Playing Cards: Predicting Your Future (Astrolog Complete Guide)
This book explains how to read future with the standard playing cardsdeck in a concise way, with no extraneus material. After a short introduction, the card's meanings are explained a card a page, with an extra page for each suit. The explanations are short and to the point, clear, and very understandable. For some reason, each explanation is accompanied with the card's picture which is scanned in very low resolution and printed in black & white. The last section includes several good spreads, explained well over 34 pages, with a few pages with hints for correct interpretation. The subject of reversed cards is covered as well.
The Complete Book of Greed: The Strange and Amazing History of Human Excess Moneymania: Рассказ о том, как они рулят миром, как отдельные личности жаждут наживы, и что в деньгах сытости нет. Забавно, остроумно, и даже местами - трагично.
Goldberg reveals the quirks and characters of famous misers, gamblers, investors, spendthrifts, spenders, gold diggers, and billionaires while he talks about the reality of greed. He also philosophizes that greed is unrelenting because it's really a search for spiritual fulfillment and cannot be satisfied through the accumulation of material possessions. His anecdotal format results in an entertaining book, while his scary stories of the effect of greed almost make the reader glad not to be rich.
The Complete Rhyming Dictionary Revised This simple-to-use, exceptionally complete reference work has been updated, expanded and redesigned to meet the needs of today's most demanding wordsmiths. Included here are over 10,000 new entries--over 60,000 in all, sight, vowel, consonant, and one-, two-, and three-syllable rhymes.
Young Learners Go! is a complete English for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL) course that gives young learners a solid foundation and a positive first experience in learning English.
- teaches English through meaningful themes and practical contexts that are relevant to learners' daily lives - Based on the multiple intelligences theory - Spiral progression teaching: allowing for a complete understanding and acquisition of the language for learners - Learner-centric : develops learners' ownership of the language - User-friendly
Nearly everyone who's had a brush with American lit knows the story of Emily Dickinson - her poetry unpublished in her lifetime, and then even after her death, her verses seeing the light of day only after having been "improved" on by an editor who found her rhymes imperfect and her meter "spasmodic." He even went so far as to make her metaphors "sensible." The fact is, Thomas Wentworth Higginson, to whom Dickinson had sent her poems, was a representative of the poetic establishment, and as with all artistic establishments then and now, was too rigid in his thinking and too impoverished in his imagination to comprehend a new voice of genius.