Author: E. Locken
Publisher: Lulu.com
ISBN: 0557080568
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 194
Book Description
Travel Journal Seychelles - Keep a diary of your holiday / vacation to Seychelles, includes diary, budget planner, activity planner, packing checklist and other useful aids to help you record and remember every aspect of your trip.
Travel Journal Seychelles
Author: E. Locken
Publisher: Lulu.com
ISBN: 0557080568
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 194
Book Description
Travel Journal Seychelles - Keep a diary of your holiday / vacation to Seychelles, includes diary, budget planner, activity planner, packing checklist and other useful aids to help you record and remember every aspect of your trip.
Publisher: Lulu.com
ISBN: 0557080568
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 194
Book Description
Travel Journal Seychelles - Keep a diary of your holiday / vacation to Seychelles, includes diary, budget planner, activity planner, packing checklist and other useful aids to help you record and remember every aspect of your trip.
Seychelles
Author: Lyn Mair
Publisher: Bradt Travel Guides
ISBN:
Category : Travel
Languages : en
Pages : 50
Book Description
Seyvchelles Bradt
Publisher: Bradt Travel Guides
ISBN:
Category : Travel
Languages : en
Pages : 50
Book Description
Seyvchelles Bradt
Victorian Geographical Journal
The Backpacking Housewife (The Backpacking Housewife, Book 1)
Author: Janice Horton
Publisher: HarperCollins UK
ISBN: 0008302685
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 245
Book Description
‘A feelgood read that reminds us it’s never too late to live the life you want’ 4* SUN One mum is leaving it all behind for the adventure of a lifetime...
Publisher: HarperCollins UK
ISBN: 0008302685
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 245
Book Description
‘A feelgood read that reminds us it’s never too late to live the life you want’ 4* SUN One mum is leaving it all behind for the adventure of a lifetime...
The Journal
Author: Cecil A. Papaly
Publisher: AuthorHouse
ISBN: 1504956818
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 153
Book Description
My work entitled The Journal is a science-fiction novel. The theme of the story is presented with a perspective on the spiritual link among all living creatures and looks at the apparent contradiction between human desire for peace and prosperity for all on the one hand and the overwhelming compulsion for personal possession and competitiveness on the other. The story introduces a spiritual entity that systematically brings unprecedented global changes, including the elimination of money, the displacement of governments, and the removal of borders, resulting in peace and tranquility throughout the world, albeit for a limited period. When normalcy is returned, the world has no memory of the great changes that took place.
Publisher: AuthorHouse
ISBN: 1504956818
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 153
Book Description
My work entitled The Journal is a science-fiction novel. The theme of the story is presented with a perspective on the spiritual link among all living creatures and looks at the apparent contradiction between human desire for peace and prosperity for all on the one hand and the overwhelming compulsion for personal possession and competitiveness on the other. The story introduces a spiritual entity that systematically brings unprecedented global changes, including the elimination of money, the displacement of governments, and the removal of borders, resulting in peace and tranquility throughout the world, albeit for a limited period. When normalcy is returned, the world has no memory of the great changes that took place.
T.P.'s and Cassell's Weekly
Islands Magazine
Fodor's the Complete Guide to African Safaris
Author: Fodor's Travel Guides
Publisher: Fodor's Travel
ISBN: 1640970290
Category : Travel
Languages : en
Pages : 526
Book Description
Written by local experts, Fodor's travel guides have been offering advice and professionally vetted recommendations for all tastes and budgets for 80 years. Fodor’s correspondents highlight the best African safari destinations in both eastern and southern Africa. Travelers will be able to determine which African safari destination is best for them and plan their trip step by step starting months before departure up to the day of arrival. We cover the best local and international safari tour operators with information on how to create a dream safari, whether it's a luxury, bespoke experience, or a rustic in-the-bush excursion. Plus, Fodor's reveals the best beaches for must-needed post-safari relaxation. More in-depth planning information is given for popular gorilla treks in Rwanda and Uganda. This travel guide includes: •UP-TO-DATE COVERAGE: New recommendations include the best new safari camps and tour operators •ILLUSTRATED FEATURES: Special full-color "Fodor's Features" throughout the guide provide rich information on the Big Five, the Great Migration, the Dunes of Namibia, and African culture. Gorgeous photos throughout, many by Fodor's travelers, provide endless inspiration. •INDISPENSABLE TRIP PLANNING TOOLS: Travelers can discover details about animals and birds, including the Big Five, with checklists for each country. Fodor's offers a hierarchy of safari parks in each country, with detailed lodging options, and compare tour operators with an easy-to-read chart broken down by experience, expertise, and clientele. Internet resources, a planning timeline, packing lists, must-ask questions, and information on what to expect after arrival are provided in easy-to-use, compact features. •DISCERNING RECOMMENDATIONS: Fodor's The Complete Guide to African Safaris offers well-informed advice and recommendations from expert and local writers to help travelers make the most of their time. Fodor's Choice designates our best picks, from hotels to nightlife. •COVERS: South Africa, Kenya, Tanzania, Botswana, Namibia, Rwanda, Uganda, Victoria Falls, South African Wine Country, Zanzibar, Kruger National Park, Skeleton Coast, Victoria Falls, Okavango Delta, Serengeti National Park, and Mount Kilimanjaro
