Browse Results

Showing 19,501 through 19,525 of 19,656 results

Oh, The Things I Know!: A Guide To Success, Or, Failing That, Happiness

by Al Franken

More advanced than Robert Fulghum, more fit than Maria Shriver's husband, Oh, the Things I Know! is Franken's commencement address for the 21st century. A cradle-to-grave guide for living, it takes young grads from their first job ("Oh, Are You Going to Hate Your First Job!") through their twenties and thirties ("Oh, the person of Your Dreams vs. the Person You Can Actually Attract!"), into marriage and parenthood ("Oh, Just Looking at Your Spouse Will Make Your Skin Crawl!"), and all the way up to senior citizenship ("Oh, the Nursing Home You'll Wind Up In!"). What does a mega success like Al Franken have to say to ordinary people? "There's no point in getting advice from hopeless failures." Filled with wit, wisdom, observations, and practical tips, this is an easy-to-follow user's manual for human existence. Why travel life's highway all by your lonesome when you can bring Al Franken along?

The Fantastic 4: The Movie Story Book

by John Sazaklis

Stories about the Fantastic 4, 4 super heroes who try to save the world.

Teach Yourself Film Studies

by Warren Buckland

To study film should not be thought of as an activity inferior to studying other arts, such as theatre, painting or opera, for two reasons. Firstly, film occupies a dominant place in society and because film is a popular medium, it should be studied seriously. Secondly, if the film student adopts a serious, responsible and critical approach to film, then film studies becomes as important as any other type of study. Ultimately, it is the student's attitude that justifies the study of film, not the nature or popularity of film. If the student takes his or her task seriously, then studying Steven Spielberg's film The Lost World: Jurassic Park becomes as important and legitimate as studying Shakespeare's play Hamlet, Hans Holbein's painting The Ambassadors or Mozart's opera The Magic Flute. the cinema is not so difficult to explain once you become familiar with the main critical tools film scholars use to analyse films. As a secondary aim, we shall look at films that are not easy to understand and we shall see what makes them difficult. By analysing the complex nature of difficult films we should be able to appreciate them more.

Men, Women & Pianos

by Arthur Loesser

Some of the greatest composers of history have confined some of their most precious thoughts to the piano. For a century and a half, series of pianists of outstanding nimbleness and expressive power have attracted millions of admirers to their performances. Mozart, Beethoven and Chopin, Liszt, Rubinstein and Rachmaninov, to achieve the fulfillment of their art, needed to have pianos. From where did they get them? From factories, of course. But piano factories cannot stay in business simply by making a few instruments for a few great musicians. They must sell their products annually by the hundreds, by the thousands, to all manner of persons: doctors, lawyers, merchants, government officials. What did those persons want with pianos? This book may supply some answers to this question." That is the modest raison d'être for his book given by the author in a letter to the publisher. But any reader will see at once that the proliferations in the answer to his question result in something much more important and delightful. What Mr. Loesser has written is really a piano's-eye view of the social--and sometimes the philosophical--history of Western Europe and the United States from the seventeenth century to the present, with glances both forward and back. With a keen eye for both the ridiculous and the significant detail (which turn out often to be the same thing), he traces the history of the design and manufacture of the piano, and the music written for it, from its predecessors, the clavichord and the virginal, to the latest concert grand and the modern "spinet." Long established as an internationally known concert pianist, Mr. Loesser here shows himself to be an elegant stylist and an impressively learned scholar, who has the wit to see that in a social history the role of the interior decorator may be quite as important as that of the virtuoso--and that of the ambitious parent, more important than either.

Socrates

by Voltaire Frank J. Morlock

Play

The Skin Game

by John Galsworthy

Play, tragi-comedy in three acts

Biology: God's Living Creation (3rd Edition)

by Keith Graham Gregory Parker

This textbook is unique--different from any other biology text in print today. The study of life is presented in a traditional manner as it was discovered by the great naturalists of the past, a large majority of whom revered the biblical account of Creation. Unlike other texts, which begin by confusing students with intangible, unseen, and theoretical topics such as biochemistry, subcellular structure, genetics, and philosophy, Biology: God's Living Creation motivates students to learn by first presenting the living world around them, the things they can see, touch, and identify.

Teach Yourself Digital Home Movie Making

by Peter Cope

'Digital' is a term that is bandied around often by marketeers who see it as a synonym for 'cutting edge' and it now appears in almost every walk of life: digital radio, digital phones, digital cameras. Digital, in its most common, if clinical, meaning describes the way in which real world information -- such as sound, colour and light -- are converted into numeric form. When we talk about digital video the key distinguishing feature is its quality. A digital video signal -- such as that produced by a sensor in a digital camera -- doesn't suffer degradation in the same way as an analogue signal. A single frame of video will be more sharply defined than that from an equivalent analogue camera. Digital video really comes into its own when we start thinking about editing. The book teaches you everything related to Digital Home Movie Making.

