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Hey Bert is a clarion call to open our eyes to the extentof poetry's capacity with the aim to find new ways oflooking at our own lives. Poems that speak intenselyof the everyday, of nostalgia, friendship and love, thebody, the sacred, all seen through Pastore's unique,eccentric filter of spirit animals, pop-culture, dreamsand astrology.In the spirit of John Giorno, Anne Waldman, and JuliaHeyward, Pastore's work draws from performance art,confessional poetry, mantra, and folklore to create avoice both fiercely contemporary and somehow out oftime. His inspiration for this collection derived fromhis trips to Carlisle, where his love for poetry ignitedtwelve years ago.'I think my poems connect with people, becausethey speak of things that we all experience and aren'tintimidating to people who don't generally read poetry.I think my collection could be a bridge for people whogrew up on Instagram poetry.'
Annual report and list of subscribers in each vol. (except v. 10, 14).
From the bone-fishing flats of the Pacific nuclear weapons' proving ground, Bikini Atoll, to the taimen rivers of Outer Mongolia, anthropologist Bill Douglas is the consummate angling adventurer.
Original documents relating to minor foundation illustrate lower levels of local society and government of the town.The Benedictine priory of St Bartholomew outside Sudbury was a cell of Westminster Abbey founded in the reign of Henry I by Wulfric the moneyer. Although a small and poorly-endowed establishment, it has nevertheless, and unusually, left over 130 original documents in the muniments at Westminster, enabling this volume in the Suffolk Charters series to be the first to be devoted to a group of original documents rather than medieval transcriptions. Dating mostly from the thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries, the collection illustrates the lower levels of local society and the...
This is the story of seven years of explorations and adventures among the mountains and steppes of Mongolia, searching the secret tomb of Genghis Khan. Year after year, step by step, the author explored unknown tracks and forbidden places, where breaking the taboos once led to a deadly outcome, remaining loaded with unpredictable dangers to this day. Through a multi-disciplinary research, the author has succeeded in locating the imperial cemetery but, when the search is over, a top secret plot tries to stop him. Is this the proof that research has reached his goal?
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