Stranded in the Land of Transients

Stranded in the Land of Transients

Author: Louis Brodsky

Publisher: Time Being Books

Published: 2014-05-01

Total Pages: 93

ISBN-13: 1568092326

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This volume's forty-seven poems trace Brodsky's life as a road-poet and manager of outlet stores, during a time when he was "itinerant minister of surplus and flaw," traveling throughout the Midwest, "selling his soul wholesale," by day, and assuaging his loneliness, at night, with wine and music, while hiding himself away in hotel bars that might absorb him in their "dim-lit anonymity."


The Complete Poems of Louis Daniel Brodsky: Volume, Two, 1967-1976

The Complete Poems of Louis Daniel Brodsky: Volume, Two, 1967-1976

Author: Louis Daniel Brodsky

Publisher: Time Being Books

Published: 1996

Total Pages: 724

ISBN-13: 9781568090740

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The second volume in Louis Daniel Brodsky's Complete Poems series, covering his early years as a professional poet, from 1967-1976, contains more than eight hundred chronologically arranged pieces. This body of work shows Brodsky developing a number of artistic strategies to record the life he chose outside the realm of academia, which he abandoned after complete his master's degree in creative writing at San Francisco State University in 1968. --Time Being Books.


The Eleventh Lost Tribe

The Eleventh Lost Tribe

Author: Louis Brodsky

Publisher: Time Being Books

Published: 2014-05-08

Total Pages: 116

ISBN-13: 1568092253

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The Eleventh Lost Tribe, Brodsky's fourth book of poems devoted to the Holocaust, asks the reader to confront the dispossessed lives of ghetto dwellers, death-camp survivors, Jews prescient or desperate enough to have fled Europe prior to being captured and slaughtered, and, finally, children of the Shoah's refugees or orphans of those who perished in it. Exposing the gritty existence of characters Brodsky has resurrected from his imagination, the book's four sections implore the reader to follow on a quest not so much for historical fact as emotional truth, in search of a better understanding of our incredulity and outrage over the Holocaust.


Transients

Transients

Author: John K.B. Ford

Publisher: UBC Press

Published: 2011-11-01

Total Pages: 98

ISBN-13: 0774844329

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This book focuses on transient killer whales. Enigmatic and elusive, these mammal-hunting whales are difficult animals to study. They travel in small groups, often moving unpredictably, which makes them less conspicuous than the larger resident pods. For these and other reasons, our understanding of the life history and ecology of transient killer whales has lagged behind that of residents. Transients contains the latest information on the natural history of transient killer whales, including their feeding habits, social lives, and distribution patterns. The catalogue section contains photographs of and notes on over 200 individual whales. Numerous sidebars contain interesting observations on encounters with transients as well as information on how and where to best watch them.


Fear Stalks the Land!

Fear Stalks the Land!

Author: Thom Yorke

Publisher: Canongate Books

Published: 2021-11-11

Total Pages: 177

ISBN-13: 1838857753

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In which the writings of the authors Thom Yorke and Stanley Donwood are gathered together. This commonplace book includes faxes, notes, fledgling lyrics, sketches, lists of all kinds and scribblings towards nirvana, as were sent between the two authors during the period 1999 to 2000 during the creation of the Radiohead albums Kid A and Amnesiac. This is a document of the creative process and a mirror to the fears, portents and fantasies invoked by the world as its citizens faced a brave new millennium.


Transient Apostle

Transient Apostle

Author: Timothy Luckritz Marquis

Publisher: Yale University Press

Published: 2013-04-30

Total Pages: 267

ISBN-13: 0300187424

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DIVIn a significant reevaluation of Paul’s place in the early Christian story, Timothy Luckritz Marquis explores the theme of travel in the apostle’s correspondence. He casts Paul’s rhetorical strategies against the background of Augustus’s age, when Rome’s wealth depended on conquests abroad, the international commerce they facilitated, and the incursion of foreign customs and peoples they brought about. In so doing, Luckritz Marquis provides an explanation for how Paul created, maintained, and expanded his local communities in the larger, international Jesus movement and shows how Paul was a product of the material forces of his day. DIV “This is the single most sophisticated book on Paul to be written within the paradigms of contemporary critical thought. By integrating its extensive, erudite, and compelling citations of the Greco-Roman world in which Paul was writing with post-colonial and post-Marxist thinking, it makes real progress in understanding Paul’s letters.�—Daniel Boyarin/div/div


Report

Report

Author: Michigan. State Emergency Welfare Relief Commission

Publisher:

Published: 1934

Total Pages: 352

ISBN-13:

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The Homeless Transient in the Great Depression

The Homeless Transient in the Great Depression

Author: Joan M. Crouse

Publisher: State University of New York Press

Published: 1986-11-21

Total Pages: 344

ISBN-13: 1438400101

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Years before the Dust Bowl exodus raised America's conscience to the plight of its migratory citzenry, an estimated one to two million homeless, unemployed Americans were traversing the country, searching for permanent community. Often mistaken for bums, tramps, hoboes or migratory laborers, these transients were a new breed of educated, highly employable men and women uprooted from their middle- and working-class homes by an unprecedented economic crisis. The Homeless Transient in the Great Depression investigates this population and the problems they faced in an America caught between a poor law past and a social welfare future. The story of the transient is told from the perspective of the federal, state, and local governments, and from the viewpoint of the social worker, the community, and the transient. In narrowing the focus of the study from the national to the state level, Joan Crouse offers a close and sensitive examination of each. The choice of New York as a focal point provides an important balance to previous literature on migrancy by shifting attention from the Southwest to the Northeast and from a preoccupation with rejection on the federal level to the concerted effort of the state to deal with the non-resident poor in a humane yet fiscally responsible manner.


The Country of Lost Children

The Country of Lost Children

Author: Peter Pierce

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 1999-06-07

Total Pages: 234

ISBN-13: 9780521594998

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This book traces the figure of the lost child in Australia's history and imagination.