Even though Hime and her friends live in an enlightened era where equality among all sentient creatures rules the day, there are harsh reminders that things weren't always this way. As the girls struggle with their plans for the future, Shino-chan learns important lesson about empathy for a creature smaller than herself. A Centaur's Life continues!
Centaur girl Hime and her adorable cousin Shino, along with their catfolk, angelfolk, and other friends, pose the following question: are the legendary weretigers truly extinct? In the meantime, a battle of the home-makers ensues, while some serious father-daughter time is in order. Plus: mysterious aliens have arrived!
SOME CENTAURS ARE MORE EQUAL THAN OTHERS! Even though Hime and her friends live in an enlightened era where equality among all sentient creatures rules the day, there are harsh reminders that things weren't always this way. As the girls struggle with their plans for the future, Shino-chan learns important lesson about empathy for a creature smaller than herself. A Centaur's Life continues!
Himeno is a sweet, shy little centaur girl. In her world, everyone seems to be a supernatural creature, and all her classmates have some kind of horns, wings, tails, halos, or other visible supernatural body part. Despite their supernatural elements, Himeno and her best friends, Nozomi and Kyoko, have a fun and mostly normal daily school life!
New tribes move into the village in Farming Life in Another World Volume 5! With the peaceful culmination of the martial arts tourney, the villagers are ready to go back to their laidback lifestyle . . . that is until new residents create major problems! The village never thought that so many centaurs and tribes would turn up at their doorstep! The outskirts of Tall Tree Village grows livelier by the second!
The material presented in this six-volume set moves away from courtly etiquette, adopting a more middle-class, domestic focus, and includes facsimile reproductions of sermons, poems, narratives and cookery books.
Itâs a Wild Last Boss versus a Vampire Princess! In order to fulfill a 200 year old promise, Lufas heads to Mjolnir, Benetnaschâs country, alone with the intention of completing the life-or-death battle theyâd begun long ago. Will Lufasâ true power finally awaken during this long-awaited battle to the death? Meanwhile, Leonâone of the Twelve Heavenly Stars who hasnât yet returned to the foldâis up to something, and the demihumans seem to be on his side of the brewing war against the rest of humanity. But Leon is the strongest of the Twelve Heavenly Stars. Without Lufas, will the other Stars be enough to stop him on their own? The heroâs party, along with Virgo and Castor, head to Sagittariusâ homeland, the centaursâ village, in an attempt to discover why the normally even-tempered former Star is acting so out of character. Will the other former members of the Twelve Heavenly Stars come back peacefully? Or are there more unexpected events in store for Lufas?!
In 1911 Jung published a book of which he says: '...it laid down a programme to be followed for the next few decades of my life.' It was vastly erudite and covered innumerable fields of study: psychiatry, psychoanalysis, ethnology and comparitive religion amongst others. In due course it became a standard work and was translated into French, Dutch and Italian as well as English, in which language it was given the well-known but somewhat misleading title of The Psychology of the Unconscious. In the Foreword to the present revised edition which first appeared in 1956, Jung says: '...it was the explosion of all those psychic contents which could find no room, no breathing space, in the constricting atmosphere of Freudian psychology... It was an attempt, only partially successful, to create a wider setting for medical psychology and to bring the whole of the psychic phenomena within its purview.' For this edition, appearing ten years after the first, bibliographical citations and entries have been revised in the light of subsequent publications in the Collected Works and in the standard edition of Freud's works, some translations have been substituted in quotations, and other essential corrections have been made, but there have been no changes of substance in the text.