Publisher: Fodor's Travel
ISBN: 1640970290
Category : Travel
Languages : en
Pages : 526
Book Description
Written by local experts, Fodor's travel guides have been offering advice and professionally vetted recommendations for all tastes and budgets for 80 years. Fodor’s correspondents highlight the best African safari destinations in both eastern and southern Africa. Travelers will be able to determine which African safari destination is best for them and plan their trip step by step starting months before departure up to the day of arrival. We cover the best local and international safari tour operators with information on how to create a dream safari, whether it's a luxury, bespoke experience, or a rustic in-the-bush excursion. Plus, Fodor's reveals the best beaches for must-needed post-safari relaxation. More in-depth planning information is given for popular gorilla treks in Rwanda and Uganda. This travel guide includes: •UP-TO-DATE COVERAGE: New recommendations include the best new safari camps and tour operators •ILLUSTRATED FEATURES: Special full-color "Fodor's Features" throughout the guide provide rich information on the Big Five, the Great Migration, the Dunes of Namibia, and African culture. Gorgeous photos throughout, many by Fodor's travelers, provide endless inspiration. •INDISPENSABLE TRIP PLANNING TOOLS: Travelers can discover details about animals and birds, including the Big Five, with checklists for each country. Fodor's offers a hierarchy of safari parks in each country, with detailed lodging options, and compare tour operators with an easy-to-read chart broken down by experience, expertise, and clientele. Internet resources, a planning timeline, packing lists, must-ask questions, and information on what to expect after arrival are provided in easy-to-use, compact features. •DISCERNING RECOMMENDATIONS: Fodor's The Complete Guide to African Safaris offers well-informed advice and recommendations from expert and local writers to help travelers make the most of their time. Fodor's Choice designates our best picks, from hotels to nightlife. •COVERS: South Africa, Kenya, Tanzania, Botswana, Namibia, Rwanda, Uganda, Victoria Falls, South African Wine Country, Zanzibar, Kruger National Park, Skeleton Coast, Victoria Falls, Okavango Delta, Serengeti National Park, and Mount Kilimanjaro
The Journal of Andrew Bihaly
Author: Andrew Bihaly
Publisher: Michael Joseph
ISBN:
Category : New York (N.Y.)
Languages : en
Pages : 252
Book Description
"The eerie feeling one gets on reading this, sad, self-lacerating journal of a lonely young man's cockroach's existence in a New York room, is that if he had not killed himself no publisher would have touched his book with a bargepole. Publication might have saved him. He felt he was a failure. An early entry goes: "Today for the first time in my life I smelled gas. For suicide. It does not smell bad." But in a world that hankers for proof of the truly tragic, only death convinces us of sincerity: we are willing to find magic in an obituary while we deny it to a life. That logic is made explicit in Thomas Hardy's story, "The Withered Arm," where a hangman's rope is sold in Dorchester the inch. Andrew Bihaly found writing "therapeutic," and after what seems to have been a number of unsuccessful bouts with psychiatrists he began confiding his undated experiences to a journal, Which has just appeared, mysteriously "edited" (excisions are not marked) by Anthony Tuttle. Bihaly did this for two years. In the beginning he was working as a busboy in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. restaurant. He was a broody, hard-working person, thin-skinned, easy to meet, and possessing a generosity that amounted almost to martyrdom. In the process of describing the disappointments in his work, he remembers his past, and slowly on the balance sheet of this journal his memory scourges him: he recalls his childhood in Budapest; in a monastery, Visegrad, where he was placed by his mother (who was put into several concentration camps) only to be tormented by the ambiguous menace of the Nazis; he recalls the uprooted existence he led after the war, a succession of cities and camps, until his arrival in the United States in 1950 at the age of 9. He was educated in Philadelphia (one of his school essays is reprinted here with grotesque irony, "What the Flag Means to Me"); he was in the Air Force; he went to Queens College for a while; he refers to a nervous breakdown, to plans for writing and photography. In its superficial details it is not an unusual story. But there is more. His birth certificate was forged to prove he was not a Jew; his father was killed in Eichmann's death march; his mother, for reasons he does not disclose, kept apart from him at crucial periods, and he had a crippling dependency on her. So, again and again, we read sentences like these: "I am trying to be free of the vicious spasm of anxiety ... whenever I remember that I am Jewish," "... I look up at a woman and, no matter how young she is ... I feel she is my mother, she reminds me of my mother." "Can a Jewish refugee become a healthy lover?", "I need a doctor," "Who am I?" "What am I doing?" And there are fantasies: he dreams of having a harem, being craved by all the women he meets, being a writer, having expensive clothes, a fancy hi-fi set ("The thing for me is to get my teeth fixed, get a nice set of fashionable winter clothes."), glamour, happiness, money. He feared anonymity and failure"--Taken from The New York Times Archives.
