Best Selling Books by Ian McDonald

Ian McDonald is the author of Terminal Cafe (1995), Current Issues 2002 (2002), Recent Developments 2000 (2000), The Best of Ian McDonald (2016), Family Album - Poems by Ian McDonald (2024).

81 - 120 of 171 results
<< >>

Terminal Cafe

release date: Sep 01, 1995
Terminal Cafe
Los Angeles has its Necroville or "City of the Dead"--off-limits to living humans--but on the Night of the Dead, Necroville throws the wildest party L.A. has ever seen and mysterious events threaten all of humanity

Current Issues 2002

release date: Jan 01, 2002

Recent Developments 2000

release date: Jan 01, 2000
Recent Developments 2000
Get across changes to the educational statutory licence in this updated guide. A useful insight for educational institutions working with text, images and musical scores for educational purposes. Feel confident in understanding what copyright protects and how you can reproduce copyright material efficiently for your institution.

The Best of Ian McDonald

release date: Apr 01, 2016
The Best of Ian McDonald
"Ian McDonald, the author of such landmark novels as Desolation Road, Chaga, River of Gods, and The Dervish House, has long been regarded as one of Britain''s finest SF writers. Just like those full-length works, his shorter fiction has commanded much admiration, and now, in this massive retrospective volume, the best McDonald tales are assembled in glittering array. Represented here are all the phases of McDonald''s career: the poetic early retro-visions that in the late Eighties signalled the arrival of a marvellously fluent new stylistic voice; the virtuoso Nineties riffs on themes such as the Irish Troubles, nanotechnology, alternate history, and alien sexuality; the bold post-millennial ventures into the futuristic politics of Third World countries such as Kenya, India, and Brazil, as well as far afield to alien solar systems; and recent, dazzlingly conceived variations on the Arab Spring, the nature of superheroes, and Mars as pulp SF writers once fondly imagined it to be. The treasures are abundant, each presented in McDonald’s addictive, immersive prose--language at once elegantly timeless and edgily contemporary."--Publisher''s statement.

Family Album - Poems by Ian McDonald

release date: Jun 30, 2024
Family Album - Poems by Ian McDonald
This precious book of heartfelt poems from the pen of one of the Caribbean region''s leading poets, Ian McDonald, reflects his love of life and of all whom he holds dear. His beloved wife Mary is the muse whose inspirational influence can be sensed throughout the work''s pages. McDonald, ever the family historian, invites the reader to meet his cherished family members: from ancestors long past, to parents, wife, children and grandchildren. Ian McDonald, author of the Hummingbird Tree and 12 books of poetry, is the holder of an Honorary Doctorate of Letters from The University of the West Indies, winner of the Guyana Prize of Literature for four years and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature since 1970. He was born in Trinidad in 1933 and lives in Guyana. He is married to Mary and has three sons.

Not Quite Without a Moon

release date: Jan 26, 2023
Not Quite Without a Moon
Now in his late eighties, the poet''s world has become, increasingly, his house and garden, his wife, children and grandchildren, a world experienced as no less rich than anything in the past - indeed ever more precious for its evanescence.

Life Isn't Fair

release date: Jun 15, 2023
Life Isn't Fair
Living life with a physical disability from birth means a hard road ahead for anyone, but Ian McDonald has taken it all in his stride and through tough times and good, he has led what some people would describe as a relatively normal yet in some respects, extraordinary life despite his disability. This has seen him treated well by his family and friends, but who survived his school years being mercilessly bullied by other children. As his life has gone on, he''s come up against discrimination in the workplace, discrimination by potential and actual employers, been sacked from his "job of a lifetime" for being too good at it and through all this has had some unbelievable successes along the way. Ian''s life is a rich tapestry of good and bad, but all through it we can see his ability to keep a smile on his face and shrug off the bad times shines through. With a wide variety on his resume.

The Brutal Blade of Bruno the Bandit

release date: Dec 13, 2014
The Brutal Blade of Bruno the Bandit
Unless you''ve been living under a dome, you know that The Brutal Blade of Bruno the Bandit is a shining example of great comics! No doubt you''ve had insomnia waiting for the next volume, but you need live in desperation no longer, for here it is! End your misery; make a stand by putting Brutal Blade on your list of needful things! The stories in this volume are guaranteed to transport you to joyland, from the wastelands of "Castle''s Lot" where we meet the dark half of Bruno''s favorite author, to "The Lair of Morpheum" where our heroes get snared by the original dream catcher, to "1001," where Bruno must brave the dead zone of dietary hell! You won''t want to miss this revival of webcomics history, and one of the best comics on the web becomes one of the funniest comics in print.

