Baja Bad


Book Description

S. C. Watson's Baja Bad is a powerful collection of stirring original gothic and southwestern poems and prose. It's traditionally concise and carefully crafted sounds, rhythms, imagery, symbolism, and technical devices echo the senses, inspire the imagination, and enlighten both our personal perceptions and collective understanding of the universe. It's rooted in the ideal that poetry is beauty, and beauty is truth, absolute truth. And it conveys this principle in a manner rarely utilized in modern dramatic poetry. This collection of poems is set against the semiautobiographical experiences of the writer as he battles a powerful other-worldly Daughter of Darkness and a variety of very worldly evils.




Nhanda


Book Description

This book presents the first detailed sketch grammar of Nhanda, a Pama-Nyungan language of the central coast of Western Australia presently on the verge of extinction. This language was once spoken along the lower Murchison River, from Kalbarri inland, and south to present-day Northampton and Geraldton, but has remained largely unknown until recent years. Nhanda is based on the author's fieldwork in Western Australia from 1993 to 1998 with one of the last speakers of the language, and also incorporates notes of early explorers and linguists who passed through the area. The grammar presents the general features of the language within the Australian context, followed by a comprehensive study of Nhanda sound patterns, major sections on nominal and verbal morphology, and descriptions of simple sentences and constituent order. Each chapter is rich in data and provides comparative evidence with important implications for historical relationships between the languages of Australia. The volume also includes Nhanda-English and English-Nhanda alphabetical vocabularies and an alphabetical list of Nhanda affixes.




Operation Blackball


Book Description

The content of this book is for informational purposes only. The book will help those assigned to monitor prison and street gangs, criminal groups, or drug cartel operatives deciphering what they say or talk about. This book is language and slang commonly used by those criminals. It’s intended for those in the field of corrections and law enforcement. This book is a must-have for those tasked with intercepting mail, text messages, or listening to a telephone conversation. This book discusses words, terms, and language that some readers might consider profane, vulgar, racial, derogatory, or offensive. Slang terms are words or phrases that have a cultural definition that is different from the literal meaning. Slang expressions also change continually. Many expressions or words often have more than one purpose or meaning. Some phrases have been around so long that they have become idioms or common expressions where certain word combinations are different from their literal meaning.










Love is for the Dist


Book Description

Everyone graduates college hoping to land their dream job. And that's exactly what I did. Assistant event planner at the most prestigious firm in town. Too bad my boss is a nightmare. How am I supposed to gain experience when all I do is fetch coffee? I’m about to say screw it, when Will Asher strolls into the office. The epitome of sophistication, he breathes life into my dying career. All he asks in return? Throw the most spectacular fundraiser our town has ever seen. In one month. Which I have completely under control. It’s the rest of the stuff I’m struggling with. The closeness between me and Asher that I never expected. And that can never be. He’s a client and I’m a professional. There are some lines that should never be crossed. Now if I can just figure out where that pesky little line begins.










Proceedings


Book Description




The Joy of Doing Things Badly


Book Description

In a society that puts so much emphasis on perfection, Veronica Chambers mischievously casts aside the guilt-inducing litany of “shoulda, coulda, woulda” that seems to define modern-day life and replaces it with a resounding call to live with “foolish bravery.” Refreshingly open about the personal failures and limitations that once weighed her down with shame, Chambers describes how she turned her less-than-perfect qualities into sources of delight and satisfaction. From belting out off-key renditions of torch songs while washing the dishes to seeing even the most unlikely career opportunity as a chance to spread one’s wings, Chambers shows that a willingness to fall flat on one’s face heightens the joys of everyday life and opens a new, wonderfully liberating perspective on work, motherhood, aging, friendship, failure, and success. With a winning combination of lighthearted anecdotes and heartfelt musings, Chambers encourages readers to follow her example and do the things that tickle their fancies and fire their imaginations—no matter what other people (and that little voice inside) may say. Like Chambers herself, they’ll discover that “what we consider our failures have a surprising ability to charm . . . we are loved for our imperfections—for our funny faces and walks and dances and songs.”