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When your high school football team beats their rivalry 36-16, and the head cheerleader nails the perfect fly at half-time landing gracefully on her bases hands, it is a night to celebrate. Which is exactly what Angie was headed home to do when her whole
“A rich exploration of sci-fi universes we know and love, merged flawlessly with discussions on leadership, national security . . . diplomacy, and more.” —Diplomatic Courier As a literature of ideas, science fiction has proven to be a powerful metaphor for the world around us, offering a rich tapestry of imagination through which to explore how we lead, how we think, and how we interact. To Boldly Go assembles more than thirty writers from around the world—experts in leadership and strategy, senior policy advisors and analysts, professional educators and innovators, experienced storytellers, and ground-level military leaders—to help us better understand ourselves through the lens o...
Put Off My Sackcloth: Essays is a mosaic of essays about one writer's journey through a life fraught with crippling interior darkness in an uncertain world to the salve she finds in her "shored-up ruins" and new maternal life beneath the lambent glow of the Sangre de Cristo mountain range in South-Central Colorado. The daughter of a Jewish refuge from Nazi Germany and an American mother prone to suicidal depression, Annie Dawid, in these essays, traces the history of her life, pivoting between the hanging trees of her most despairing moments, the fouettés of her youth, her archetypal dig into the horrific mass suicides of Jonestown, and the aching "architectural wonders" of her beloved son,...
This book explains how animals use chemical communication, emphasising the evolutionary context and covering fields from ecology to neuroscience and chemistry.
David Schuyler was probably born in Albany, New York. His parents were Peter Schuyler and Alida Van Schlichtenhorst. He married Anna Bratt (1700-1723), daughter of Dirk Bratt and Maritje van Epps, 17 July 1720. They had two children. He married Margaret and they had eight children. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in New York, Ohio and Michigan.