cyber terrorism, against a backdrop of technological advancement, and transhumanist cyberisation, in a Neo-Japanese state. Schönecker and Wood aim to explain exactly what Kant is saying throughout the Groundwork. Their aim is an accurate reading that pays close attention to textual details - including the structure of individual sentences and paragraphs that are hard to parse and often misread. It is an excellent, short (as they intend it to be) commentary. Schönecker and Wood stress that it is a joint product that is independent of the earlier work of each individual author, but readers familiar with their other work will recognize the influence of Wood's views about the Categorical Imperative (CI) on their treatment of Groundwork II and of Schönecker's account of the structure of the deduction of the CI on their treatment of Groundwork III. This volume is a slightly revised translation of a commentary on the Groundwork that Dieter Schönecker and Allen W. The first difference is incorporating the gods of the alien Shi’ar race, people with influence throughout a significant area of Marvel’s universe. Over the years Thor has probably fought an entire pantheon of mad gods, but Aaron differentiates this significantly. That, however, is just by means of an appetiser as the title story kicks in, and that’s a gem. It’s nice to have them codified after all these years. While that plot doesn’t come to a head, there is at least an introductory skirmish over the first two chapters, Thor part of a cabal featuring representatives of each of those nine worlds. More were signed up to his axis of evil in Lords of Midgard, and a further couple are added here. A slow release plot Jason Aaron’s run since Jane Foster’s adoption of Thor’s identity is the machinations of the Dark Elf Malekith, intending to conquer the nine worlds. Watching her violent father bullying her weak mother is torment and she feels powerless to intervene. But she has even worse problems at school where she is bullied, especially by Kez, for being fat and scruffily dressed. There’s very little money and her mum struggles just to keep the family going. Fit for a King and May Day Madness! Topical themes to inspire aspiring young writersįebruary 2015 Debut of the Month Life at home is horrible for Jess since her father left. The year’s outstanding debut authors for children: shortlist for the 2023 Branford Boase Award announced.Celebrate Grandparents Day with 50 great kids books about grandparents.Anxiety & Wellbeing - 80 Books to Help Children Nurture Good Mental Health.Jacqueline Wilson - our Guest Editor of the Month.Branford Boase 2023 – what the judges had to say about the shortlist.Read Hour returns for its third year in the UK with Moomin Characters.In its 20th year, the shortlist for CLiPPA (CLPE Children’s Poetry Award) reflects the wealth of talent in children’s poetry.13 Children's Books Featuring Poverty and Homelessness.30 enticing chapter books for children who are newly independent readers.
A plan so sinister that only a megalomaniac could think it up, and only the unlikely duo of the irrepressibly charming Emerson Knight and the tenacious Riley Moon could hope to stop it. Through the streets of Washington D.C., and down into the underground vault of the Federal Reserve in New York City, an evil plan is exposed. At least, Riley Moon thinks it's her dream job until she is given her first assignment: babysitting Emerson Knight.Īn inquiry about missing Knight money leads to a missing man, missing gold and a life-and-death race across the country. Her assertive (some people might say aggressive) spitfire attitude has helped land a dream job at Blane-Grunwald bank. Riley Moon has just graduated from Harvard. Good thing he's also brilliant, rich and (some people might say) handsome. They couldn't be less compatible, but they make a great team.Įmerson Knight is introverted, eccentric, and has little-to-no sense of social etiquette. A Fox and OHare Novel By: Janet Evanovich, Lee Goldberg Narrated by: Scott Brick Series: Fox and OHare, Book 4 Length: 6 hrs and 55 mins Release date: 09-15-15 Language: English 2,765 ratings Regular price: 18. 