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Pages in category "Lists of reference books" The following 11 pages are in this category, out of 11 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B.
Uprisings: An Illustrated Guide to Popular Rebellion. PM Press. December 2020. ISBN 9781629638256. Written with Nika Dubrovsky. [2] Pirate Enlightenment, or the Real Libertalia. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. January 2023. ISBN 9780374610203. [3] A David Graeber Reader. PM Press. Coedited by Romy Ruukel. [4] Whose Creative Energy?
Guide to Reference, published in 2008 as the online successor to Guide to Reference Books, was a selective guide to the best print and online reference sources.An editorial team of reference librarians and subject experts selected and annotated some 16,000 entries, which were organized by subject.
Set decades after the Earth's population has been sterilised as a result of nuclear bomb tests conducted in Earth's orbit, the book shows a world emptying of humans, with only an ageing, childless population left. The story is mainly told through the eyes of Algernon "Algy" Timberlane (the titular Greybeard) and his wife, Martha. [1]
Items within a reference collection may include books, journals, manuscripts, samples, artifacts, and other primary and secondary sources of information. A reference collection may also include an assortment of damaged or manipulated items, fakes and forgeries, or items to be used for education and public outreach. [4]
By October 2005, fifty-nine volumes had been printed. Each unabridged volume is book size octodecimo, or 4 x 6-1/2 inches, printed in hardback, on high-quality paper, bound in real cloth, and contains a dust jacket.
Keep scrolling for the main differences that took place on Netflix's A Good Girl's Guide to Murder compared to the book series: The Depth of Pip's Investigation. Netflix.
The authors open the book by suggesting that current popular views on the progress of western civilization, as presented by Francis Fukuyama, Jared Diamond, Yuval Noah Harari, Charles C. Mann, Steven Pinker, and Ian Morris, are not supported by anthropological or archaeological evidence, but owe more to philosophical dogmas inherited unthinkingly from the Age of Enlightenment.