Arrow Pointing Nowhere


Book Description

From Agatha Christie’s favorite American author—creepy correspondence from a Manhattan mansion puts an amateur sleuth on the trail of a killer. Take one grand house, stuff it with staff, and make it home to several generations. If they send their sons to Oxford and occasionally knock each other off, you’ve got a country-house murder mystery, the delight of classic English crime fiction. But if the boys are at Yale, odds are that you’re reading its American counterpart, the New York mansion mystery—a genre largely invented by Elizabeth Daly. In Arrow Pointing Nowhere, Daly is back on the Upper East Side, where antiquarian book dealer Gamadge has been receiving missives suggesting that all is not right at the elegant Fenway mansion. But first he must find out who the messages are from . . . “Highly recommended.” —New Republic “Told with all the skill that Miss Daly has at her command, and she has plenty.” —New York Times




Prosthetic Gods


Book Description

How to imagine not only a new art or architecture but a new self or subject equal to them? In Prosthetic Gods, Hal Foster explores this question through the works and writings of such key modernists as Gauguin and Picasso, F. T. Marinetti and Wyndham Lewis, Adolf Loos and Max Ernst. These diverse figures were all fascinated by fictions of origin, either primordial and tribal or futuristic and technological. In this way, Foster argues, two forms came to dominate modernist art above all others: the primitive and the machine. Foster begins with the primitivist fantasies of Gauguin and Picasso, which he examines through the Freudian lens of the primal scene. He then turns to the purist obsessions of the Viennese architect Loos, who abhorred all things primitive. Next Foster considers the technophilic subjects propounded by the futurist Marinetti and the vorticist Lewis. These "new egos" are further contrasted with the "bachelor machines" proposed by the dadaist Ernst. Foster also explores extrapolations from the art of the mentally ill in the aesthetic models of Ernst, Paul Klee, and Jean Dubuffet, as well as manipulations of the female body in the surrealist photography of Brassai, Man Ray, and Hans Bellmer. Finally, he examines the impulse to dissolve the conventions of art altogether in the drip paintings of Jackson Pollock, the scatter pieces of Robert Morris, and the earthworks of Robert Smithson, and traces the evocation of lost objects of desire in sculptural work from Marcel Duchamp and Alberto Giacometti to Robert Gober. Although its title is drawn from Freud, Prosthetic Godsdoes not impose psychoanalytic theory on modernist art; rather, it sets the two into critical relation and scans the greater historical field that they share.







Programming Languages


Book Description

This book constitutes the proceedings of the 16th Brazililan Symposium on Programming Languages, SBLP 2012, held in Natal, Brazil, in September 2012. The 10 full and 2 short papers were carefully reviewed and selected from 27 submissions. The papers cover various aspects of programming languages and software engineering.




Multitudinous Heart


Book Description

"A selection of the finest poems from the preeminent Brazilian poet of the twentieth century"--




The Armchair Detective


Book Description




The Mystery Fancier


Book Description

A bibliography of various mystery novels published between November 1976 and Fall 1992.




The Mystery Fancier (Vol. 2 No. 1) January 1978


Book Description

The Mystery Fancier, Volume 2 Number 1, January 1978, contains: "The Professorial Sleuth of Roy Winsor," by Larry L. French, "The Vengeance Novels of Brian Garfield," by George Kelley, "Miscellaneous Mystery Mis-Mash," by Marvin Lachman, "Chance and Illogic and The Black Box Murder," by E. F. Bleiler, "An Index of Books Reviewed in TMF Volume 1 (Including the Preview Issue)," compiled by Jeff Meyerson, and "The Nero Wolfe Saga, Part V," by Guy M. Townsend.




Planting the Impatience


Book Description

UNIQUE TRANSFORMATIVE SELF-HELP / PSYCHOLOGY BOOK USING METAPHORS AS CHANGE AGENTS Einstein: 'the same brain that created a problem cannot be used to solve it'. So, before you head off to a neurosurgeon to get a 'new brain', take this unique, interactive and powerful self-help method to it. You may find your brain has a new mind of its own to 'solve that problem'. The approach called Metaphor Animation for Personal Trans-phor-mation (M.A.P.T) shifts the contemporary self-help paradigm. How? BOOK ON METAPHOR ANIMATION Draws on readers' unconscious resources Reader highly active (creativity; intuition; play). Content-free; purely symbolic (works with 'how' not 'what'). After reading & application, change/ transformation process has started.




The Gospel of Abraham


Book Description