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"Going postal. We hear the chilling phrase and think of the rogue employee who snaps. But Blood, Sweat, and Fear shows that on-the-job bloodshed never occurs in isolation. Using violence as a lens, Jeremy Milloy provides fresh insights into the everyday workings of capitalism, class conflict, race, and gender in the United States and Canada. The result is a study that reveals the workplace as a battleground--one that saw a late-century paradigm shift from the collective violence of strikes and riots to the individualized violence of assaults and shootings. Explosive and original, Blood, Sweat, and Fear brings historical perspective to contemporary debates about North American workplace violence."--Back cover
This is the story of the authors climb from a US Marine to overseas police contractor with the United Nations and finally as an undercover narcotics agent in the desert cities of southeast New Mexico and West Texas.
Heralded internationally as "Canada's Sherlock Holmes," John Vance was an innovative and groundbreaking forensic investigator. Over 42 years beginning in the 1930s, Vance helped police detectives in British Columbia to determine murder from suicide as well as solve hit-and-runs, safecrackings, and some of the most sensational murder cases of the twentieth century.
The year is 2010, the place Sangin, Afghanistan. The U.S. Marines from 3/7 have been tasked to go into the heart of darkness. This story tells the accounts from the front lines in one of the most dangerous places in the world. The birthplace of the Taliban, and home to the some of the world's most radical terrorists. This fast-paced memory is in-your-face, direct, and vulgar - but all true.The author was side by side the Marines in firefights and surviving IED blasts. Not as an observer, but as a Tactical Advisor. He was helping to hunt out and reduce the insurgent threat. From moments of sheer terror to the loss of Marines that fought bravely, this epic story recounts the first U.S. Marines to replace the British Forces that had been fighting for seven years in Sangin. Fighting for their lives minute by minute, the Marines of 3/7 made their place in Marine Corps history. Not only were the Marines deadly, they were determined to prevail. The author is a former Marine and a 24 year Law Enforcement veteran. His vast knowledge and experience was just another tool used by the Marines to hunt down the Taliban where they hid. The Marines depicted in the novel were real and earned individual awards like the Navy Cross, Silver Star and Bronze Star. Too many posthumous awards were earned as well. Learn about true bravery and doing what is right for your country. This is the untold story of the real Warfighters that hunted and killed the Taliban in their own front and backyard. See what the "Brotherhood of the Blade" is all about: Honor, Courage and Commitment. "3/7 No Shit, No Shit 3/7!"
"Blood, Sweat and Fears describes those medical practitioners and medical students connected to South Australia who served in the armed forces, at home or abroad, during what we now know as World War 1. They range from 18-66 years of age and from student to professor. Each is described in a one page biography; there are over 200 biographies. Some were to distinguish themselves in action with high military decorations and some were to distinguish themselves in their later medical careers. The Australian medical colleges in medicine, surgery, women's health, radiology and anaesthesia drew their early leaders from these South Australians." -- cover description.
Andy Till was the youngest of nine children and suffered years of physical and mental abuse at the hands of his parents. He started boxing at 11. This is Till's harrowing and inspiring story of his fight for more than a title.
An alluring mix of humor, bravery, cynicism, and compassion." --London Daily Telegraph It's the stuff of Grey's Anatomy, House, and ER--only these events aren't unfolding on a Hollywood soundstage. Have you ever wondered what's going on inside the ambulance screaming past you during your rush-hour commute? Since 2003, Tom Reynolds (writing under an alias so as not to get sacked from his job), has kept a blog where he chronicles the day-in, day-out realities of his life on the job as an EMT with the London Ambulance Service. By turns both poignant and profound, Reynolds's writing captures the very essence of life and death. From the mundane to the surreal, from the heartwarming to the cynical, from the calm to the frenetic, more than 300 entries from his popular blog at randomreality.blogware.com are included in the book. Dear Mr. Alcoholic: Would you mind awfully not swearing at me, taking a swing at me, or exposing yourself to me? I have quite enough abuse from the nondrunks out there. . . . Still, at least your fists are easy to dodge, and if I stop holding you up, you fall over. The author's hugely popular blog, Random Acts of Reality, has been named Medgadget Best Medical Blog and Best Literary Medical Blog.
This ambitious book investigates a major yet underexplored nexus of themes in Roman cultural history: the evolving tropes of enclosure, retreat and compressed space within an expanding, potentially borderless empire. In Roman writers' exploration of real and symbolic enclosures - caves, corners, villas, bathhouses, the 'prison' of the human body itself - we see the aesthetic, philosophical and political intersecting in fascinating ways, as the machine of empire is recast in tighter and tighter shapes. Victoria Rimell brings ideas and methods from literary theory, cultural studies and philosophy to bear on an extraordinary range of ancient texts rarely studied in juxtaposition, from Horace's Odes, Virgil's Aeneid and Ovid's Ibis, to Seneca's Letters, Statius' Achilleid and Tacitus' Annals. A series of epilogues puts these texts in conceptual dialogue with our own contemporary art world, and emphasizes the role Rome's imagination has played in the history of Western thinking about space, security and dwelling.
Twelve men pull off what should have been a perfect crime. In Montana they rob both the sellers and buyers of drugs and leave no witnesses. There is one glitch in the plan. One of the buyers turns out to be a DEA agent. Feds are all over the place, backing the men into a corner. To escape they go to the most isolated place in Wyoming, the small town of Heritage located in the Rocky Mountains. When the town's people learn who they are, the gang takes over the town raining havoc and violence. Only one man is in position to fight back but the odds are sorely against him.