Read Book Lot 50 Comics Good Condition! various distributors Not Sure Books

By Tyrone Mccall on Wednesday, June 5, 2019

Read Book Lot 50 Comics Good Condition! various distributors Not Sure Books





Product details

  • Paperback
  • Publisher Marvel (1994)
  • Language English
  • ASIN B002095J4G




Book Lot 50 Comics Good Condition! various distributors Not Sure Books Reviews


  • Although overall this was a good collection of comics, it gets a low rating because among the comics I found on titled "SEX", and inside was a very clear drawing of a man's penis. In a area of great interest this was totally unacceptable. I can't imagine having to explain to my grand children had I purchased this for them. You really need to be more careful in weeding out inappropriate material or at the very least giving a very clear warning!!!
  • Some doubles. And most too inappropriate for my child who ordered these with his gift card from Christmas but in nice shape. He was pleased with most but they seem pretty average. The package was in absolute shreds upon arrival. I got a note from the post office that they re-boxed because their machine tore up the original. It arrived a volume it two short but that's not the sellers fault. Just good old USPS.
  • Seeing the main picture I was hoping for a few good names... Not a single one have I ever heard of. Got multiple duplicates not to mention it showed up a week late. Not to impressed by this, sorry
  • Overall very happy with this product. The description could have been a little more specific. I was expecting 50 comic books. I was sent 45....however, two books were magazines filled with 4 or 5 comics in each magazine. So I did get 50 comic stories total. Unfortunately, one was written in Japanese, so I will not be able to read it.
    I purchased these as gifts for my kids, so it will be a little more difficult to separate them equally, but the comics are all in very good condition. Some even have protective sleeves. This was totally worth the cost, I would just recommend that you contact the seller to see if you can get comics in your preferred language.Also worth the money if you don't mind getting a plethora of different comics from different universes and authors.
  • The best unboxing ever with every book worth over 4$ each......WOOOOOW. Spiderman, Star wars, even Fight club 2 comics
  • Comics were not bagged or boarded. Plus all books had stickers on the covers.
  • They weren't all in good condition. Some were brand new still in bags, some are used and falling apart. Some are from this year and some are from the 80's. But, if you want a random assortment, this is good.
  • I thought this pack was a great value. I am not really a collector but I have a small candy store where I re-sell these. Not a huge mark up but just a reason for the kids to "poke" around a bit. A couple of cool titles and a few DC's. About half were already professionally sleeved with bags and boards..."ready to sell"! Most were in excellent condition.
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Ebook Shrill Dusk City of Magic Series Book 1 Audible Audio Edition Helen Harper Ruth Urquhart Tantor Audio Books

By Tyrone Mccall on Tuesday, June 4, 2019

Ebook Shrill Dusk City of Magic Series Book 1 Audible Audio Edition Helen Harper Ruth Urquhart Tantor Audio Books





Product details

  • Audible Audiobook
  • Listening Length 7 hours and 18 minutes
  • Program Type Audiobook
  • Version Unabridged
  • Publisher Tantor Audio
  • Audible.com Release Date March 5, 2019
  • Whispersync for Voice Ready
  • Language English, English
  • ASIN B07NWXKN7X




Shrill Dusk City of Magic Series Book 1 Audible Audio Edition Helen Harper Ruth Urquhart Tantor Audio Books Reviews


  • I really like the heroine and felt that she had a very strong beginning.

    The middle of the story was a chaotic mess with dozens of secondary characters popping up and deciding to live in Charley’s house.

    Most seem interesting but with so many we never get a real chance to learn about them.

    The book summary might need some tweaking as well because I was expecting a slightly different type of book. This is on a much smaller scale- both the enemies and the heroes.

    Some spoilers

    She’s also a different type of hero- not one to save the world, but one to pick up the pieces after the world was saved...I think that she would’ve worked better if the entire world was effected and not just one city that they could’ve left at anytime.

    The ending was decent.

    However I would point out that she really doesn’t save the world or anything like that- someone else does. Also she decides to stay in a city with less than 10% population remaining that was abandoned by government. Also there is no way they would be able to effectively survive long term. They might survive a few years, but Food would run out eventually and a city wouldn’t have any place for hunting and farming.

    Since the government will no longer let them leave the city limits—-they cannot hunt or farm.

