Earth's Riches, Or, Underground Stores


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Factual material on minerals presented in a fictional framework.




The Marrow Thieves


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Just when you think you have nothing left to lose, they come for your dreams. Humanity has nearly destroyed its world through global warming, but now an even greater evil lurks. The indigenous people of North America are being hunted and harvested for their bone marrow, which carries the key to recovering something the rest of the population has lost: the ability to dream. In this dark world, Frenchie and his companions struggle to survive as they make their way up north to the old lands. For now, survival means staying hidden — but what they don't know is that one of them holds the secret to defeating the marrow thieves.







The Marrow of the World


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Healing Earths


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TRAVELS OF THE PRINCE is a narrative poem divided into five parts or Provenances. It is a fictionalized yet to some extent, parallel history told as a mythic tale, but with shadowy references to historical times, places, and events. The first part, "The Provenance of Darkness" is a kind of prehistory, the second suggests the Orient, the third, Greece, the forth, Rome, the fifth, the Modern Era. The principal characters, Prince Krishna, his friend, Baladev, (referred to as Dog, Sun, Weird), his enemy, Kaliya, (refered to as Snake, Python, Dissident) live in a timeless world in which events occur in a somewhat circular rather than linear way. The story begins when Prince Krishna, son of the Great Khan ruler of the Seven Realms that constitute the Empire, leaves his father's castle and against his father's wishes, begins a long adventurous journey from one realm to the next. This apparently rebellious action of the Prince, inspires Kaliya, the messianic leader of the autochthonous peoples, to rebel against the Empire and attack Baladev, Commander of the Imperial Army. New characters now appear, the Lords of the Seven Realms: Hiranyaksha of the Golden Eye, "the jewel-flashing dandy", Lord of the Second Realm, Kaliya's man; Phoibos Iskander, Duke of the Third realm, "a boy well made and fatal"; Arjuna Beak-o'-Bronze, Duke of the Fourth Realm; Narada "of the unhappy Consciousness, Lord of the Fifth Realm; Orlando, the Alchemist, Lord of the Sixth Realm; Hyperion, Lord of the Seventh Realm, "Held a secret so intense that no one dared to covet it". The almost continuous war that ensues between Kaliya and Baladev is destined to involve all of the Seven Realms as first one side, then the other appear to be the victor, each side hoping to enlist the sympathies of the Prince. Whereas the Khan is an enlightened monarch with democratic ideals, Kaliya's followers are of a static society, still mired in the past. On another level the war could be regarded as more a symbolic conflict between the mind-set of antiquity and the enduring quest of the individual for freedom of the creative spirit. The Prince, who has attachments for both Baladev and Kaliya, wavers between their opposing points of view. In the end, however, events bring him back, though under cloudy circumstances, to his father's castle at the place called Worldsend.







Southern Folk Medicine


Book Description

For the first time ever, an active practitioner describes the history, folklore, and remedies of Southern and Appalachian Folk Medicine in this groundbreaking guide for curious herbalists. This book is the first to describe the history, folklore, assessment methods, and remedies of Southern and Appalachian Folk Medicine—the only system of folk medicine, other than Native American, that developed in the United States. One of the system's last active practitioners, Phyllis D. Light has studied and worked with herbs, foods, and other healing techniques for more than thirty years. In everyday language, she explains how Southern and Appalachian Folk Medicine was passed down orally through the generations by herbalists and healers who cared for people in their communities with the natural tools on hand. Drawing from Greek, Native American, African, and British sources, this uniquely American folk medicine combines what is useful and practical from many traditions to create an energetic system that is coherent and valuable today.




The Letters of Hildegard of Bingen : Volume I


Book Description

The first translation into English of the complete correspondence of the remarkable twelfth-century Benedictine abbess Hildegard of Bingen (1098-1179), this study consists of nearly four hundred letters, in four projected volumes. Addressed to some of the most notable people of the day, as well as to some of humble status, the correspondence reveals the saint in ways her more famous works leave obscure: as determined reformer, as castigating seer, as theoretical musician, as patient adviser, as exorcist. Sometimes diffident and restrained, sometimes thunderously imperious, her letters are indispensable to understanding fully this luminary of medieval philosophy, poetry, and music. In addition, they provide a fascinating glimpse at life in tumultuous twelfth-century Germany, beset with schism and political unrest. This first volume includes ninety letters to the highest ranking prelates in Hildegard's world--popes, archbishops, and bishops. Three following volumes will be divided according to the rank of the addressees.