1 bestselling author Janet Evanovich and screenwriter Phoef Sutton is a must-read thriller for fans of the Stephanie Plum mysteries including ONE FOR THE MONEY and TRICKY TWENTY-TWO. and hemmed in by woods, lakes and the bands of ambushed enemies, were entirely cut off by those foes, whom they had used to slaughter like cattle.The savage enemy mangled the half-burned body of Varus. The troops did not even have the opportunity of fighting, as they wished. An army unrivaled in bravery, the first of the Roman troops in discipline, vigor and military experience, was thus brought through supine leadership, the perfidy of the foe, and a cruel Fortune into an utterly desperate situation. Here I can merely lament the disaster as a whole. *Includes pictures *Includes ancient accounts describing the battle *Includes online resources and a bibliography for further reading *Includes a table of contents “The details of this terrible calamity, the heaviest that had befallen the Romans on foreign soil since the disaster of Crassus in Parthia, I shall endeavor to set forth, as others have done, in my larger work. Paperback (September 15th, 2021): $10. The work is often assumed to have been written, or at least compiled, by the Icelandic scholar, lawspeaker, and historian Snorri Sturluson c.He reframes the telling of the Lanfeogatal. by Snorri Sturluson (Author), Jean I Young (Translator) June 2012 First Edition Paperback 24.95, £21. Written by Alana Shaw and other people who wish to remain anonymous Prologue Just as Geoffrey of Monmouth asserted, Sturluson's Edda begins with the battle of Troy, arguing that several soldiers from that war traveled north to Iceland and the Nordic states. Publisher: Grapevine India Publishers Pvt Ltd The Prose Edda Tales from Norse Mythology. The Prose Edda is the result, a rare peek into early Norse mythology. Snorri Sturluson, a distinguished poet, legislator, and frequent visitor to Norway's royal court, determined in 1220 to assemble Norse mythology's narratives and poetic practises before they faded under the influence of Christianity and European poem forms. The Prose Edda, also known as the Younger Edda, Snorri's Edda, and simply Edda, was written in Old Norse during the thirteenth century in Iceland. The Holy Roman Empire is the First Reich to Adolf Hitler’s Third. The Thirty Years War ended in 1648 with the Peace of Westphalia, negotiated and signed in the Holy Roman Empire, and which continues to influence international politics to this day. The Holy Roman Empire is where the Thirty Years War, the most destructive military conflict on the European continent, second only to World War II, was fought. It was because of decisions made in the Holy Roman Empire that Spain became an Empire in and of itself. It was in the Holy Roman Empire that Protestantism as a third branch of Christianity developed. It was in the Holy Roman Empire that Martin Luther published his 95 Theses. It was in the Holy Roman Empire that the Roman Catholic Church faced its first major secular opposition through the Investiture Controversy. Located at the center of the European continent, it was a dominating force in European politics, religion, and warfare for nearly one thousand years. The Holy Roman Empire is arguably the best kept out-in-the-open secret of pre-modern European history. You get the knee-jerk reply, “It wasn’t holy, Roman, nor an empire,” the person most likely unaware that they are quoting French Enlightenment philosopher Voltaire. The person thinks you mean the Roman Empire. The person you are speaking to thinks you are talking about the Roman Catholic Church. Say “the Holy Roman Empire” and you are likely to get one of four responses. Twirl with the pig if you know how.’ The rowdy crew in Monsters bursts in upon a mild-mannered hippo and makes ‘the mess that monsters make,’ but returns to make amends. In Barnyard, farm animals dance a boisterous, breathless, knee-slapping reel called, with great panache, by a fiddle-playing cow: ‘Bow to the horse. A zany sensibility gives an extra bounce to the otherwise conventional counting book One, Two, Three! A similar silliness suffuses Dinosaurs, which explores opposites. Each volume features a die-cut front cover framing a picture of its ebullient cartoon stars. “The popular illustrator and greeting-card artist brings oddball humor and plenty of sassy energy to Boynton on Board, a quartet of concept board books. Her Barnyard Dance! Is a true romp of a board book, with cartoon farm animals that are wacky enough to make you laugh out loud, and rhymes clever enough to sustain those nearly infinite re-readings: ‘Stand with the donkey / Slide with the sheep / Scramble with the little chicks - cheep cheep cheep!’ Now, here's a woman who really knows how to use an active verb.” -Parents “Sandra Boynton has a knack for creating baby books with bounce. |