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Your body is totally honest! Are you listening? Do you understand what it is telling you? Your Body Reveals: Awaken to Your Truth offers a depth of wisdom through Lisa Bermans psychosomatic and empirical understanding. Learn how thoughts, beliefs, and perceptions can manifest as symptoms, illness, and disease. Understand the bodys communication and the inherent message from your Soul. Experience 7 Steps to Wholeness. Create an awakened life in harmony with your Soul. Choose effective exercises and meditations for your personal healing, and learn essentials for a nutritional diet. Your Body Reveals: Awaken to Your Truth is a handbook to guide you to more balance, inner peace, health, and whol...
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"The brothers' keepers, a novel by John H. Paddison and Charles D. Orvik, is the saga of the Lambson brothers. The story takes place in the fictional town of Farmington, North Dakota, during and after the Great Depression. In a sensitive yet realistic way, the storyline develops around the neglect and then abandonment of five young boys by their alcoholic mother and drifter father, as well as their development under adverse physical and social conditions and their eventual outcome. Events of the story are structured so as to bring light upon two social ills that plague America today-child neglect and child abuse"--Back cover.
From John Flanagan, author of the worldwide bestselling Ranger's Apprentice, comes a brand-new chapter in the adventures of young Skandians who form a different kind of family - a brotherband. When the Brotherband crew are caught in a massive storm at sea, they’re blown far off course and wash up on the shores of a land so far west that Hal can’t recognize it from any of his maps. Eerily, the locals are nowhere in sight, yet the Herons have a creeping feeling they are being watched. Suddenly the silence is broken when a massive, marauding bear appears, advancing on two children. The crew springs into action and rescues the children from the bear’s clutches, which earns them the gratitu...
Today's comprehensive go-to book about pâte de verre, geared to meet the new interest in exploring this form of opaque glass-making. Includes history, photos of top contemporary works, and how-to.
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Label mounted on title page: Humanities Press, New York. Popularized version of the author's thesis "The changing concept of neutrality," University of Wisconsin. Bibliography: p. [306]-313.
A sometimes funny, sometimes catastrophically sad story of performance art, ukuleles, dance, and our attempts and failures to make contact.
Fiddling for Norway is an engrossing portrait of a fiddle-based folk revival in Norway, one that in many ways parallels contemporary folk institutions and festivals throughout the world, including American fiddling. It is a detailed case study in the politics of culture, the causes and purposes of folk revivals, and the cultivation of music to define identity. The book begins with an investigation of the people and events important to Norwegian folk fiddling, tracing the history of Norwegian folk music and the growth and diversification of the folk music revival. The narrative takes us to fiddle clubs, concerts and competitions on the local, regional, and national levels, and shows how conflicting emphases—local vs. national identity, tradition vs. aesthetic qualities—continue to transform Norwegian folk music. Goertzen utilizes a large anthology of meticulously transcribed tunes to illustrate personal and regional repertoires, aspects of performance practice, melodic gesture and form, and tune relationships. Ethnomusicologists and readers who fiddle will enjoy both the music and the stories it tells.