The Red Baron of IBEW Local 213

release date: May 01, 2022
The Red Baron of IBEW Local 213
A ground-breaking study of the firebrand leader of the leftist faction of a construction trade union at a pivotal moment in labor history. The "Red Baron" from Local 213 of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) was Les McDonald, a firebrand Communist activist and the youthful leader of the left faction within the Vancouver electrical workers'' union. His fate would be intertwined with the Lenkurt Electric strike of 1966, a wildcat strike that led to the imprisonment of four trade union leaders. McDonald''s important role in Local 213 and the Lenkurt strike--a watershed moment in Canadian labor history--was, until now, the untold story of the first half of his life. Referencing Local 213''s Minute Books, newspaper articles, collected correspondence, as well as dozens of personal interviews conducted by the author, this book examines the history of IBEW Local 213 in the turbulent years leading up to the Lenkurt strike. In addition to describing these events and their important historical ramifications, Ian McDonald chronicles how his father helped to rebuild a left faction within the local union.

Essequibo

release date: Jan 01, 1992

The Passion Within

release date: Oct 29, 2022
The Passion Within
"The Passion Within" is an inspirational guide to help readers discover, use and cultivate their gifts while pursuing their passion. The book also discusses what may cause a person to overlook their gift and how to overcome fear in the process of pursuing one''s passion. The authors want the readers to know that God always sends a motivator in those moments when doubt and feelings of being inferior overshadow the desire to be successful in their pursuit. While reading this book you will be able to gain insight on how to optimize your potential. The ultimate goal of "The Passion Within" is for readers to realize that everyone was born with a gift and not to ignore or put aside that gift placed in them, but to recognize their God given abilities to be extraordinary.

The Year's Top Hard Science Fiction Stories 4

release date: Jun 01, 2020
The Year's Top Hard Science Fiction Stories 4
An unabridged collection spotlighting the best hard science fiction stories published in 2019 by current and emerging masters of the genre, edited by Allan Kaster. A coastal restoration researcher can help the police solve a murder but is conflicted over the unjust nature of the criminal justice system in "Soft Edges," by Elizabeth Bear. In "By the Warmth of Their Calculus," by Tobias S. Buckell, the captain of a dustship musters her crew to escape from a trap set by Hunter-Killers in a game of cat and mouse amid the rings of a giant planet. An arachnipede becomes wary of potential mates after she sees a male eat her mother . . . but she''s lonely in "A Mate Not a Meal," by Sarina Dorie. In "The Slipway," by Greg Egan, astronomers are hard-pressed to explain what appears to be a new cluster of stars that''s growing by the hour. Abandoned at a lunar base after losing radio contact with Earth, a newlywed traverses the moon in a buggy with her newborn toward a skyhook on the farside in "This is Not the Way Home," also by Greg Egan. In "Cloud-Born" by Gregory Feeley, children born on a ship from Earth become anxious as they begin to transition to their new lives as colonists of Neptune. An astrobiology postdoc is called at the last minute to remotely navigate a robot searching for hydrogen-based life on Titan in "On the Shores of Ligeia," by Carolyn Ives Gilman. In "Ring Wave," by Tom Jolly, an engineer in a life pod is desperate to join a colony in space after an asteroid destroys Earth. A deep-sea mining company''s operation is threatened by a crustacean scientist in "The Little Shepherdess," by Gwyneth Jones. In "Sacrificial Iron," by Ted Kosmatka, a decades long mission to another star is threatened when the two men keeping watch over a frozen crew turn on each other. A teenager seeks to maintain her "Captain" status among her non-traditional lunar family by leading her siblings on a dangerous trek to Neil Armstrong''s first footprint on the moon in "The Menace from Farside," by Ian McDonald. In "The Ocean Between the Leaves," by Ray Nayler, the mind of a dying gardener is transferred to another body for three days of closure in a state-run experiment. A robot strives to maintain its energy reserves as it crosses thousands of kilometers underwater to find its way home in "At the Fall," by Alec Nevala-Lee. In "Winter Wheat," by Gord Sellar, a Canadian farmer and his son are at odds on how to cope with a powerful agribusiness promoting its genetically modified wheat. And finally, a resentful submarine pilot is ordered to an undersea research facility to assist with the mining survey of a formerly protected seabed in "Cyclopterus," by Peter Watts.

