You hear all sorts of things said or implied about adoption. Some information comes from people who know a lot about it, while some comes from people who don’t know anything about it but make a
In this quick reference for clinicians and students of veterinary medicine, Barr and Bowman (veterinary medicine and parasitology, Cornell U.) present a text that addresses both canine and feline infe
In some cooking circles, cast iron gets a bad rep – people think it's old-fashioned, heavy, and hard to take care of. And really, how often do folks nowadays need to hitch up a mule and wagon and leav
The literary works of Tertullian of Carthage (c. AD 160 - c. 225) represent an important epoch in the history of attitudes toward the foetus and embryo. Although his ideas were far from consistent, Te
With Amazon Web Services you can launch new servers in minutes, distribute data through a global high-speed network, and store terabytes of data at a fraction of the normal cost.Host Your Web Site in
Every photographer, from weekend enthusiast to professional, can learn by studying the "greats". In Why Photographs Work, author/photographer George Barr analyzes fifty striking images by some of the
The Hundred Fathom Curve chronicles the search for an American identity from the Vietnam war to 9/11. The poems, drawn from five previous collections and published over 40 years, include Barr’s
African American have lived in Texas for more than four hundred years?longer than in any other region of the United States. Beginning with the arrival of the first African American in 1528, Alwyn Barr
Any of us that have ever repaired things around the home have always run into the same question, how to do it right. Typically, our experience tells us what to do, but many of us have someone in our l
This title tells the story of Father Robert O'Keeffe of Callan and his conflict with ecclesiastical authority. It traces the Callan Schools Affair from its origins in 1868 to O'Keeffe's death in 1881.
Growing up on the northern shore of Lake Michigan in the town of Escanaba, Michigan, Robin Hamilton couldn’t wait to get away from the isolation and cold, snowy weather to the bright lights of Chicago
Woodland Manitou: To Be on Earth is a collection of essays rooted in the rhythm of the natural world. Through the turn of the seasons, Heidi Barr illustrates how the cycles of the earth have informed