From growing up in a family of eight children in Guadalajara, Mexico to working his way up the culinary ladder under the tutelage of top chefs, Chef Martín Rios’ humble charm and exceptional culinary talent have won him accolades on the national scale. A James Beard Award nominee, he has been repeatedly honored for his innovative and pleasing combinations of flavors, colors and presentation. His unique style emphasizes fresh, local produce and organic meats and poultry, and reflects not only Southwestern and Asian influences but also his classic training in French technique Written with acclaimed food writers, Cheryl and Bill Jamison, The Restaurant Martín Cookbook offers sophisticated recipes––some are meant for special occasion dinners and others are straightforward in their basics and suitable for everyday purposes––that are accessible to in-tune home cooks who love to cook, who find joy and fulfillment in creating fine food for themselves, their families, and their friends.
Covid-19 brought many changes to the world. For kids, those changes are especially daunting! Mommy & Me During Covid-19 is the story of a young boy and his mom coping with the changes, daily struggles, and surprising upsides of 2020’s global pandemic. If 2020 taught us anything, it's that we should enjoy the moments we have with friends and family. Don't take any day, anything, or anyone for granted. And that’s exactly what Jamison learns to do in this heartwarming and affirming story.
From growing up in a family of eight children in Guadalajara, Mexico to working his way up the culinary ladder under the tutelage of top chefs, Chef Martín Rios’ humble charm and exceptional culinary talent have won him accolades on the national scale. A James Beard Award nominee, he has been repeatedly honored for his innovative and pleasing combinations of flavors, colors and presentation. His unique style emphasizes fresh, local produce and organic meats and poultry, and reflects not only Southwestern and Asian influences but also his classic training in French technique Written with acclaimed food writers, Cheryl and Bill Jamison, The Restaurant Martín Cookbook offers sophisticated recipes––some are meant for special occasion dinners and others are straightforward in their basics and suitable for everyday purposes––that are accessible to in-tune home cooks who love to cook, who find joy and fulfillment in creating fine food for themselves, their families, and their friends.
George R. R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire has sparked a renewed interest in things medieval. The pseudo-historical world of Westeros delights casual fans while offering a rich new perspective for medievalists and scholars. This study explores how Martin crafts a chivalric code that intersects with and illuminates well known medieval texts, including both romance and heroic epics. Through characters such as Brienne of Tarth, Sandor Clegane and Jaime Lannister, Martin variously challenges, upholds and deconstructs chivalry as depicted in the literature of the Middle Ages.
After a long day fighting off zombies and werewolves alike, Jesus and Lincoln take refuge in a seemingly harmless area... or so they thought!Join our two heroes as they go toe to rotted toe against the likes of which they¿ve never seen before: the dreaded, relentless, horrifying... Alterna Zombies!
George R. R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire has sparked a renewed interest in things medieval. The pseudo-historical world of Westeros delights casual fans while offering a rich new perspective for medievalists and scholars. This study explores how Martin crafts a chivalric code that intersects with and illuminates well known medieval texts, including both romance and heroic epics. Through characters such as Brienne of Tarth, Sandor Clegane and Jaime Lannister, Martin variously challenges, upholds and deconstructs chivalry as depicted in the literature of the Middle Ages.
Martin Milton Madellbaum-or Fartin' Martin as he was un-affectionately called by the very few people who knew him or even cared to-worked in Room 246 on the thirteenth floor of a corporate mega-tower at a company for whom he was invisible.Daily pushing his mail cart mindlessly, as if on a pre-determined and unchangeable track, his life was lived out in a human habitrail of obscurity. There was no present, no future for poor Martin. Or was there? What whizzed and whirred under that mask of blank expression?Against a backdrop of corporate greed and abusive power, one simple man chooses to take a stand. Martin had a plan. He was just waiting for the right time. Until he was tired of waiting.Nowhere Man is part thriller, part mystery, part love story. A riveting page turner from the author of Swimming in Jello, this story will keep you guessing until the end. And then leave you thinking.