The Brutal Blade of Bruno the Bandit Vol. 3

release date: Jun 11, 2012
The Brutal Blade of Bruno the Bandit Vol. 3
The third time''s the charm! Or so hopes our hero, Bruno the Bandit, in this issue, as he turns on the charm in an attempt to win the lovely Lydia away from the wizard Maledict. Meanwhile, the demonic Numth''kul sees his troubles increase a thousandfold, and we learn that Elder Gods need love too! Plus, we''re not sure if it serves a purpose clear when Fiona serves up some "Free Will"! All this and much more, including the Charles Schulz memorial story, "When a God Retires" and several new pages of Bruno pinups from Ian McDonald. Presenting nine more stories from the archives of Bruno the Bandit (www.brunothebandit.com), this third swing of the Brutal Blade of Bruno the Bandit continues the tradition of turning some of the best comics on the web into some of the funniest comics in self-publishing.

The 2020 Look at Space Opera Book

release date: Oct 01, 2020
The 2020 Look at Space Opera Book
This collection highlights 20 stellar space operas published over the past 20 years by top-notch authors of the science fiction genre. A soldier fights for survival behind enemy lines, on an alien vessel, thousands of light-years from Earth in "On the Orion Line," by Stephen Baxter. A man aboard a ship in deep space wakes up from biostasis at the wrong time in "The Days Between," by Allen M. Steele. An astronaut in a damaged balloon struggles to survive 800 meters above the surface of a sea on Titan in "Slow Life" by Michael Swanwick. Two rival space-faring cultures vie for influence over the people of a forgotten human world in "The Third Party," by David Moles. One thousand people, aboard five generation starships, leave the Sol system to flee an enemy that threatens to destroy their way of life in "Mayflower II," by Stephen Baxter. Modified combat troops must deal with recalcitrant settlers on a planet being attacked by hostile aliens in "Bright Red Star," by Bud Sparhawk. Programmed military doppelgängers continue to carry out their missions long after the Quiet War''s end in "Dead Men Walking," by Paul McAuley. Mathematicians seek to learn more from a civilization, on another planet, that spent three million years doing math in "Glory," by Greg Egan. Human diplomats must deal their own cultural biases while dealing with two representatives from warring factions on a newly discovered planet in "Saving Tiamaat," by Gwyneth Jones. Space pirates haul in booty aboard a living spaceship that doesn''t quite smell right in "Boojum," by Elizabeth Bear & Sarah Monette. The constable in a settlement on a planet full of the tombs of a long-vanished alien race befriends a woman who researches dangerous hive rats in "City of the Dead," by Paul McAuley. A dying young man on a treasure hunt tries to save a world that''s devoid of gravity and lit by artificial suns in "The Hero," by Karl Schroeder. An eternal, aboard a slower than light ship, is woken to investigate an unexplained signal emanating from the area of the ship''s next stargate construction site in "The Island," by Peter Watts. An alienated teenager, in a domed iron city on a planet where a fundamentalist revolt is brewing, seeks to uncover her enigmatic tutor''s long-held secret in "The Ice Owl," by Carolyn Ives Gilman. A woman recalls a childhood train journey, on a planet with a permanent dayside and a nightside of eternal darkness, to see a captured specimen of the Nightmare race in "Weep for Day," by Indrapramit Das. Peculiar mating rituals and divergent evolution have developed on a lost colony that has been out of contact with the rest of humanity in "Someday," by James Patrick Kelly. An aristocrat''s trip to Venus, in search of her disgraced brother, is memorialized by papercuts of flora native to the planet in "Botanica Veneris: Thirteen Papercuts by Ida Countess Rathagan," by Ian McDonald. An enemy of the revolution, on a colonized planet, uploads a digital copy of himself into the body of a braindead boy in an attempt to escape off-world in "Jonas and the Fox" by Rich Larson. Set in the author''s Machineries of Empire universe, an undercover agent infiltrates a space station to recover the crew of a lost ship in "Extracurricular Activities," by Yoon Ha Lee. And finally, the captain of a dustship musters her crew to escape from a trap set by Hunter-Killers in a game of cat and mouse amid the rings of a giant planet in "By the Warmth of Their Calculus," by Tobias S. Buckell.

Assembly Lines

release date: Sep 01, 2003

Urban Municipal Finance in a Period of Expansion

release date: Sep 09, 2021
Urban Municipal Finance in a Period of Expansion
This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work is in the public domain in the United States of America, and possibly other nations. Within the United States, you may freely copy and distribute this work, as no entity (individual or corporate) has a copyright on the body of the work. Scholars believe, and we concur, that this work is important enough to be preserved, reproduced, and made generally available to the public. To ensure a quality reading experience, this work has been proofread and republished using a format that seamlessly blends the original graphical elements with text in an easy-to-read typeface. We appreciate your support of the preservation process, and thank you for being an important part of keeping this knowledge alive and relevant.

