Middleworld

Middleworld

Author: Jon Voelkel

Publisher: Darby Creek

Published: 2010-04-27

Total Pages: 444

ISBN-13: 1606840711

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When his archaeologist parents go missing in Central America, fourteen-year-old Max embarks on a wild adventure through the Mayan underworld in search of the legendary Jaguar Stones, which enabled ancient Mayan kings to wield the powers of living gods. Includes cast of characters, glossary, facts about the Maya cosmos and calendar, and a recipe for chicken tamales.


The Essential Guide to Werewolf Literature

The Essential Guide to Werewolf Literature

Author: Brian J. Frost

Publisher: Popular Press

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 392

ISBN-13: 9780879728601

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In this fascinating book, Brian J. Frost presents the first full-scale survey of werewolf literature covering both fiction and nonfiction works. He identifies principal elements in the werewolf myth, considers various theories of the phenomenon of shapeshifting, surveys nonfiction books, and traces the myth from its origins in ancient superstitions to its modern representations in fantasy and horror fiction. Frost's analysis encompasses fanciful medieval beliefs, popular works by Victorian authors, scholarly treatises and medical papers, and short stories from pulp magazines of the 1930s and 1940s. Revealing the complex nature of the werewolf phenomenon and its tremendous and continuing influence, The Essential Guide to Werewolf Literature is destined to become a standard reference on the subject.


Last Stories and Other Stories

Last Stories and Other Stories

Author: William T. Vollmann

Publisher: Penguin

Published: 2015-07-21

Total Pages: 706

ISBN-13: 014312756X

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Supernaturally tinged stories from William T. Vollmann, author of the National Book Award winner Europe Central Watch for Vollmann’s new work of nonfiction, No Immediate Danger, coming in April of 2018 In this magnificent new work of fiction, his first in nine years, celebrated author William T. Vollmann offers a collection of ghost stories linked by themes of love, death, and the erotic. A Bohemian farmer’s dead wife returns to him, and their love endures, but at a gruesome price. A geisha prolongs her life by turning into a cherry tree. A journalist, haunted by the half-forgotten killing of a Bosnian couple, watches their story, and his own wartime tragedy, slip away from him. A dying American romances the ghost of his high school sweetheart while a homeless salaryman in Tokyo animates paper cutouts of ancient heroes. Are ghosts memories, fantasies, or monsters? Is there life in death? Vollmann has always operated in the shadowy borderland between categories, and these eerie tales, however far-flung their settings, all focus on the attempts of the living to avoid, control, or even seduce death. Vollmann’s stories will transport readers to a fantastical world where love and lust make anything possible.


Temple

Temple

Author: Matthew Reilly

Publisher: Macmillan

Published: 2007-04-01

Total Pages: 550

ISBN-13: 1429908165

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A blockbuster thriller from bestselling author Matthew Reilly. Four centuries ago, a precious idol was hidden in the jungles of Peru. To the Incan people, it is still the ultimate symbol of their spirit. To William race, an American linguist enlisted by the U.S. Army to decipher the clues to its location, it's the ultimate symbol of the apocalypse... Carved from a rare stone not found on Earth, the idol possesses elements more destructive than any nuclear bomb--a virtual planet killer. In the wrong hands it could mean the end of mankind. And whoever possesses the idol, possesses the unfathomable--and cataclysmic--power of the gods... Now, in the foothills of the Andes, Race's team has arrived--but they're not alone. And soon they'll discover that to penetrate the temple of the idol is to break the first rule of survival. Because some treasures are meant to stay buried..and forces are ready to kill to keep it that way...


