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Birds, Art & Design
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 233

Birds, Art & Design

Legendary bird carver Larry Barth has created a stunning retrospective of his life's work, including sculptures from museum exhibits and rarely seen pieces from private collections. This is a must-have book for every bird lover, carver, and anyone who appreciates fine sculptural art.

Birds, Art & Design
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 234

Birds, Art & Design

Legendary bird carver Larry Barth has created a stunning retrospective of his life's work, including sculptures from museum exhibits and rarely seen pieces from private collections. This is a must-have book for every bird lover, carver, and anyone who appreciates fine sculptural art. • 24 finely detailed sculptures in wood shown in up-close photographs • Includes his early work, the Ward world-class winners, and his most recent pieces • Barth shares insights on how he conceives, designs, and executes his blue-ribbon masterpieces

Masterplanning Futures
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 313

Masterplanning Futures

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2012
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  • Publisher: Routledge

Lucy Bullivant analyses the ideals and processes of international masterplans, and their role in the evolution of many different types of urban contexts in both the developed and developing world. Among the book's key themes are landscape-driven schemes, social equity through the reevaluation of spatial planning, and the evolution of strategies responding to a range of ecological issues and the demands of social growth. The author's research was enabled by grants from the Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment (CABE), the SfA (the Netherlands Architecture Fund), the Danish Embassy and support from the Alfred Herrhausen Society.

Crossroads at Clarksdale
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 392

Crossroads at Clarksdale

Weaving national narratives from stories of the daily lives and familiar places of local residents, Francoise Hamlin chronicles the slow struggle for black freedom through the history of Clarksdale, Mississippi. Hamlin paints a full picture of the town over fifty years, recognizing the accomplishments of its diverse African American community and strong NAACP branch, and examining the extreme brutality of entrenched power there. The Clarksdale story defies triumphant narratives of dramatic change, and presents instead a layered, contentious, untidy, and often disappointingly unresolved civil rights movement. Following the black freedom struggle in Clarksdale from World War II through the fir...

Calvino and the Age of Neorealism
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 432

Calvino and the Age of Neorealism

Italo Calvino's reputation as one of the great writers of our century rests chiefly on his allegorical fables and fantastic narratives, whose inventiveness, irreverence, and elegant style are universally admired. In this study, the author focuses on Calvino's first novel, The Path to the Nest of Spiders (1947), because in it she discerns a critical point of origin for Calvino's entire 'ethics' of writing. She shows how, in The Path, he challenges the poetics of objectivity of the Italian neorealists movement and offers a complex and ironic representation of the anti-Fascist armed resistance in Italy. Situating Calvino's early work in its historical and cultural context, the author reassesses...

What There Is to Say We Have Said
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 529

What There Is to Say We Have Said

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2011-05-12
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  • Publisher: HMH

Letters revealing a lost literary world—and a unique friendship between a brilliant author and a New Yorker editor. For over fifty years, Eudora Welty and William Maxwell, two of our most admired writers, penned letters to each other. They shared their worries about work and family, literary opinions and scuttlebutt, and moments of despair and hilarity. Living half a continent apart, their friendship was nourished and maintained by their correspondence. What There Is to Say We Have Said bears witness to Welty and Maxwell’s editorial relationship—both in Maxwell’s capacity as New Yorker editor and in their collegial back-and-forth on their work. It’s also a chronicle of the literary...

Strangely Familiar
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 104

Strangely Familiar

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2013-05-13
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  • Publisher: Routledge

This series of provocative views presents the ways we use and inhabit places and the ways our lives are shaped by those places. Strangely Familiar is a book about the unexpected, about the vitality and the complexity of the everyday.

Property, Politics, and Urban Planning
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 282

Property, Politics, and Urban Planning

This text on the origins and history of city planning in Australian cities covers the emergence of the Town Planning Movement, and planning from the nineteenth century through to the post-1980s period. Looking at the cities of Adelaide, Melbourne and Sydney.

Birds in Wood and Paint
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 202

Birds in Wood and Paint

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2009
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  • Publisher: UPNE

A comprehensive look at American miniature bird carvings and the artists who made them

Hackers
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 430

Hackers

This 25th anniversary edition of Steven Levy's classic book traces the exploits of the computer revolution's original hackers -- those brilliant and eccentric nerds from the late 1950s through the early '80s who took risks, bent the rules, and pushed the world in a radical new direction. With updated material from noteworthy hackers such as Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg, Richard Stallman, and Steve Wozniak, Hackers is a fascinating story that begins in early computer research labs and leads to the first home computers. Levy profiles the imaginative brainiacs who found clever and unorthodox solutions to computer engineering problems. They had a shared sense of values, known as "the hacker ethic," that still thrives today. Hackers captures a seminal period in recent history when underground activities blazed a trail for today's digital world, from MIT students finagling access to clunky computer-card machines to the DIY culture that spawned the Altair and the Apple II.