Going Nowhere, Slow


Book Description

Using examples from art and literature, Frantzen explores the social, political and economic implications of both real and imagined depression. Is feeling blue a symptom of the death of progress? Was the suicide of David Foster Wallace a proverbial canary in a coal mine? Margaret Thatcher once declared that there is no alternative to the social order that we now reside within. Have we accepted her slogan as a fact, and is that why so many are on Prozac and other anti-depressants? Frantzen examines the works of Michel Houellebecq, Claire Fontaine and David Foster Wallace as he seeks out an answer and a way to formulate a new future oriented left movement.




Going Nowhere Slow


Book Description

David Muir is a retired science teacher who lives in the Grange area of Edinburgh with his wife Lynn. He is a regular contributor to the Last Word section of New Scientist magazine and likes wandering and pondering. Follow the author through his first year of retirement and be entertained by his musings and occasional rants. His tales of nature, gardens, science and surgery will entertain you and perhaps make you re-evaluate the speed at which you live your life, to the benefit of your physical health and mental well-being. See which beers, websites and books have brought sanity and joy to the author while writing the Going Nowhere Slow trilogy. David Muir's quirky approach is a recipe for happiness, contentment and a life well-lived. Going Nowhere Slow is a lifestyle choice. Going Nowhere Slow: Winter into Spring is the second book in the Going Nowhere Slow trilogy: meet the animals and plants which share the author's environment; read about a second knee-replacement and opioid drugs; find out about poisonous, pretty flowers; see why bird sex should not be viewed from below; learn to love clouds, their beautiful coloured phenomena and the joys of nephelococcygia; discover why there is only four, twenty-four hour days in a year; and lots more. Going Nowhere Slow is the way to go.




Going Nowhere Slow


Book Description

David Muir is a retired science teacher who lives in the Grange area of Edinburgh with his wife Lynn. He is a regular contributor to the Last Word section of New Scientist magazine and likes wandering and pondering. Follow the author through his first year of retirement and be entertained by his musings and occasional rants. His tales of nature, gardens, science and surgery will entertain you and perhaps make you re-evaluate the speed at which you live your life, to the benefit of your physical health and mental well-being. See which beers, websites and books have brought sanity and joy to the author while writing the Going Nowhere Slow trilogy. David Muir's quirky approach is a recipe for happiness, contentment and a life well-lived. Going Nowhere Slow is a lifestyle choice. Going Nowhere Slow: Autumn into Winter is the first book in the Going Nowhere Slow trilogy: meet the animals, plants and fungi which share the author's environment; read how he recovers from knee-replacement surgery; take a trip to the moon and view planet Earth from a lunar perspective; learn to empathise with trees and how they have more in common with us than we realise; be introduced to some mushrooms that are better left alone; discover there are right- and left-footed birds; and lots more. Going Nowhere Slow is the way to go.




Going Nowhere Slow


Book Description

David Muir is a retired science teacher who lives in the Grange area of Edinburgh with his wife Lynn. He is a regular contributor to the Last Word section of New Scientist magazine and likes wandering and pondering. Follow the author through his first year of retirement and be entertained by his musings and occasional rants. His tales of nature, gardens, science and surgery will entertain you and perhaps make you re-evaluate the speed at which you live your life, to the benefit of your physical health and mental well-being. See which beers, websites and books have brought sanity and joy to the author while writing the Going Nowhere Slow trilogy. David Muir's quirky approach is a recipe for happiness, contentment and a life well-lived. Going Nowhere Slow is a lifestyle choice. Going Nowhere Slow: Spring into Summer is the third book in the Going Nowhere Slow trilogy: meet the animals and plants which share the author's environment; become acquainted with a recent immigrant bumblebee; compare the attitudes of urban and rural pigeons; learn the purpose of the jackdaw's uncanny eye; find out why time seems to go faster as you age; eavesdrop on a conversation between a swiftlet and its primeval parasite; join the author on an adventure into prehistoric Orkney; and lots more. Going Nowhere Slow is the way to go.




The Art of Stillness


Book Description

"In The Art of Stillness, Iyer draws on the lives of well-known wanderer-monks like Cohen--as well as from his own experiences as a travel writer who chooses to spend most of his time in rural Japan--to explore why advances in technology are making us more likely to retreat. Iyer reflects that this is perhaps the reason why many people--even those with no religious commitment--seem to be turning to yoga, or meditation, or tai chi. These aren't New Age fads so much as ways to rediscover the wisdom of an earlier age."--Publisher's description.