Publisher: Michael Joseph
ISBN:
Category : New York (N.Y.)
Languages : en
Pages : 252
Book Description
"The eerie feeling one gets on reading this, sad, self-lacerating journal of a lonely young man's cockroach's existence in a New York room, is that if he had not killed himself no publisher would have touched his book with a bargepole. Publication might have saved him. He felt he was a failure. An early entry goes: "Today for the first time in my life I smelled gas. For suicide. It does not smell bad." But in a world that hankers for proof of the truly tragic, only death convinces us of sincerity: we are willing to find magic in an obituary while we deny it to a life. That logic is made explicit in Thomas Hardy's story, "The Withered Arm," where a hangman's rope is sold in Dorchester the inch. Andrew Bihaly found writing "therapeutic," and after what seems to have been a number of unsuccessful bouts with psychiatrists he began confiding his undated experiences to a journal, Which has just appeared, mysteriously "edited" (excisions are not marked) by Anthony Tuttle. Bihaly did this for two years. In the beginning he was working as a busboy in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. restaurant. He was a broody, hard-working person, thin-skinned, easy to meet, and possessing a generosity that amounted almost to martyrdom. In the process of describing the disappointments in his work, he remembers his past, and slowly on the balance sheet of this journal his memory scourges him: he recalls his childhood in Budapest; in a monastery, Visegrad, where he was placed by his mother (who was put into several concentration camps) only to be tormented by the ambiguous menace of the Nazis; he recalls the uprooted existence he led after the war, a succession of cities and camps, until his arrival in the United States in 1950 at the age of 9. He was educated in Philadelphia (one of his school essays is reprinted here with grotesque irony, "What the Flag Means to Me"); he was in the Air Force; he went to Queens College for a while; he refers to a nervous breakdown, to plans for writing and photography. In its superficial details it is not an unusual story. But there is more. His birth certificate was forged to prove he was not a Jew; his father was killed in Eichmann's death march; his mother, for reasons he does not disclose, kept apart from him at crucial periods, and he had a crippling dependency on her. So, again and again, we read sentences like these: "I am trying to be free of the vicious spasm of anxiety ... whenever I remember that I am Jewish," "... I look up at a woman and, no matter how young she is ... I feel she is my mother, she reminds me of my mother." "Can a Jewish refugee become a healthy lover?", "I need a doctor," "Who am I?" "What am I doing?" And there are fantasies: he dreams of having a harem, being craved by all the women he meets, being a writer, having expensive clothes, a fancy hi-fi set ("The thing for me is to get my teeth fixed, get a nice set of fashionable winter clothes."), glamour, happiness, money. He feared anonymity and failure"--Taken from The New York Times Archives.
Spicebox Kitchen
Author: Linda Shiue
Publisher: Hachette UK
ISBN: 073828601X
Category : Cooking
Languages : en
Pages : 529
Book Description
A renowned chef and physician shares her secrets to a healthy life in this cookbook filled with healthy recipes that will fuel and energize your body and mind. "I like to think of a spicebox as the cook's equivalent of a doctor's bag--containing the essential tools to use in the art of cooking. Learning to use spices is the best way to add interest and vibrancy to simple home cooking."—from the Introduction In her first cookbook, chef and physician Linda Shiue puts the phrase "let food be thy medicine" to the test. With 175 vegetarian and pescatarian recipes curated from her own kitchen, Dr. Shiue takes you on a journey of vibrant, fresh flavors through a range of spices from amchar masala to za'atar. With a comprehensive "Healthy Cooking 101" chapter, lists of the healthiest ingredients out there, and tips for prevention, Spicebox Kitchen is a culinary wellness trip you can take in your own kitchen.
Publisher: Hachette UK
ISBN: 073828601X
Category : Cooking
Languages : en
Pages : 529
Book Description
A renowned chef and physician shares her secrets to a healthy life in this cookbook filled with healthy recipes that will fuel and energize your body and mind. "I like to think of a spicebox as the cook's equivalent of a doctor's bag--containing the essential tools to use in the art of cooking. Learning to use spices is the best way to add interest and vibrancy to simple home cooking."—from the Introduction In her first cookbook, chef and physician Linda Shiue puts the phrase "let food be thy medicine" to the test. With 175 vegetarian and pescatarian recipes curated from her own kitchen, Dr. Shiue takes you on a journey of vibrant, fresh flavors through a range of spices from amchar masala to za'atar. With a comprehensive "Healthy Cooking 101" chapter, lists of the healthiest ingredients out there, and tips for prevention, Spicebox Kitchen is a culinary wellness trip you can take in your own kitchen.