Somewheres East of Suez

Somewheres East of Suez
Author: Tristan Jones
Publisher: Open Road Media
Total Pages: 339
Release: 2014-04-01
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1497630762

In 1983 Tristan Jones, well known as one of the finest sailing adventure writers of our time, had his left leg amputated. Refusing to become landbound after a lifetime at sea, he acquired a specially designed, virtually untippable 38-foot trimaran and began to sail around the world. Outward Leg is the tale of his intrepid voyage from San Diego to London. The Improbable Voyage chronicles his heroic journey along an unusual and hazardous route from the North Sea, through the rivers of Central Europe, to the Black Sea. In Somewheres East of Suez, the final installment of this extraordinary saga, Tristan sails eight thousand miles from Istanbul to Thailand. From the tourist- and terrorist-dominated ports of the eastern Mediterranean to African outposts peopled with famine refugees, Tristan maintains the unique perspective of a man who has had minimal contact with society's restraints, using his acerbic wit to spare no fools and offer biting social commentary. After barely escaping with his life in South Yemen, he sets off for the Far East, determined to win out against the difficulties of his disability, whether battling a tropical cyclone or surviving on a dwindling ration of fresh water in the vast windless expanse of the Indian Ocean.

Dream Chronicles 1

Dream Chronicles 1
Author: David Rotenberg
Publisher: ibooks
Total Pages: 151
Release: 2017-05-12
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1596875208

Find the Dreamers! It's a future time. A time of extremely long life spans, almost perfect health, human colonization of planets throughout the galaxy—and dreamlessness. It has been over three hundred years since any human being’s sleep has been disturbed by the anarchy of dreams. Centuries earlier, at the time of the first alien contacts, humanity made the proverbial trade with the devil—its basic freedoms in exchange for security and safety. An unexpected side effect of this swap was the gradual cessation of dreaming. Then an S3 fully armed starship disappears through a hole in space—A GATEWAY. All that remains of the huge vessel is a scattercast message heard throughout the galaxy: YOUR MACHINES ARE USELESS HERE. YOUR WAY OF THINKING IS OF NO VALUE HERE. FOR BEYOND HERE LIE DREAMS!! And the race was on. Overnight finding those capable of dreaming becomes the most important issue of state—the only issue of state. FIND ME DREAMERS! Five raids on five distant planets. Massive destruction and the kidnapping of five young people who might possess the most valuable commodity in the dreamless galaxy—the gene structure that may enable them to dream and navigate through the Gateway. SO BEGINS THE DREAM CHRONICLES.

Adventure

Adventure
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 674
Release: 1917
Genre: Adventure stories
ISBN:

Our Task in Canada

Our Task in Canada
Author: Roderick George MacBeth
Publisher: Westminster Company
Total Pages: 162
Release: 1912
Genre: Missions
ISBN:

Binding Up the Wounds

Binding Up the Wounds
Author: Leon C. Standifer
Publisher: LSU Press
Total Pages: 253
Release: 2014-10-28
Genre: History
ISBN: 0807161497

In his highly acclaimed Not in Vain, Leon C. Standifer recounted his experiences as a small-town Mississippi boy who at age nineteen found himself fighting as a combat infantryman in World War II France and Germany. Binding Up the Wounds carries the story beyond V-E Day to describe what the author saw, heard, felt, and learned as a member of the American occupation army in the homeland of its defeated enemy. Standifer, who served in the 94th Infantry Division in western Germany, the Sudetenland, and Bavaria in the first year of occupation, chronicles that unique and chaotic time from the viewpoint of a typical GI. Germany was an epic landscape of human need, and cities lay in ruins. But the war was over, light and laughter were once again possible, and, as Standifer recalls, “we had a ball during that first year.” Among the things he experienced or witnessed were black-market operations large and small (American cigarettes served as a universal currency, and a few ounces of mess-hall grease or used coffee grounds were valuable commodities); the spectacle of gung-ho officers attempting to turn combat troops into spit-and-polish paraders; the exploitative games played between American soldiers and German women; a gut-wrenching visit to a displaced persons camp; and the difficulties involved in guarding captured soldiers who were no longer the enemy. Perhaps most revealing, and often surprising, are the attitudes Standifer discovered among ordinary Germans toward the war, the Nazis, the “Hitler times” in general—not only during the occupation, but also decades later when he revisited Germany and spoke with elderly survivors of those times. For there are really two voices telling the tale of Binding Up the Wounds. One is that of the combat-hardened but otherwise naive twenty-year-old who lived the experiences. The other is that of the author as retired college professor looking back over half a century and puzzling out what those experiences meant for himself, for America, and for human-kind.

