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David Sanders resides in Jersey City and in Baiting Hollow on the North Fork of Long Island. Sanders will always be a New Yorker at heart: he grew up in Westbury, Long Island, and spent most of his adult life just a stone's throw from the fields and tennis courts of Central Park. A graduate of Georgetown University he writes, paints, and composes music. Sanders also has a great deal of product design, digital design, and architectural experience. He has written eight volumes of poetry. Currently he is finishing his first collection of digital prints under his brand Mates 4or Life as well as composing the music for an original ballet based upon one of his roundels. He is very happy to be publishing The Selected Poems, his eighth volume of poetry by agreement with Random House's xlibris.com.
Two hundred new poems from David Sanders including: Love Is Always In Your Heart Love is always in your heart. In a busy world that tends to isolate We all feel, at times, like a spare part. But love is always in your heart. If you can’t feel it, you can’t relate, Please don’t despair or hesitate, It’s still there–ready for your next date. Love is always pretty smart. It’s always there, always in wait. It’s the place it gets its start: Love is always in your heart.
The first entirely evidence-based guide revealing the truth about gluten. Gluten is regularly lambasted in the press, demonised by wellbeing experts and banned from more diets every day. But do we know why? Where does the hype end and science begin? And will bread forever be off the menu? Cutting through the sensationalism, myths and confusion surrounding all things gluten, Professor David Sanders is here to bring us the very latest evidence and groundbreaking research findings from his very personal journey into the heartland of Gluten. Including: specific advice tailored to suit individual needs, from coeliac to wheat-sensitive and FODMAP; a comprehensive look at how exactly gluten affects the body; delicious gluten-free recipes. This book will help to advise you and empower you, both in terms of understanding the evidence and providing guidance about how best to look after yourself - whether gluten is for you or not.
My Garden - My Friend is a collection of poems and short stories, even a rap song, written by lively and alert young gardeners about their gardening experiences, each one matched with a charming, complementary illustration. Share their enchanting tales, scary adventures, passionate pleas and heart-warming feelings about what they discover living and growing in their gardens. And how they all agree . . . that their garden really is their friend! This is a book for children and young adults, parents and grand-parents, to marvel at and enjoy the wonders that these young gardeners unearth!
The first edition of The Struggle for Health was published in 1985 and was widely acclaimed by those seeking a broader and deeper political understanding of ill health, beyond the medical model of care. It was a revolutionary book, charting new ways of understanding and tackling the causes of ill health, and suggesting strategies to enable health for all. This second edition includes health problems that have emerged since the 1980s, notably HIV/AIDs, COVID-19, and other epidemics, and the increase in non-communicable diseases, such as cardiovascular disease and diabetes. It examines some of the health impacts of globalization, specifically on the food and pharmaceutical value chains, and co...
Informed by Winston Churchill's famous metaphor, successive British governments have shaped their foreign policy thinking around the belief that Britain's overseas interests lie in three interlocking 'circles': in Europe, in the Commonwealth, and in the 'special relationship' across the Atlantic. Recent administrations may have updated the language in terms of 'bridges', 'hubs' and 'networks', but the notion of Britain as somehow at the centre of things remains a vital idea. In this updated edition of a classic text, David Sanders and David Patrick Houghton examine British foreign policy since 1945 through the prism of these three circles. Taking account of major developments from the ending...
A collection of poems about time, solitude, and wisdom that leads readers to hover between acceptance of and alienation from our fragility. Bread of the Moment, the follow-up to David Sanders' Compass and Clock (Swallow Press, 2016), devotes keen attention to the porous nature of the past and how the unbidden evidence of ordinary life pervades the world, provoking a spectrum of moments from which to draw meaning and find solace. These poems, characterized by a mix of free and formal verse, depict quiet days at home or in nature, as well as close calls and brushes with death: chronic illness, a house fire, a car crushed by a boulder. In this way, these poems amplify the fragility of the commonplace, a mystery from which we are, amid the noise of our everyday lives, sometimes estranged. Through this exploration, Sanders constructs a precarious balance between alienation and acceptance, striking a note at once recognizable and new.