Iris Ritchie, part time bookkeeper, wife and mother, wakes up in hospital thinking she's killed a cyclist. The cyclist is fine, but God has punished Iris by giving her a special mission. She's the most normal person he could find; if she can be heroic, anybody can. Grumpily, Iris finds herself forced to choose between saving the world, and saving her family.
This volume is a practical guide to the technique and most frequent clinical applications of magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) of the brain. Using more than 500 images, the authors present the fundamentals of MRS in a straightforward fashion and show radiologists and neurologists how to recognize normal and disease processes on scans. The book presents the spectra of the most common neurological disease entities, along with the conventional images and perfusion and diffusion where appropriate. The authors thoroughly describe the pathology and key MRS features of each disease process. Each chapter ends with a quick-reference summary of the main findings.
At the turn of the twentieth century, an emerging consumer culture in the United States promoted constant spending to meet material needs and develop social identity and self-cultivation. In Sold American, Charles F. McGovern examines the key players active in shaping this cultural evolution: advertisers and consumer advocates. McGovern argues that even though these two professional groups invented radically different models for proper spending, both groups propagated mass consumption as a specifically American social practice and an important element of nationality and citizenship. Advertisers, McGovern shows, used nationalist ideals, icons, and political language to define consumption as the foundation of the pursuit of happiness. Consumer advocates, on the other hand, viewed the market with a republican-inspired skepticism and fought commercial incursions on consumer independence. The result, says McGovern, was a redefinition of the citizen as consumer. The articulation of an "American Way of Life" in the Depression and World War II ratified consumer abundance as the basis of a distinct American culture and history.
Alan Parker cannot face telling his wife he has lost his job. Each day he goes off to ‘work’. Other than this deception he is honest and loyal, but all changes when he happens across a child after an accident and then meets her mother. A double life follows. The child goes missing and the police are involved ... with yet more twists to follow.