Glencannon: Great Stories from The Saturday Evening Post

Glencannon: Great Stories from The Saturday Evening Post
Author: Guy Gilpatric
Publisher: Rare Treasure Editions
Total Pages: 458
Release: 2023-11-29T00:00:00Z
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1774641119

A collection of 21 short stories, originally written between 1929 and 1948: The Lost Limerick; The Missing Link; Odds and Ends; The Glasgow Smasher; The Crafty Jerko-Slovaks; Pardon the French; One Good Tern; The Ladies of Catsmeat Yard; The Rolling Stone; The Pearl of Panama; The Toad Men of Tumbaroo; Mutiny on the Inchcliffe Castle; The Yogi of West 9th Street; The Hunting of the Haggis; The Smugglers of San Diego; Where Early Fa's the Dew; The Glasgow Phantom; The Homestretch; Crocodile Tears; The Artful Mr. Glencannon.

The Navy and the Nation

The Navy and the Nation
Author: Tim Barrett
Publisher: Melbourne Univ. Publishing
Total Pages: 89
Release: 2017-01-23
Genre: History
ISBN: 0522871593

The Royal Australian Navy is at a watershed moment in its history. Major reinvestment following the 2016 Defence White Paper will see it re-equipped with offshore patrol boats, a new class of frigate, a modern and expanded submarine force and an air warfare destroyer. How does the Navy best prepare for the future? Vice Admiral Tim Barrett forcefully argues the answer is by reimagining the way the Navy views itself, especially its domestic and international relationships. In The Navy and the Nation Vice Admiral Barrett outlines the extensive opportunities for the service and Australia if the Navy is embraced as a national enterprise.

Embedding Ethics

Embedding Ethics
Author: Lynn Meskell
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 260
Release: 2020-05-27
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1000189783

Anthropologists who talk about ethics generally mean the code of practice drafted by a professional association for implementation by its members. As this book convincingly shows, such a conception is far too narrow. A more radical approach is to recognize that moral judgments are made at every juncture of scientific practice and they require a negotiation of responsibility with all stakeholders in the research enterprise.Embedding Ethics questions why ethics have been divorced from scientific expertise. Invoking different disciplinary practices from biological, archaeological, cultural, and linguistic anthropology, contributors show how ethics should be resituated at the heart of, rather than exterior to, scientific activity. Positioning the researcher as a negotiator of significant truths rather than an adjudicator of a priori precepts enables contributors to relocate ethics in new sets of social and scientific relationships triggered by recent globalization processes - from new forms of intellectual and cultural ownership to accountability in governance, and the very ways in which people are studied. Case studies from ethnographic research, museum display, archaeological fieldwork and professional monitoring illustrate both best practice and potential pitfalls.This important book is an essential guide for all anthropologists who wish to be active contributors to the discussion on ethics and the ethical practice of their profession.

The Dark Light Years

The Dark Light Years
Author: Brian W. Aldiss
Publisher: Open Road Media
Total Pages: 192
Release: 2014-04-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1497608147

A strange alien species forces us to question our definition of civilization in this biting satire from the Grand Master of Science Fiction. What would intelligent life‐forms on another planet look like? Would they walk upright? Would they wear clothes? Or would they be hulking creatures on six legs that wallow in their own excrement? Upon first contact with the Utod— intelligent, pacifist beings who feel no pain—mankind instantly views these aliens as animals because of their unhygienic customs. This leads to the slaughter, capture, and dissection of the Utod. But when one explorer recognizes the intelligence behind their habits, he must reevaluate what it actually means to be “intelligent.”