The Sixties." The powerful images conveyed by those two words have become an enduring part of American cultural and political history. But where did Sixties radicalism come from? Who planted the intellectual seeds that brought it into being? These questions are answered with striking clarity in Andrew Jamison and Ron Eyerman's book. The result is a combination of history and biography that vividly portrays an entire culture in transition. The authors focus on specific individuals, each of whom in his or her distinctive way carried the ideas of the 1930s into the decades after World War II, and each of whom shared in inventing a new kind of intellectual partisanship. They begin with C. Wright Mills, Hannah Arendt, and Erich Fromm and show how their work linked the "old left" of the Thirties to the "new left" of the Sixties. Lewis Mumford, Rachel Carson, and Fairfield Osborn laid the groundwork for environmental activism; Herbert Marcuse, Margaret Mead, and Leo Szilard articulated opposition to the postwar "scientific-technological state." Alternatives to mass culture were proposed by Allen Ginsberg, James Baldwin, and Mary McCarthy; and Saul Alinsky, Dorothy Day, and Martin Luther King, Jr., made politics personal. This is an unusual book, written with an intimacy that brings to life both intellect and emotion. The portraits featured here clearly demonstrate that the transforming radicalism of the Sixties grew from the legacy of an earlier generation of thinkers. With a deep awareness of the historical trends in American culture, the authors show us the continuing relevance these partisan intellectuals have for our own age. "In a time colored by 'political correctness' and the ascendancy of market liberalism, it is well to remember the partisan intellectuals of the 1950s. They took sides and dissented without becoming dogmatic. May we be able to say the same about ourselves."—from Chapter 7 This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press's mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1994. "The Sixties." The powerful images conveyed by those two words have become an enduring part of American cultural and political history. But where did Sixties radicalism come from? Who planted the intellectual seeds that brought it into being? These questi
Over the past decade, software companies have increasingly monopolized the flow of venture capital, starving support for scientific research and its transformative discoveries. New medicines, cheaper and faster personal computers, and other life-changing developments all stem from investment in science. In the past, these funds led to steam engines, light bulbs, microprocessors, 3D printers, and even the Internet. In Venture Investing in Science, the venture capitalist Douglas W. Jamison and the investment author Stephen R. Waite directly link financial support to revolutionary advancements in physics, computers, chemistry, and biology and make a passionate case for continued investing in science to meet the global challenges of our time. Clean air and water, cures for intractable diseases, greener public transportation, cheaper and faster communication technologies—these are some of the rich opportunities awaiting venture capital investment today. Jamison and Waite focus on how early-stage companies specializing in commercializing transformative technologies based on deep science have been shunned by venture capitalists, and how the development of such companies have been hampered by structural changes in capital markets and government regulation over the past decade. The authors argue that reinvigorating science-based technological innovation is crucial to reactivating the economic dynamism that lifts living standards and fuels prosperity over time.
Widow of the waves is a juicy book about being the wife of a Great Lakes sailor for over three decades. Bev recalls the sailing life from the landlubber's perspective. She tells the stories about the captains, the management, the storms, the trials, the joys, the great galley cooks.
This book explores the remarkable collaboration of one of the most prominent and successful female literary partnerships at work in the late nineteenth century; Irish authors, Edith Somerville (1858-1949) and Violet Martin/Martin Ross (1862-1915). Based on extensive and original archival research, it reorients traditional thinking about Somerville and Ross's partnership and rethinks the collaboration beyond a purely domestic and personal affair. The collaboration is here viewed as a significant part of the two women's lifelong but always complex feminist ethic, as well as a defiant and oft-times subversive cultural position within Irish and Victorian literary society more generally. Taking its cue from the legal aesthetics of nineteenth-century definitions of authorship and copyright, this book significantly expands the existing parameters of debate surrounding these authors and argues for their dual artistic practice to be understood as a type of authorial dissidence. Sidestepping Somerville and Ross's major texts, the book sheds new light on the two women's lesser studied--but equally important--travel writing, essays, short fiction, life writing, and extensive personal archival material, opening up new avenues of enquiry into the complexities of gender, class, and nationality in nineteenth-century Ireland. The book thus significantly interrogates the idea of collaboration both from the point of view of the authors, their publishers and readers, as well as their texts, and both deepens, as well as challenges, current literary history's broader understanding and treatment of nineteenth-century female authorship and literary production in particularly resonant ways.
This long-awaited second edition of Manic-Depressive Illness will exhaustively review the biological and genetic literature that has dominated the field in recent years, and incorporate cutting-edge research conducted since publication of the first edition. Drs. Frederick Goodwin and Kay Redfield Jamison have updated their surveys of psychological and epidemiological evidence, as well as that pertaining to diagnostic issues, course, and outcome, and they offer practical guidelines for differential diagnosis and clinical management. This book will be a valuable addition to the libraries of psychiatrists and other physicians, psychologists, clinical social workers, neuroscientists, pharmacologists, and the patients and families who live with manic-depressive illness.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.