    A few plot holes in my opinion.

    Overall- I like her writing and will continue to read her other books, but will give this series a pass.
  • This Helen Harper, while another fabulous and funny story with witty characters and fascinating plot that kept me reading the entire book in one day, is more of a Slice-of-Life type. It has lots of surprising and horrifying terrors from the view of a human in Manchester during the magical chaos of her last trilogy (and I’m so glad she’s continuing that story in this slim-off), rather than a long-term quest style of story. A fun dystopia with magic, sarcasm and morals... and a touch of romantic tension, and I’m intrigued to read the next book!
  • One of my biggest complaints about the series focussing on Madrona was that it left so many dangling plotlines. What happened to Charley and her shifter roommate? What about the werewolves? And the vampire? And the dude who ran the motel? This series is apparently going to focus on what happens after Madrona returns to her proper world. And it's awesome. Charley is really a fully formed character. The way she behaves is clearly tied to her background. It makes sense. Max was a little one-dimensional, and Julie and Jodie were walk-ons, but I'm really looking forward to the next installment in this series!
  • Sorry but I did not like this book. Charley the main character was so incredibly annoying that I found myself skimming the book just to finish it. Most of the time I wanted to slap her for being so naive. I will not be reading the second book.
  • I did finish the book, but I put it down and very nearly returned it after the prologue. The idea of a magical ‘contamination’ of a modern city is quite interesting, and while I loathe the flaw of the main character, being compulsively impulsive in a very particular way, I can see how something like the prologue is required to support such extreme behavior. That said, I recommend to the author to find another way to do it, so you traumatize your reader a bit less.
  • This book starts after Madrona the faery, and what happened after she saved the world. Read that first. Then this. I enjoyed it very much and look forward to the sequel.
  • Unfortunately, I could not finish reading this book as it has something terrible happening to a child in it. Too bad, hopefully the story got better.
  • After being disappointed by the previous series, a wonderful new series begins. Magical apocalypse indeed. A theme that is quite new
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Ebook Ein wenig Zeit für dich 2020 9783848521401 Books

By Tyrone Mccall

Ebook Ein wenig Zeit für dich 2020 9783848521401 Books





Product details

  • Calendar
  • Language German
  • ISBN-10 3848521407




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Download Moderne Philosophiedidaktik 9783787335305 Books

By Tyrone Mccall

Download Moderne Philosophiedidaktik 9783787335305 Books



Download As PDF : Moderne Philosophiedidaktik 9783787335305 Books

Download PDF Moderne Philosophiedidaktik 9783787335305 Books

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Download Moderne Philosophiedidaktik 9783787335305 Books


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Product details

  • Paperback
  • Language German
  • ISBN-10 3787335307

Read Moderne Philosophiedidaktik 9783787335305 Books

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Ebook Mountain Canyon and Backcountry Flying eBundle Amy L Hoover RK "Dick" Wiliams 9781619547452 Books

By Tyrone Mccall

Ebook Mountain Canyon and Backcountry Flying eBundle Amy L Hoover RK "Dick" Wiliams 9781619547452 Books



Download As PDF : Mountain Canyon and Backcountry Flying eBundle Amy L Hoover RK "Dick" Wiliams 9781619547452 Books

Download PDF Mountain Canyon and Backcountry Flying eBundle Amy L Hoover RK &quotDick&quot Wiliams 9781619547452 Books

For more than a century, pilots have been intrigued by the challenges of flight in the highest mountains and the deepest canyons on every continent. Mountain, canyon, and backcountry flying allows pilots to get off the beaten path and enjoy the outdoors. It opens up a whole new world of recreation, including airplane camping, hiking, fishing, and staying at guest lodges or bush camps in areas without roads or easy access by land or water. Flying in these enticing environments often entails operations over relatively inaccessible terrain in a challenging and sometimes unforgiving environment. This necessitates the proper mindset, discipline, and procedures to operate efficiently and safely. Operating over mountains, navigating through canyons, taking off and landing on unimproved, high-altitude airstrips in confined areas, and maximizing airplane performance requires specialized skills. The authors and guest writers share information and tips gleaned from more than 150 years and 100,000 hours of collective experience as professional mountain and backcountry pilots and flight instructors. Recreational pilots to mountain flying instructors will find this book useful, and college and university professors can use the text to supplement their classroom instruction. Fundamental concepts include preparing for and conducting mountain and canyon flights, airport operations, situational awareness, aircraft performance, risk management, and emergency operations. Analysis of accident scenarios, accounts from the authors’ own experiences, and contributions from seasoned backcountry pilots and instructors expand on material detailed in the text. Each chapter includes exercises to help the reader understand and apply the information to their own flying, and beautiful color illustrations will inspire pilots to seek out these awe-inspiring destinations. Foreword by Rod Machado. Full-color illustrations.

