Action Figures is a book of asemic graffiti hieroglyphs from the future. This edition features an introduction from Australian poet Tim Gaze. This is ...
An adjunct to the Presence Process by Michael Brown. Contains supportive text pertaining to mindfulness and healthy psychological dynamics within a relationship with ourselves, our families …Descripción completa
Algebra by Michael Artin is a must have book for learning linear algebra.Full description
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breu diccionari de figures retòriques exemplificades
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Archaeology
Descripción: With original Foreword by Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, a new Introduction by Motown founder Berry Gordy, and an Afterword by Michael Jackson’s editor and publisher, Shaye Areheart. “I’ve always w...
Learn in detail how to produce cards one at a time from the interlock position.
Great simple song to improve right hand strengthening
Great simple song to improve right hand strengtheningFull description
JEWELLERY MAKING GUIDE FOR FANS OF METAL CLAYFull description
PSICOLOGIADescripción completa
This is an award winning business plan by the European Union, for the Enterprise fellowship scheme. Business Plan by Syed Masrur, the Founder of the first English speaking Islamic Television Channe...
other projects by Michael Jacobson: The Giant's Fence (Barbarian Interior, 2006) A Headhunter's Tale (preview № Press, 2008) thenewpostliterate.blogspot.com thenewpostliterate.blogspot.com gallery
An Introduction Who are these creatures? Are they the characters & things you might see, walking down the street in any big city? Are they the inhabitants of a metropolis at some time in the far future? Or are they the occupants of our own minds? Whoever they are, they walk a line between crazy exuberance, & standing in well-behaved rows. Some of them are reacting to their immediate neighbours, but they all a ll seem to respect each others’ space. They hint at both Mayan glyphs & street graf. Oddly enough, Jacobson’s figures remind me of Nathalie Sarraute’s Sarraute’s « Tropismes ». Some of Sarraute’s Sarraute’s short prose pieces p ieces strike me as examples of fiction where the main character is third person plural: they, them.