Crisis in Contemporary Medicine and the Rise of the Reflective Physician

release date: Jan 01, 2016
Crisis in Contemporary Medicine and the Rise of the Reflective Physician
This book is an account of criticism and controversy surrounding modern medicine. Chapter One provides an overview of the contents. Chapter Four explains the contribution of the concept of paradigm'' to the analysis provided. The argument is that, for all its fine accomplishments in medicine, the science has also damaged the art. This view is an echo of views expressed by eminent physicians early in the last Century, including William Osler and Francis Peabody. Concrete evidence of an ailing doctor-patient relationship is manifest in the form of some serious clinical problems. These include patient dissatisfaction, failure to take prescribed medication, failure of a doctor''s reassurance of normality to allay anxiety, resort to alternative medicine, use of patient advocates and defection'' to alternative medicine. These we see as, not only damaging to treatment and health outcome, and very expensive, but indicators of a basic lack of trust. To compound the problem, the clinical process is essentially hermeneutic; an interpretive exercise. Hence it cannot be studied without interview and qualitative data analysis. Such methods are also indispensable for the understanding of the doctor''s management decisions, particularly the social context. The science of medicine is well served by biomedical research and education which has recently been reinforced by the rise of clinical epidemiology and evidence-based medicine. Of great concern is that the skills of sociology and the humanities have been spurned, even denigrated as journalistic'' or unscientific''. Not only has this prevented physicians from fully understanding the patient''s medical views and social predicament, but has robbed us of the humanistic'' research methods needed to research the problems. These problems cannot be explained simply as side-effects of the impact of science. Rather there are much deeper currents. In Thomas Kuhn''s terms, medicine shifted paradigm from superstition to rationality in Ancient Greece, and again to scientific modern medicine at the time of the French Revolution. Medicine, it seems, is on the cusp of a further paradigm shift to a postmodern paradigm. The goal is that this brings the necessary balance between the already revitalised science and the ancient art of medicine. To achieve this, the establishment of centres for the study of clinical practice'' to train reflective physicians'', who will lead clinical practice research'', with multidisciplinary studies of the process of clinical care is needed. This will mean applying research methods of empirical science, clinical epidemiology, biostatistics and evidence-based medicine, already in progress and, in cooperation with relevant academics hosted by the centre, interview techniques involving qualitative analysis or any other appropriate methods. An important function is to act as a catalyst to inject social science and humanities into the current modern medical curriculum.

Kirinya Chaga II

release date: Jan 01, 1998

Thrown Out. [By] Ian "Chucker" Meckiff as Told to Ian McDonald. [With Plates, Including Portraits.].

Athens, Megara and the 'hiera Orgas'

release date: Jan 01, 1994

Tendeleo's Story (300 Hardcovers)

release date: Dec 01, 2000

Papers

Papers
Notes, newscuttings and photographs relating to the National Eucharistic Congress, Sydney, 12-19 April 1953; compiled by D. I. McDonald. The congress commemorated the 150th anniversary of Governor King''s proclamation, giving permission to celebrate Mass in Sydney, the 25th anniversary of the establishment of the Australian Holy Name Society as a Diocesan Unit and the 25th anniversary of the International Eucharistic Congress, held in Sydney, 1928.

Forest Fragmentation and Forest Response in the North Carolina Piedmont

release date: Jan 01, 2004

Hunger in the Soul

release date: Jan 01, 2005

Churches and Copyright

release date: Jan 01, 1995

Raglan Homestead

release date: Jan 01, 2009

James Barnet - New South Wales Colonial Architect (1865-1890)

For Your Eyes Only

release date: Jan 01, 2007

Chilled Sea Water Systems for the Preservation of Fish

Identification and Characterisation of Key Mediators and Receptors in Chronic Pruritus and the Comparison of These Mediators in Different Pruritic Dermatoses

release date: Jan 01, 2016

Technology, Contracts & Paracopyright

release date: Jan 01, 2007
Technology, Contracts & Paracopyright
Explores policy issues relating to copyright owners'' use of technological measures and contractual provisions to control access to, and use of, copyright content.
81 - 120 of 171 results
<< >>


  • Aboutread.com makes it one-click away to discover great books from local library by linking books/movies to your library catalog search.

  • Copyright © 2024 Aboutread.com