Contains eBook download code.

Ebook Mountain Canyon and Backcountry Flying eBundle Amy L Hoover RK "Dick" Wiliams 9781619547452 Books


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Product details

  • Paperback 392 pages
  • Publisher Aviation Supplies & Academics, Inc. (May 20, 2019)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 1619547457

Read Mountain Canyon and Backcountry Flying eBundle Amy L Hoover RK &quotDick&quot Wiliams 9781619547452 Books

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Read The Creation of iGiselle Classical Ballet Meets Contemporary Video Games Nora Foster Stovel Vadim Bulitko Wayne DeFehr Christina Gier Pirkko Markula Mark Morris Sergio Poo Hernandez Emilie St Hilaire Laura Sydora eBook

By Tyrone Mccall

Read The Creation of iGiselle Classical Ballet Meets Contemporary Video Games Nora Foster Stovel Vadim Bulitko Wayne DeFehr Christina Gier Pirkko Markula Mark Morris Sergio Poo Hernandez Emilie St Hilaire Laura Sydora eBook



Download As PDF : The Creation of iGiselle Classical Ballet Meets Contemporary Video Games Nora Foster Stovel Vadim Bulitko Wayne DeFehr Christina Gier Pirkko Markula Mark Morris Sergio Poo Hernandez Emilie St Hilaire Laura Sydora eBook

Download PDF The Creation of iGiselle Classical Ballet Meets Contemporary Video Games Nora Foster Stovel Vadim Bulitko Wayne DeFehr Christina Gier Pirkko Markula Mark Morris Sergio Poo Hernandez Emilie St Hilaire Laura Sydora eBook

The unusual marriage of Romantic ballet and artificial intelligence is an intriguing idea that led a team of interdisciplinary researchers to design iGiselle, a video game prototype. Scholars in the fields of literature, physical education, music, design, and computer science collaborated to revise the tragic narrative of the nineteenth-century ballet Giselle, allowing players to empower the heroine for possible ”feminine endings.” The eight interrelated chapters chronicle the origin, development, and fruition of the project. Dancers, gamers, and computer specialists will all find something original that will stimulate their respective interests.

Contributors Vadim Bulitko, Wayne DeFehr, Christina Gier, Pirkko Markula, Mark Morris, Sergio Poo Hernandez, Emilie St. Hilaire, Nora Foster Stovel, Laura Sydora

Read The Creation of iGiselle Classical Ballet Meets Contemporary Video Games Nora Foster Stovel Vadim Bulitko Wayne DeFehr Christina Gier Pirkko Markula Mark Morris Sergio Poo Hernandez Emilie St Hilaire Laura Sydora eBook


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Product details

  • File Size 2500 KB
  • Print Length 233 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN 1772123811
  • Publisher The University of Alberta Press (March 11, 2019)
  • Publication Date March 11, 2019
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B0793GK4WV

Read The Creation of iGiselle Classical Ballet Meets Contemporary Video Games Nora Foster Stovel Vadim Bulitko Wayne DeFehr Christina Gier Pirkko Markula Mark Morris Sergio Poo Hernandez Emilie St Hilaire Laura Sydora eBook

Tags : The Creation of iGiselle Classical Ballet Meets Contemporary Video Games - edition by Nora Foster Stovel, Vadim Bulitko, Wayne DeFehr, Christina Gier, Pirkko Markula, Mark Morris, Sergio Poo Hernandez, Emilie St. Hilaire, Laura Sydora. Download it once and read it on your device, PC, phones or tablets. Use features like bookmarks, note taking and highlighting while reading The Creation of iGiselle Classical Ballet Meets Contemporary Video Games.,ebook,Nora Foster Stovel, Vadim Bulitko, Wayne DeFehr, Christina Gier, Pirkko Markula, Mark Morris, Sergio Poo Hernandez, Emilie St. Hilaire, Laura Sydora,The Creation of iGiselle Classical Ballet Meets Contemporary Video Games,The University of Alberta Press,Ballet,Ballet / Artificial Intelligence / Video Games,COMPUTERS / Programming / Games,Computers/Programming - Games,Games development programming,PERFORMING ARTS / Dance / Classical Ballet,COMPUTERS / Programming / Games,Computers/Programming - Games,PERFORMING ARTS / Dance / Classical Ballet

