Quadruplet Power – The Story Begins


Book Description

IT ALL STARTED with a hastily written letter on a torn piece of notebook paper written moments before... Well, you’ll have to read to find out how a letter changed the life of Yondila and took her, her siblings, and her friends on a big adventure.




Quad


Book Description

When six students from six different cliques are forced into a student store as a classmate holds the school hostage by shooting his gun in the quad, the six classmates begin to consider who would do such a thing and why through a series of revealing flashbacks.




Eerie Quad Cities


Book Description

Like the mighty Mississippi River that cleaves the Quad Cities, the region's history can trap the unwary in some unexpected eddies. Peer through the fog of the past to catch a glimpse of the Tinsmith Ghost of Rock Island or the river serpent with a price on its head. Get the back story on the Banshee of Brady Street, read the 1869 report on a Bigfoot sighting near East Davenport and run the numbers on local UFO activity. From phantom footsteps in the Renwick Mansion to a mausoleum heist in Chippiannock Cemetery, Michael McCarty and John Brassard Jr. trace a path through the shadowy heritage of the Quad Cities.




Outwitting the Devil


Book Description

Originally written in 1938 but never published due to its controversial nature, an insightful guide reveals the seven principles of good that will allow anyone to triumph over the obstacles that must be faced in reaching personal goals.




The Michigan Technic


Book Description




Making Multiple Babies


Book Description

Human beings have been producing more twins, triplets, and quadruplets than ever before, due to the expansion of medically assisted conception. This book analyzes the anticipatory regimes of making multiple babies. With archival documents, participant observation, in-depth interviews, and registry data, this book traces the global and local governance of the assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs) used to tackle multiple pregnancy since the 1970s, highlighting the early promotion of single embryo transfer in Belgium and Japan and the making of the world's most lenient guidelines in Taiwan.




Cosmology and Moral Community in the Lakota Sun Dance


Book Description

Drawing on Indigenous methodologies, this book uses a close analysis of James R. Walker’s 1917 monograph on the Lakota Sun Dance to explore how the Sun Dance communal ritual complex – the most important Lakota ceremony – creates moral community, providing insights into the cosmology and worldview of Lakota tradition. The book uses Walker’s primary source to conduct a reading of the Sun Dance in its nineteenth-century context through the lenses of Lakota metaphysics, cosmology, ontology, and ethics. The author argues that the Sun Dance constitutes a cosmic ethical drama in which persons of all types – human and nonhuman – come together in reciprocal actions and relationships. Drawing on contemporary animist theory and a perspectivist approach that uses Lakota worldview assumptions as the basis for analysis, the book enables a richer understanding of the Sun Dance and its role in the Lakota moral world. Offering a nuanced understanding that centers Lakota views of the sacred, this book will be relevant to scholars of religion and animism, and all those interested in Native American cultures and lifeways.




Beckett, Modernism and the Material Imagination


Book Description

Steven Connor, one of the most influential critics of twentieth-century literature and culture, has spent much of his career writing and thinking about Samuel Beckett. This book presents Connor's finest published work on Beckett alongside fresh essays that explore how Beckett has shaped major themes in modernism and twentieth-century literature. Through discussions of sport, nausea, slowness, flies, the radio switch, religion and academic life, Connor shows how Beckett's writing is characteristic of a distinctively mundane or worldly modernism, arguing that it is well-attuned to our current concern with the stressed relations between the human and natural worlds. Through Connor's analysis, Beckett's prose, poetry and dramatic works animate a modernism profoundly concerned with life, worldly existence and the idea of the world as such. Lucid, provocative, wide-ranging, and richly informed by critical and cultural theory, this book is required reading for anyone teaching or studying Beckett, modernism and twentieth-century literary studies.




The Stanford Quad


Book Description




Atlantis Rising 102 - November/December 2013


Book Description

Martin Ruggles: LAKE VOSTOK'S SECRET LIFE Startling Proof of the Very Strange World Beneath Antarctica's Ice David H. Childress: EASTER ISLAND'S ASTONISHING ANTIQUITY Orthodox Science Has a Lot of Explaining to Do Thomas J. Carey: THE SUSPENSION OF DISBELIEF U.S. Air Force Strategy and the Roswell Case Robert M. Schoch: THE ZODIAC OF GLASTONBURY A Scientist Looks at Mrs. Maltwood's Vision Steven Sora: DID THE WELSH DISCOVER AMERICA? Prince Madoc and England's Claim to the New World