SF -Elven Star Margaret Weis Paperback

science fiction book
Get other Fantasy Science Fiction Books hereOn steamy Pryan never-ending sunlight and plentiful rain have created a jungle so vast that humans and elves dwell high in the trees and only dwarves live anywhere near the ground. From the treetops the aristocratic elves sell weapons to the other races whose incessant warfare sends a steady steam of profits and essential resources skyward. Now generations of dissent and race hatred will not heal — not even under the threat of annihilation at the hands of legendary Titans. Armed with little more than their wits and prophecy an elf a human and a dwarf must unite to try to save the world from destruction. CLICK HERE -Elven Star Margaret Weis Paperback at www.science-fiction-books.com.au

Collectable -The Waterhole – Graeme Base

Posted on 19th December 2010 by NZ News in news - Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

little golden books
The Waterhole – Graeme Base Author and Illustrator : Graeme Base Format : Paperback Condition : New Dimensions : 27cm x 29cm x 0.5cm About The Waterhole Down to the secret waterhole the animals all come As seasons bring forth drought and flood they gather there as one. United in their common need their numbers swell to ten But hidden deep amongst the trees lie ten times that again! The Waterhole is an ingenious fusion of counting book puzzle book storybook and art book – an exhilarating journey of discovery from the plains of Africa and the Jungles of the Amazon to the woodlands of North America and the deserts of outback Australia About Graeme Base Graeme Base is one of the world’s le more…..

Rare -The Lorax – Dr Seuss Book

Posted on 18th December 2010 by French News in news - Tags: , , , , , , , ,

little golden books
The Lorax “I speak for the trees.” The Lorax is the original eco-warrior and his message rings loud today. In this fable about the dangers of destroying our forests he tries to save the trees from the wicked Once-ler’s axe. The Dr Seuss blend of zany pictures and unique rhyme rhythm and repetition means that all ages will love this wonderful book. Author and Illustrator : Dr Seuss Format : Hardcover Condition : New Dimensions : 27cm x 20cm x 1.5cm Dr. Seuss: Issues/Opinions/Inspirations Like most works of merit the works of Dr. Seuss have been overanalyzed; many scholars have found devices where there are truly none to be found. For the most part Ted enjoyed writing entertaining bo more information…..

Envisage 365: Amanda 6/365

Posted on 8th September 2010 by NZ News in news - Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Hot cross buns, hot cross buns, one a-penny two a-penny hot cross buns. Email This BlogThis! Share to Twitter Share to Facebook Share to Google Buzz. 0 comments: Post a Comment · Newer Post Older Post Home

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Envisage 365: Amanda 6/365

Temeura Morrison haunted by Jake the Muss

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Fifteen years after bringing to life one of the most memorable characters of New Zealand film, Temuera Morrison says he is still haunted by the “demon” of Jake the Muss – and worries Jake’s anger and torment will be with him for life.

In a memoir to be published tomorrow, Morrison, who lost his entertainer uncle Sir Howard on Thursday, touches on how the wife-beating Jake character from 1994′s Once Were Warriors took him to a dark place from which he has not fully emerged.

“There’s a lot of torment left in there.

“I had to work hardest on Jake’s anger, and now I think it’s probably with me for life,” says Morrison in From Haka to Hollywood, ghost- ritten by journalist Paul Little. Maybe I need to go through some spiritual cleansing process to get rid of that guy. When you go to these dark places inside you, for some reason things linger on. “Uncle Howard gave us so much, we’re going to miss him very much.”

Morrison told the Sunday Star-Times a dark cloud had come over his family with the death of Sir Howard.

In 1999, Morrison chased a group of teenagers who had set fire to a real estate sign outside his house on Auckland’s North Shore.”

He said the anger he unleashed to create Jake may have been responsible for two high-profile incidents, including his bashing of a teenager and an argument with his former partner, to which police were called. It turned out the boy was not even involved in the arson.

He grabbed a 17-year-old boy by the shirt, punched him twice in the face, dragged him by the hair down a drive and bashed his head against a fencepost. Morrison said of the incident: “I think he [Jake] might have popped out there for a brief moment.

Morrison was not convicted for the assault, instead being dealt with under the police diversion scheme.”

In December 2007, concerned neighbours called police to a domestic dispute between Morrison and then partner Peata Melbourne. Poor kid, it’s a regret.