The Creation of iGiselle Classical Ballet Meets Contemporary Video Games Nora Foster Stovel Vadim Bulitko Wayne DeFehr Christina Gier Pirkko Markula Mark Morris Sergio Poo Hernandez Emilie St Hilaire Laura Sydora eBook Reviews :


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Read Online Everything in Its Place First Loves and Last Tales eBook Oliver Sacks

By Tyrone Mccall

Read Online Everything in Its Place First Loves and Last Tales eBook Oliver Sacks



Download As PDF : Everything in Its Place First Loves and Last Tales eBook Oliver Sacks

Download PDF Everything in Its Place First Loves and Last Tales eBook Oliver Sacks

From the best-selling author of Gratitude and On the Move, a final volume of essays that showcase Sacks's broad range of interests--from his passion for ferns, swimming, and horsetails, to his final case histories exploring schizophrenia, dementia, and Alzheimer's.

Oliver Sacks, scientist and storyteller, is beloved by readers for his neurological case histories and his fascination and familiarity with human behavior at its most unexpected and unfamiliar. Everything in Its Place is a celebration of Sacks's myriad interests, told with his characteristic compassion and erudition, and in his luminous prose.

Read Online Everything in Its Place First Loves and Last Tales eBook Oliver Sacks


"It feels poignant to review this last collection of Oliver Sacks’s essays, published four years after his death. It’s a measure of how intellectually voracious and prolific the man was that it took four years before the corpus of his work was exhausted. But Sacks has written so much about so many different topics that his voice will continue to speak to us in spirit if not in person. As with his previous essay collections, "Everything in Its Place" feels like taking a walk through a garden of intellectual delights.

The essays in this collection span the same range of diverse interests that marked out Sacks as one of the most eclectic thinkers and writers of his time. They are divided into three parts – the first part deals with childhood and family, the second deals with neuroscience and the kinds of fascinating case studies which made him famous, and the last contain miscellaneous thoughts about his interests and family.

In the first section you see him writing about a lifelong love of swimming – he bought a house midway through a swim once – childhood experiments with cuttlefish that led to an embarrassing incident with putrefied ocean life in a friend’s basement, another lifelong love of museums exemplified by visits to the great South Kensington museums of geology and natural history, a marvelous paean to the chemist-poet Humphrey Davy, and a somewhat bittersweet contemplation of libraries in which he laments the replacement of so many great paper books by impoverished online versions (curiously, although he mentions the great libraries at Oxford, he does not mention the great New York Public Library in which he must surely have spent countless hours).

In the second section he dwells with characteristic humanity and curiosity on patients with neurological challenges. In doing this he goes beyond simple descriptions of disorders like Alzheimer’s diseases and depression. He describes how Alzheimer’s, as gut wrenching as it is for both patients and in particular for their families, is increasingly seen as a reorganization of the brain rather than a simple degeneration where patients connect with areas of the brain which have been previously enveloped by layers of complexity. Under the right circumstances, Alzheimer’s patients can be every bit as alert and responsive to specific stimuli as anyone else. Another related essay talks about kuru, an infectious variant of Alzheimer’s. There are short musings on annoying but relatively curious problems like hiccups and various assorted tics. And an enlightening chapter on the history of mental asylums which shows far we have come in treating the mentally ill with dignity.

The third and last section speaks of many of Sacks’s personal loves; gardens, gefilte fish, the periodic table and the discovery of superheavy elements, a trip to Colorado Springs and a mesmerizing interaction through a glass panel with an orangutan. The final chapter which was published in the New Yorker recently is poignant and leaves one feeling sad. It laments the lack of human connection engendered by our obsession with devices, and Sacks talks about how depressed he feels when he sees everyone who was previously nodding, smiling and talking on the streets of New York lost in their devices and screens, seduced by pieces of fleeting information. Sacks is not a Luddite, but he does question the coming of technology that seems to sap us of our human and emotional connections.