The Woman Who Turned Into a Jaguar, and Other Narratives of Native Women in Archives of Colonial Mexico

The Woman Who Turned Into a Jaguar, and Other Narratives of Native Women in Archives of Colonial Mexico

Author: Lisa Sousa

Publisher: Stanford University Press

Published: 2017-01-11

Total Pages: 423

ISBN-13: 1503601110

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This book is an ambitious and wide-ranging social and cultural history of gender relations among indigenous peoples of New Spain, from the Spanish conquest through the first half of the eighteenth century. In this expansive account, Lisa Sousa focuses on four native groups in highland Mexico—the Nahua, Mixtec, Zapotec, and Mixe—and traces cross-cultural similarities and differences in the roles and status attributed to women in prehispanic and colonial Mesoamerica. Sousa intricately renders the full complexity of women's life experiences in the household and community, from the significance of their names, age, and social standing, to their identities, ethnicities, family, dress, work, roles, sexuality, acts of resistance, and relationships with men and other women. Drawing on a rich collection of archival, textual, and pictorial sources, she traces the shifts in women's economic, political, and social standing to evaluate the influence of Spanish ideologies on native attitudes and practices around sex and gender in the first several generations after contact. Though catastrophic depopulation, economic pressures, and the imposition of Christianity slowly eroded indigenous women's status following the Spanish conquest, Sousa argues that gender relations nevertheless remained more complementary than patriarchal, with women maintaining a unique position across the first two centuries of colonial rule.


A Handmade Wilderness

A Handmade Wilderness

Author: Donald G. Schueler

Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt

Published: 1997-04-23

Total Pages: 308

ISBN-13: 9780395860229

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The author and a friend bought eighty backwoods acres in southern Mississippi in 1968 and slowly transformed it into what bacame the Nature Conservancy's Willie Farrell Brown Reserve.


The Devil Out There

The Devil Out There

Author: Julie Houghton Keith

Publisher: Knopf Canada

Published: 2000

Total Pages: 278

ISBN-13:

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"The Devil Out There" comprises five short stories and two long ones, most of them interconnected, which take place in the 60s and early 70s. They are set variously on a tidal beach, in an island apartment in the rain, a mountain valley choked with redwoods, the old-fashioned parlour of a Montreal boarding house, the heat of summer in Boston when JFK comes to town, and the smoky bars and haute cuisine restaurants of Montreal. A man is drawn equally to physical violence and theories of light and particle dimension; a 19-year-old leaves her small-town husband in search of sexual adventure and the glamour of the city; a sister and brother cope with the mine field of their past. Classically crafted, devoid of sentimentality and alive with potent observation and tantalizing darkness, these are stories to read and read again.


Calculating Brilliance

Calculating Brilliance

Author: Gerardo Aldana

Publisher: University of Arizona Press

Published: 2022-03-15

Total Pages: 465

ISBN-13: 0816542201

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This book contextualizes the discovery of a Venus astronomical pattern by a female Mayan astronomer at Chich'en Itza and the discovery's later adaptation and application at Mayapan. Calculating Brilliance brings different intellectual threads together across time and space, from the Classic to the Postclassic, the colonial period to the twenty-first century to offer a new vision for understanding Mayan astronomy.


Touching the Jaguar

Touching the Jaguar

Author: John Perkins

Publisher: Berrett-Koehler Publishers

Published: 2020-06-16

Total Pages: 263

ISBN-13: 1523089873

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“This eloquent book inspires us to create a new reality of what it means to be humans on this magnificent planet.” —Deepak Chopra This all happened while Perkins was a Peace Corps volunteer. Then he became an "economic hit man" (EHM), convincing developing countries to build huge projects that put them perpetually in debt to the World Bank and other US-controlled institutions. Although he'd learned in business school that this was the best model for economic development, he came to understand it as a new form of colonialism. When he later returned to the Amazon, he saw the destructive impact of his work. But a much more profound experience emerged: Perkins was inspired by a previously uncontacted Amazon tribe that “touched its jaguar” by uniting with age-old enemies to defend its territory against invading oil and mining companies. For the first time, Perkins details how shamanism converted him from an EHM to a crusader for transforming a failing Death Economy (exploiting resources that are declining at accelerating rates) into a Life Economy (cleaning up pollution, recycling, and developing green technologies). He discusses the power our perceptions have for molding reality. And he provides a strategy for each of us to change our lives and defend our territory—the earth—against current destructive policies and systems.