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Robert Graham

    Heaven and Hell
    We Do Not Fear Anarchy - We Invoke It
    Syngress Force Emerging Threat Analysis
    The Road to Somewhere
    A Photographer on the Hajj
    Anarchism Volume Three - A Documentary History of Libertarian Ideas, Volume Three - The New Anarchism
    • A Photographer on the Hajj

      • 144 pages
      • 6 hours of reading

      The diaries of Mohammed Ali Effendi Sa'oudi, a civil servant and accomplished photographer, offer a rare glimpse of the Hajj through Egyptian eyes at the beginning of the twentieth century. The authors have compressed the diaries into a highly readable narrative with selected quotations, illustrated with Sa'oudi's photographs.

      A Photographer on the Hajj
    • The Road to Somewhere

      • 324 pages
      • 12 hours of reading

      An inspiring, stimulating new edition of this writer's companion and practical guide to the craft of fiction, scriptwriting, poetry and more experimental forms of writing. Updated and revised throughout, the text now contains new chapters on writing for digital media, flash fiction, memoir, and taking your writing out into the world.

      The Road to Somewhere
    • An anthology that helps you protect your enterprise from IT security threats. It provides coverage of forensic detection and removal of spyware, the transformation of spyware, global IRC security, and more. It covers secure enterprise-wide deployment of technologies including Voice Over IP, Pocket PCs, smart phones, and more.

      Syngress Force Emerging Threat Analysis
    • From 1864 to 1876, socialists, communists, trade unionists, and anarchists synthesized a growing body of anticapitalist thought through participation in the First International--a body devoted to uniting left-wing radical tendencies of the time. Often remembered for the historic fights between Karl Marx and Michael Bakunin, the debates and experimentation during the International helped to refine and focus anarchist ideas into a doctrine of international working class self-liberation

      We Do Not Fear Anarchy - We Invoke It
    • Heaven and Hell

      • 120 pages
      • 5 hours of reading

      The story follows Jonathan Smith, an 18-year-old mechanic from London, who is murdered one night. In Heaven, he reunites with his deceased father, James, an angel, and discovers his own half-angel heritage. As Jonathan learns about his divine lineage, he is faced with a monumental destiny: to lead the angels in their battle against demons. The narrative explores themes of family, destiny, and the struggle between good and evil in a supernatural context.

      Heaven and Hell
    • Managerial Economics For Dummies

      • 365 pages
      • 13 hours of reading
      3.8(11)Add rating

      Helps you make sense of complex business concepts and explains to you in plain English how Managerial Economics enhances analytical skills, assists in rational configuration, and aids in problem-solving.

      Managerial Economics For Dummies
    • I was born on November 21, 1935 in the city of Toronto. In 1942, I attended King's College in Windsor, Nova Scotia, and at the end of the war, I returned to my birth city until the start of the Korean War, when my father rejoined the service. In the 1950s, I also joined the Navy, like my father, and also sailed "deep sea" in the merchant service. In the 1960s, I became a tax assessor and for several years worked as an income tax consultant. At the age of thirty-five, I started teaching at Loyalist College and retired in the late 1990s. My avocation has always included reading and athletics, but at forty-four, I upped the ante and became a long-distance runner. I ran my last race at seventy-six, and in between, I completed sixty-seven full marathons and many others of a lesser distance. I was subconsciously driven in the closing chapter of my life to examine, if I could, what my time here was all about. So I started writing poems and later stories. I'm the oldest member of the family, and as the name Graham is Scottish, I go by "the Chieftain." At the naval college I attended, I was Chief Cadet Captain or First Captain on two occasions--not matched by anyone since, to my knowledge.

      The Chieftain: Personal Memoirs in Poetry & Prose