I would say this last chapter would have been a pessimistic note to end on, if it hadn’t been for Sacks’s feelings about science as a saving grace for us, and a final note of hope that humanity will continue to endure: “As I face my own impending departure from the world, I have to believe this – that mankind and our planet will survive, that life will continue, and that this will not be our final hour.” Even as he bids us goodbye in this final essay collection, Sacks’s writings will continue to inform, stimulate and inspire as long as men and women read, listen to music, care for loved ones and revel in the excitement of science."

Product details

  • File Size 903 KB
  • Print Length 288 pages
  • Publisher Knopf (April 23, 2019)
  • Publication Date April 23, 2019
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B07FZP73W3

Read Everything in Its Place First Loves and Last Tales eBook Oliver Sacks

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Everything in Its Place First Loves and Last Tales eBook Oliver Sacks Reviews :


Everything in Its Place First Loves and Last Tales eBook Oliver Sacks Reviews


  • It feels poignant to review this last collection of Oliver Sacks’s essays, published four years after his death. It’s a measure of how intellectually voracious and prolific the man was that it took four years before the corpus of his work was exhausted. But Sacks has written so much about so many different topics that his voice will continue to speak to us in spirit if not in person. As with his previous essay collections, "Everything in Its Place" feels like taking a walk through a garden of intellectual delights.

    The essays in this collection span the same range of diverse interests that marked out Sacks as one of the most eclectic thinkers and writers of his time. They are divided into three parts – the first part deals with childhood and family, the second deals with neuroscience and the kinds of fascinating case studies which made him famous, and the last contain miscellaneous thoughts about his interests and family.

    In the first section you see him writing about a lifelong love of swimming – he bought a house midway through a swim once – childhood experiments with cuttlefish that led to an embarrassing incident with putrefied ocean life in a friend’s basement, another lifelong love of museums exemplified by visits to the great South Kensington museums of geology and natural history, a marvelous paean to the chemist-poet Humphrey Davy, and a somewhat bittersweet contemplation of libraries in which he laments the replacement of so many great paper books by impoverished online versions (curiously, although he mentions the great libraries at Oxford, he does not mention the great New York Public Library in which he must surely have spent countless hours).

    In the second section he dwells with characteristic humanity and curiosity on patients with neurological challenges. In doing this he goes beyond simple descriptions of disorders like Alzheimer’s diseases and depression. He describes how Alzheimer’s, as gut wrenching as it is for both patients and in particular for their families, is increasingly seen as a reorganization of the brain rather than a simple degeneration where patients connect with areas of the brain which have been previously enveloped by layers of complexity. Under the right circumstances, Alzheimer’s patients can be every bit as alert and responsive to specific stimuli as anyone else. Another related essay talks about kuru, an infectious variant of Alzheimer’s. There are short musings on annoying but relatively curious problems like hiccups and various assorted tics. And an enlightening chapter on the history of mental asylums which shows far we have come in treating the mentally ill with dignity.

    The third and last section speaks of many of Sacks’s personal loves; gardens, gefilte fish, the periodic table and the discovery of superheavy elements, a trip to Colorado Springs and a mesmerizing interaction through a glass panel with an orangutan. The final chapter which was published in the New Yorker recently is poignant and leaves one feeling sad. It laments the lack of human connection engendered by our obsession with devices, and Sacks talks about how depressed he feels when he sees everyone who was previously nodding, smiling and talking on the streets of New York lost in their devices and screens, seduced by pieces of fleeting information. Sacks is not a Luddite, but he does question the coming of technology that seems to sap us of our human and emotional connections.

    I would say this last chapter would have been a pessimistic note to end on, if it hadn’t been for Sacks’s feelings about science as a saving grace for us, and a final note of hope that humanity will continue to endure “As I face my own impending departure from the world, I have to believe this – that mankind and our planet will survive, that life will continue, and that this will not be our final hour.” Even as he bids us goodbye in this final essay collection, Sacks’s writings will continue to inform, stimulate and inspire as long as men and women read, listen to music, care for loved ones and revel in the excitement of science.
More aboutRead Online Everything in Its Place First Loves and Last Tales eBook Oliver Sacks