“The road novel—or the road half-novel—has rarely been funnier or more appealing.”—Benjamin Moser, Harper’s In the great American tradition of funny road narratives— from Mark Twain to Hunter S. Thompson—a young journalist searches for his first big break down the lonesome highways of the Southwest and northern Mexico. Alternating chapters of fiction and nonfiction provide a hilarious account of Jake Silverstein’s misadventures on the hunt for an elusive magazine article—a journey that becomes a quest to understand the purpose of journalism and the nature of storytelling.
Panic Anxiety is the number one mental health problem for women and second only to drug abuse among men. Synthetic tranquilizers can alleviate the symptoms of anxiety illnesses. However, in order to achieve lasting emotional tranquility, a significant lifestyle change must be made. The Anxiety Cure provides proven, natural strategies for overcoming panic disorder and finding an emotional balance in today's fast-paced world.
A deep and penetrating exploration of the key concepts of information and communications sciences by one of its founders, this book covers everything in its subject that you want to know more about including the bedrock topics of signs, symbols, information, and communication, all considered from an historical and foundational perspective that is satisfying to the beginning student and worthwhile for practitioners of long standing. All the major players are given their role, from Shannon and Weaver to Tim Berners-Lee, with Marshall McLuhan an engaging participant. Communication in all its forms—be it print or electronic media, mass communication as well as person-to-person messaging, whether by mail, telephone, gesture, or email—is thoroughly examined in this book, which can serve as either an introductory text to undergraduates in information science, an interesting read for the layman, or as a refresher for the communications professional.
Had enough of life? Feeling discontent all the time? Feeling sad, depressed, angry and all alone in this big world? What if I told you there was a way to have peace instantaneously forever? What if I took away all your pain, stress, anxiety, self-doubt, loneliness and sickness? What if I gave you a cheat sheet to enter into heaven? What if I told you this book is not a self-help, psychological or religious book but is a book about thought? What if I gave you a secret formula for a different way to think about everything so you are able to find inner bliss? What if I told you there is another way of looking at things so you can be content and happy going forward with life? What if I showed you a way to make the circumstances you have to deal with and the negative people you are faced with daily to turn around into a positive light? Join me on this journey as I teach you what I have learned and give you the tools to have eternal peace. I will explain to you why you feel the way you do, why you have conflict with others and why bad things always seem to happen. I start with showing you examples of my crazy life and ego, how I was able to let go of everything and find the truth of who I really was. The next part identifies your current state of mind and gives a detailed description on how to change it. I also offer vivid tools in a special matrix I created for you to find your true place. I have a section on how to deal with children and how to send them forth with a positive mindset. My recollections on religion, death, evolution and the bible are discussed in a way that will change your whole entire viewpoint. The way you are currently doing things is not working so you might as well take the chance to see if this book can change you forever. Learn more at cheatsheettoheaven.com.
Born and Raised in Sawdust: My Journey Around the World in Eighty Years is the deeply moving autobiography of Lewis Thigpen as a black boy growing up in a loving family in a small, tight knit community in the deep South during the extremely segregated Jim Crow era. It captures his life on the farm and in school in a revealing, instructive, yet colorful way despite the discrimination he encountered. Fearful of being a farm worker or common laborer for the rest of his life, he joined the U.S. Army, where racism persisted even though President Truman had ordered desegregation of the entire military in 1948. He served for three years. Against the odds, Thigpen persevered. Despite adversity and lack of money, he attended college, earned the Ph.D. degree, and became a renowned engineer, research scientist, and scholar. He rose to become chair of mechanical engineering at a distinguished university. The book is an easy read, designed for those who choose to pick it up at a bookstore, order it online, check it out at their public library, or download it to Kindle or other apps. It is a valuable addition to the canon of biographies, histories, literary works and cultural studies of the South. It captures the mood of Southern writers such as Flannery O’Conner, Pearl Cleage, William Faulkner, Richard Wright and Ralph Ellison. Readers interested in family history and ancestry will love tracing through Dr. Thigpen’s family tree, photographs and drawings. One photo shows him holding a silver salmon, the outcome of one of his favorite hobbies—fishing. In his autobiography, Dr. Thigpen brings the clarity and conciseness of an engineer and research scientist who has written and published numerous articles in refereed journals.