Senda and the Whispering Sea Shells

Senda and the Whispering Sea Shells

Author: H. de Mendoza

Publisher: Babelcube Inc.

Published: 2019-10-24

Total Pages: 182

ISBN-13: 1071517635

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Synopsis: Senda and the Whispering Sea Shells “Don’t talk to strangers,” Senda says to herself as she walks the streets of Santa Cruz, California, otherwise known as Weird City – a good name for the place where she was born. After all, she, with her illness, is among the weirdest. What Senda never imagined was that she would find her life turned upside down, where she becomes the main character in an unbelievable adventure in an apocalyptic world. Here, Senda will have to face her greatest fears. The night it all started, as she walked aimlessly down the strangest ocean-side walkway in California, began when a homeless man gave her a sea shell. A sudden earthquake (if they aren’t all sudden, this one surely was), and Senda found herself splashing helplessly in the waves. Everything that followed seemed like a dream, with spirit animals, Native American Ohlones, the fall of civilization, and the inexplicable senility of the adults. This tale of frightening adventures runs from the escarpments of the Pacific Ocean to the grand and mystical Redwood Forests of California. What if humanity’s destiny really was in your hands? What would you do? What would you be willing to sacrifice to save people that never showed any interest in you or your problems? Follow along with Senda in her journey and discover the talking sea shells, find what causes the strange behavior of the adults, hear about the incredible history of the Ohlone children, travel back to the pirates and conquistadors of the Old World, uncover the identity of those mysterious men hidden behind space-men-like masks, and especially, be part of the most advanced scientific breakthrough that neither Jules Vern nor Elon Musk could have predicted. Now translated from the original Spanish by ecologist and conservationist James J. Roper, Ph.D. (who also enjoys good adventure), this second novel by H. de Mendoza is a magical story of preadolescent friendship and adve


That's why I Run

That's why I Run

Author: Argentina Senda

Publisher: Real African Publishers

Published: 2008

Total Pages: 112

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

In 1993, Argentina Senda was struck down by a mysterious, life-threatening illness; her doctors recommended that she have her right leg amputated. A year later--and without having gone through with the amputation surgery--a cured Senda completed her first long-distance road race. This autobiography follows one woman's journey from the brink of despair to the height of achievement. Detailing how the discipline of running has had a positive impact on Senda's life, this is a story of faith and also a means of giving thanks to God for her miraculous recovery.


Senda Berenson

Senda Berenson

Author: Ralph Melnick

Publisher:

Published: 2007

Total Pages: 272

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

In the winter of 1892 the new instructor of physical training at Smith College, a diminutive young woman with a heavy accent, introduced her students to an adaptation of James Naismith's new game of Basket Ball. An immediate if unexpected success, the game spread to other women's schools across the country, and soon its founder, Senda Berenson (1868-1954), was called upon to codify its distinctive set of gender-specific rules. Emphasizing team passing and position over individual play, the version she instituted defined women's basketball for seventy years and eventually earned her the honor of being the first female elected to the Basketball Hall of Fame. Yet as Ralph Melnick points out, Berenson's pioneering role in the history of women's athletics was more a matter of accident than destiny. A Jewish immigrant from Lithuania, prone to ill health throughout her childhood, she enrolled in the Boston Normal School for Gymnastics in the fall of 1890 with the hope of strengthening herself so that she could pursue a career as a pianist, dancer, or painter, Instead she soon became both a practitioner and a proponent of a new approach to women's physical education, one aimed at providing a "natural outlet of the play instinct," developing "endurance and physical courage" as well as "quickness of thought and action," and promoting through teamwork the "power of organization" women needed to achieve full social equality. Extending her work into the factories and blighted urban tenements of America, Berenson later won the recognition of Jane Addams, Margaret Sanger, and other progressive reformers. Believing that "Americans have forgotten how to play," she wanted to teach others to live"joyfully--beautifully." For Berenson, the physical culture of exercise and games, played not for competition but for personal and social development as well as sheer enjoyment, was but another form of art. This convergence of athletics and aesthetics was hardly surprising, Melnick explains, because the single most important influence on Senda Berenson's life was her brother, the renowned art critic and connoisseur Bernard Berenson. The two siblings wrote frequently to each other over the course of their lives, and the author draws heavily on their correspondence throughout the book to create an intimate and insightful portrait of a remarkable American woman.


Catalog

Catalog

Author: University of Texas. Library. Latin American Collection

Publisher:

Published: 1969

Total Pages: 712

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK


In Godzilla's Footsteps

In Godzilla's Footsteps

Author: W. Tsutsui

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2006-07-22

Total Pages: 221

ISBN-13: 1403984409

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

These essays consider the Godzilla films and how they shaped and influenced postwar Japanese culture, as well as the globalization of Japanese pop culture icons. There are contributions from Film Studies, Anthropology, History, Literature, Theatre and Cultural Studies and from Susan Napier, Anne Allison, Christine Yano and others.


Advances in Electrochemical Science and Engineering

Advances in Electrochemical Science and Engineering

Author:

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2008-11-21

Total Pages: 439

ISBN-13: 352761687X

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This series, formerly edited by Heinz Gerischer and Charls V. Tobias, now edited by Richard C. Alkire and Dieter M. Kolb, has been warmly welcomed by scientists world-wide which is reflected in the reviews of the previous volumes: "This is an essential book for researchers in electrochemistry; it covers areas of both fundamental and practical importance, with reviews of high quality. The material is very well presented and the choice of topics reflects a balanced editorial policy that is welcomed." —The Analyst "All the contributions in this volume are well up to the standard of this excellent series and will be of great value to electrochemists.... The editors again deserve to be congratulated on this fine collection of reviews." —Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry and Interfacial Chemistry "...competently and clearly written." —Berichte der Bunsen- Gesellschaft für Physikalische Chemie


Liquid Interfaces In Chemical, Biological And Pharmaceutical Applications

Liquid Interfaces In Chemical, Biological And Pharmaceutical Applications

Author: Alexander G. Volkov

Publisher: CRC Press

Published: 2001-01-30

Total Pages: 1070

ISBN-13: 0824745191

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Offers a comprehensive treatment of surface chemistry and its applications to chemical engineering, biology, and medicine. Focuses on the chmical and physical structure of oil-water interfaces and membrane surfaces. Details interfacial potentials, ion solvation, and electrostatic instabilities in double layers.