Small Town Tourism in South Africa


Book Description

This book investigates small town tourism development in South Africa taking into account the most common strategies: branding, promotion, festivals and theming. The contents of the book resonate with the intersection of the power elite and their impacts on small town tourism. Because the book focuses on small town geographies in South Africa, the literature on small town tourism in the country is reviewed in Chapter 2 to provide a contextual background. Each subsequent chapter begins with an overview of international literature to give the conceptual context of the case studies each chapter explores. In Chapter 3 the concept of small town tourism branding is illustrated by an exploration of the Richmond book town. In Chapter 4 the branding theme is probed further in an investigation of two winners of the Kwêla Town of the Year competition namely Fouriesburg and De Rust. Chapter 5 documents the branding of Sedgefield through its proclamation as Africa’s first Cittaslow (slow town), a process driven by the local power elite to the exclusion of town’s poor who have no understanding of the intentions of the Cittaslow movement and its potential benefits for the town. Chapter 6 is a case study of Greyton’s tourism-led rural gentrification by which a small town has transformed in three decades to become a sought after place of residence for elite inmigrants so making the town a jewel tourism destination while reinforcing racial segregation. Because festivals and events - creations of the wealthy - have made significant financial contributions to small towns, Chapter 7 considers festivals and events as strategies to market and brand small towns in a particular way. Case studies of the economic impacts of festivals on small towns are assessed and the assessment methodologies used are critiqued. Chapter 8 provides a synthesis by drawing on the thesis of the urban growth machine by power elites.




Chaotic Cognition Principles and Applications


Book Description

Focusing on the principles and applications of chaotic thinking, this text seeks to promote a more general understanding and acceptance of this cognitive style. It may help people deal more effectively with chaotic situations, such as economic crises, career changes, and relationship skills.




Encyclopedia of Heavy Metal Music


Book Description

It has been reviled, dismissed, attacked, and occasionally been the subject of Congressional hearings, but still, the genre of music known as heavy metal maintains not only its market share in the recording and downloading industry, but also as a cultural force that has united millions of young and old fans across the globe. Characterized by blaring distorted guitars, drum solos, and dramatic vibrato, the heavy metal movement headbanged its way to the popular culture landscape with bands like Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath the 1970s. Motley Crue and Metallica made metal a music phenomenon in the 1980s. Heavy metal continues to evolve today with bands like Mastodon and Lamb of God. Providing an extensive overview of the music, fashion, films, and philosophies behind the movement, this inclusive encyclopedia chronicles the history and development of heavy metal, including sub-movements such as death metal, speed metal, grindcore, and hair metal. Essential and highly entertaining reading for high school and undergraduate courses in popular music studies, communications, media studies, and cultural studies, the Encyclopedia of Heavy Metal Music and Culture offers a guide to the ultimate underground music, exploring its rich cultural diversity, resilience, and adaptability. Entries for musicians include a discography for those wanting to start or develop their music collections.




Devil on Sea


Book Description

Alan once more finds himself waking up on Brighton beach; only this time the pounding in his head hasn't come from alcohol. He's done something few have ever done, he's escaped from Hell! Desperate to find his wife, Alan heads for the last place he'd seen her; home. However, Mary no longer lives there as she now resides in a room where the beds come with restraints. Mary, like everyone, struggles to cope with reality. Only life has reserved its nastiest of tricks just for her. Meanwhile, Lucifer has taken a rare trip upstairs and is determined to drag Alan's sorry arse back down to Hell with him. But where to begin the look in country he despises most; Britain. So read the book the author's own brother described as ""Not as bad as I thought it would be."" A dark comedy full of twists and turns, love and loss, exorcising and exercising. You're in for one Hell of a ride.




The Big Buddha Bicycle Race


Book Description

Silver Medalist in Literary Fiction, 2020 Military Writers Society of America Awards Brendan Leary, assigned to an Air Force photo squadron an hour from L.A., thinks he has it made. But when the U.S. invades Cambodia and he joins his buddies who march in protest, he is shipped off to an obscure air base in upcountry Thailand. There, he finds himself flying at night over the Ho Chi Minh Trail in a secret war that turns the mountains of Laos into a napalm-scorched moonscape. As the emotional vise tightens, his moral fiber crumbles and he sinks ever deeper into a netherworld of drugs, sex, and booze. When a visit by Nixon looms, Brendan dreams up an all-squadron bicycle race to build morale, win hearts and minds in rural Thailand, and make him and his underpaid buddies a pile of money. The Big Buddha Bicycle Race is a last gasp of hope that turns into a unifying adventure—until the stakes turn out to be far higher than anyone imagined. The Big Buddha Bicycle Race is a new take on the Vietnam War. A caper on the surface, it is also a tribute to the complex culture and history of Southeast Asia and a sober remembrance of those groups who have been erased from American history—the brash active-duty soldiers who risked prison by taking part in the GI antiwar movement, the gutsy air commandos who risked death night after night flying over the Ho Chi Minh Trail, and the people of Laos, whose lives and land were devastated in ways that have yet to be fully acknowledged in Western accounts of the war.