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A volcanic eruption destroys Trini and Cho’s means of returning to Space City minutes after their arrival on a low-tech planet, leaving them unable to contact home for help. Maliek visits his alien crush in her homeworld, but the invitation is not what it seemed. Devika and Nico attempt to solve a trial rumored to reveal the location of a lost, ancient alien civilization. But what starts off as a series of interesting riddles lands them in a deadly environment. Arielle believes she’s set for an easy weekend on Sundara with Dirk to celebrate their first anniversary, only to encounter a familiar threat. Cade investigates a quarantined R&D facility, looking for answers to the death of a friend’s father, until someone shoots down his ship. Can these seven overcome the obstacles in their path before they become Contact Not Found?
Were you drafted during the Vietnam War? Did you have a father, or a son perhaps, who was called to duty? A brother, a lover, a relative, a best friend? You and millions of others shared the emotions, the tears, and the sorrow of those tumultuous, troubled, times. SAND HILL is a story whose emphasis is not specifically focused on Vietnam. Though many books have been, and will continue to be written about those who endured first-hand the horrors of that tragic conflict not all draftees witnessed actual combat. Not all draftees went to Vietnam. All draftees did however, share one common experience; eight weeks of basic training. Once drafted, no exemptions allowed. Your ethnic, economic, physical, marital, academic, or religious status meant nothing. It was the purest of melting pots. Unlike one who voluntarily joins the Army, a draftee must undergo the rigors of basic training with no guarantee of future vocational placement. A draftee’s destiny beyond basic training was determined on the basis of need. Your qualification as an engineer, a scientist, or a teacher did not matter if there was an infantry position to be filled. This issue weighed heavily in the minds of those who were drafted. It was during this period that the subject of, then the controversy of, and ultimately the protest of the draft evolved. SAND HILL is about those who were not controversial; those who did not protest. Amid the growing dissent of an unpopular war, they were ordered to put their personal lives on a two-year hold, and did so. Two years if you were lucky. Our country owes a debt of gratitude to those silent patriots who sacrificed their time and their lives as so many others have done throughout America’s history.
The first edition of this unique book established itself as an unparalleled source of information on perfume. Although it is primarily aimed at perfumers and others in the perfume industry, it has also found substantial sales among a wide range of others including aromatherapists, botanists, and many others who wanted to learn more about this faceted subject. The new edition is now aimed squarely at perfumery marketing specialists and others in the industry world-wide and covers in particular the needs of publicity/advertising teams and journalists, together with sales people and consultants at the counters who like to have a wide range of information at their fingertips. Changes include: an expansion of the number of profiles of the perfume houses, and of the 50 or so new perfumes worthy of record which have been launched since the previous edition. There is also increased coverage of the essences and the plants and other material from which they are derived. Coverage of perfume containers is substantially expanded and linked to other parts of the book.
'I've long wished perfumery to be taken seriously as an art, and for scent critics to be as fierce as opera critics, and for the wearers of certain "fragrances" to be hissed in public, while others are cheered. This year has brought Perfumes: The Guide by Luca Turin and Tania Sanchez, which I breathed in, rather than read, in one delighted gulp.' Hilary Mantel, Guardian Perfumes: The Guide is the culmination of Turin's lifelong obsession and rare scientific flair and Sanchez's stylish and devoted blogging about every scent that she's ever loved and loathed. Together they make a fine and utterly persuasive argument for the unrecognised craft of perfume-making. Perfume writing has certainly never been this honest, compelling or downright entertaining.
In 1948 I was posted, as a Political Officer, to a remote part of south-west Arabia on the edge of the great desert called the Empty Quarter. In valleys made fertile by seasonal flood-waters lay the remains of an ancient civilization. I found inscriptions and the ruin sites of towns, palaces and temples. Almost buried under the sand dunes were the tumbled walls of a great city. From here, two thousand years before, huge camel caravans had trudged their way along 1600 miles of burning sand and rocks to Petra and Gaza, burdened with a most precious cargo - frankincense, myrrh and other perfume materials for the courts, temples and perfume shops of Rome. My book Frankincense and Myrrh delved into the details of this romantic trade and led to a broader interest in the perfumes of ancient times. Then, researching on behalf of a perfume house into the Arab contribution to perfumery, I came across the collection of perfume recipes assembled by the Arab philosopher-scientist Yaqub al-Kindi, which have never been translated into English (some, which I have translated myself, are now included in an appendix to this book). I realized that in that work I had found key evidence to demonstrate how the medieval Arab perfume makers had been the bridge in perfume history between ancient and modern times. Perfumery could now be seen as an art with a continuous history of development since the dawn of civilization.
An intriguing look at vintage perfume's powerful past, including reviews of more than 300 scents, with stunning period advertisements throughout.