Teach Yourself Basic Guitar

by Simon Pitt Simon Troup

The core information that you will learn in this book will be useful to you whichever styles of popular music you may later choose to specialize in. Whether you want to play rock, pop, blues, reggae, funk, folk or jazz, you'll need to start developing good left- and right-hand technique, and learn the chords and scales that are the building blocks of almost all western popular music. While this book doesn't go into any depth on classical guitar technique, there is a great deal of information and advice that will be of benefit to anyone who may decide that they wish to specialize in classical guitar playing in the future.

Behind The Screen: How Gays and Lesbians Shaped Hollywood 1910-1969

by William J. Mann

Whether in or out of the closet, gays and lesbians played an essential role in shaping studio-era Hollywood. Gay actors (J. Warren Kerrigan, Marlene Dietrich, Rock Hudson), gay directors (George Cukor, James Whale, Dorothy Arzner), and gay set and costume designers (Adrian, Travis Banton, George James Hopkins) have been among the most influential individuals in Hollywood history and literally created the Hollywood mystique. This landmark study-based on seven years of exacting research and including unpublished memoirs, personal correspondence, oral histories, and scrapbooks-explores the experience of Hollywood's gays in the context of their times. Ranging from Hollywood's working conditions to the rowdy character of Los Angeles's gay underground, William J. Mann brings long overdue attention to every aspect of this powerful creative force.

Thendral: Vol. 14, Issue 05, April 2014

by Madhurabharathi

This issue features an interview with Kalakshetra’s Director Priyadarshini Govind , two short stories, ‘Payanam’ talks about a visit to Marymoor Park in Washington, ‘Samayam’ features Ayirathen Vinayagar temple, an article paying homage to T.K.Sivasankaran and Kushvanth Singh, mouth watering recipes, an article on Achievers featuring Kuralarasi Geetha Arunachalam and a few other young achievers ,an article on the veteran writer Kumuthini along with usual features like Thendral Pesukirathu ,Kathiravanai Kelungal,Nalam Vaazha, Kavithai Pandhal, Pudhinam and important events of last month.

Thendral: Vol. 14, Issue 04, March 2014

by Madhurabharathi

This issue features an interview with Dr.Chithra Vaitheeshwaran, three short stories, article on Mangala Nadha Swami Temple at Uthara kosa Mangai, travelogues on Malaysia and Nepal, an article paying homage to Balu Mahendra and Iravadam R.Swaminathan, an article on the legendary dancer and choreographer Rukmani devi Arundale , mouth watering recipes of Idly varieties, a brain teaser section with Maths puzzles along with usual features like Thendral Pesukirathu; Anbulla Snehitiye,Kathiravanai Kelungal,Nalam Vaazha etc.

Thendral: Vol. 14, Issue 03, February 2014

by Madhurabharathi

This issue features interviews with veterans Padmashree S.M.Ganapathy Sthapathy, Madurai G.S.Mani, mouth-watering recipes, homage to many veterans, short stories,an article on 37th book fair and other usual features like Ilanthendral , Kathiravanai Kelungal, Nalam Vaazha etc.

Teach Yourself Line Dancing

by Maggy Halliday

How to dance different styles of line dancing.

Teach Yourself Film Making

by Tom Holden

A straightforward guide for people who have been trying to make films, with all the techniques to succeed.

Golden Slippers

by Lee Wyndham

Through the mist before her eyes Maggie saw Kirk Sherwood, the only boy she had dated in high school. He had said good-bye the night before, not wanting to intrude on the last-minute family farewells. Maggie suddenly realized that never again --no matter what happened --even if she flopped dismally in her dancing career--would anything be the same for her in Spring Valley. She stared at the concrete ribbon of highway spinning out ahead, beckoning them toward New York.

Slipper Under Glass (Maggie Jones, Ballerina #1)

by Lee Wyndham

The Exotic World of The Dance... For seven years Maggie Jones has dedicated herself to the dance, dreaming of the day when she'll be Magda Jonescu, prima ballerina. She must prove herself not only to her generous Aunt Jo, who has paid for the lessons and sent fabulous gifts from exotic places, but also to her doubting family. Neither Maggie's father, who is allergic to her feathery costumes, nor her younger brother, who thinks dancing is for sissies, can understand the forces which drive Maggie to practice for hours on end. On Maggie struggles, assailed by doubts, but sustained by her dreams and a yellowed ballet slipper--kept under glass--in which Pavlova danced The Swan. Success comes to Maggie in a strange, unbelievable way and, faced with a golden opportunity, she must learn how to compromise reality with her dreams.

Monday Night Mayhem the Inside Story of Abc's Monday Night Football

by Marc Gunther Bill Carter

Follows the history of Monday Night Football from 1970 to 1988

Richard Burton: a Life

by Melvyn Bragg Sally Burton

Blessings in Disguise

by Alec Guinness

Alan Alda: An Unauthorized Biography

by Jason Bonderoff

Biography of the famous actor.

Refine Search

Showing 19,501 through 19,525 of 19,656 results