Morrison said of that incident: “Jake had to quickly run out of the house and disappear and hide in the trees and cool down a bit. She later told a women’s magazine how frightened she felt as the argument spiralled out of control. “Show me the man who’s very calm in those situations.”

He had only just returned from making a film in Bulgaria and was going through a stressful separation from Melbourne. “I created that character, it comes from me really.”

Morrison said filming Warriors was an emotional rollercoaster. . I created this demon of this character, all that kind of stuff I had to draw on. Sometimes I can twitch into an aggressive mode, just like that. Sometimes I can twitch into an aggressive mode, just like that. It’s not there every day, just every now and again.”

WEATHER: France and Spain start to repair vast storm damage

Posted on 25th January 2009 by NZ News in france,nz - Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

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AFP – French and Spanish rescuers battled Sunday to reopen roads and railways, douse forest fires and restore power to close toly a million homes left in the dark by hurricane-force winds that killed 19 people.

The priority today is to re-establish the electricity as quickly as possible, said French President Nicolas Sarkozy as he visited a town in the southwestern region that bore the brunt of Saturday’s storm.

Most of the deaths were in Spain, where four children died close to Barcelona when the roof and a wall of a sports hall were brought down on their heads by winds that in some places reached more than 180 kilometres (110 miles) an hour.

Witnesses said they heard a loud sound, then saw that the roof and part of a wall had crumpled.

They were playing baseball outside the centre in Sant Boi de Llobregat as the storm — which saw 20-metre (70-foot) high waves battering the Atlantic coast — gathered force and they ran inside to shelter.

The storm was one of the fiercest to hit western Europe in a decade.

The entire population is shocked by this tragedy, Jaume Bosch, the mayor of the town, said on the municipal website, while one parent whose son narrowly escaped the collapse described the scene at the gym as horrific.

It blew in eastwards from the Atlantic Ocean, barrelling across southwest France and northern Spain — ipping roofs off houses, pulling down power lines and flattening hundreds of thousands of trees.

The winds had lost some of their force but were strong enough to destroy a restaurant in Imperia on the Mediterranean coast and to force some Italian ferry operators to cancel their sailings. . A 73-year-old women died in the Gironde department when power cuts halted her breathing machine.

Two drivers were killed by falling trees Saturday in the Landes department of France, while a 78-year-old was killed by flying debris outside his home. An elderly couple died Sunday from inhaling carbon monoxide from an electricity generator they had set up in a badly ventilated room, health officials said.

A further two deaths were the indirect result of the storm.

Besides the victims in the sports hall, eight other deaths were reported in various locations across Spain.

Besides the victims in the sports hall, eight other deaths were reported in various locations across Spain.

Sarkozy said the French response to the storm had been better than back in 1999 when a tempest killed dozens and uprooted millions of trees.

Hundreds of Spanish firefighters — backed up by 14 planes and helicopters — were Sunday battling three separate forest fires sparked by electricity pylons brought down by the tempest.

Sarkozy said he had asked the army to help the operation to bring services back to normal.

There was much more resourcefulness, fewer victims, more efficiency, said the president, who brought with him to the region several government ministers as well as the heads of the EDF power company and the SNCF state rail operator.

Technicians flown in from Germany, Britain and Portugal were also working in the operation, ERDF said.

A dozen helicopters flew over the storm-struck zone in France to locate damaged power lines and direct a thousand workers deployed from electricity grid operator ERDF’s rapid intervention team to restore power to the 800,000 homes still in the dark at nightfall on Sunday.

Many rail routes were still cut on Sunday but the main Bordeaux-Paris line was running again.

Hundreds of generators were being delivered to old people’s homes and other priority sites to tide them over until power returned after the storm.

Much of the Gironde and Landes regions have key forestry industries but huge areas were flattened by the storm, officials said, adding that more than half of the trees in the area appeared to have fallen. The SNCF said it had around 1,000 workers removing trees from rail lines and repairing overhead cables.

Phone operator France Telecom said its technicicans were trying to restore service to its 350,000 fixed line and mobile clients cut off by the storm.

Phone operator France Telecom said its technicicans were trying to restore service to its 350,000 fixed line and mobile clients cut off by the storm.

Flights were halted throughout the storm region and ski resorts in the Pyrenees were closed due to the risk of avalanches.

The strong winds were also felt across the Mediterranean, with two people killed in the eastern Algerian town of Setif when the wall of a house collapsed, civil protection forces said.

Bordeaux – France – weather