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      • Altair 4 Multimedia

        ALTAIR 4 Multimedia was established in 1986 byAlessandro Furlan, Pietro Galifi and Stefano Moretti, who conceived the studio as an actual workshop where various technological and artistic disciplines would interact in a coordinated and rewarding dialogue.The members of the Altair4 creative team come from diverse backgrounds and experience in computer animation, graphic arts, design and broadcast production.The ongoing dialogue between past and present characterizes all Altair4 productions and its innovative and multi-faceted approach to creating computer products where advanced technological tools and artistic and cultural processes are joined.

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      • Sagas

        Rain

        by Leigh K Cunningham

        Set in provincial Australia in the early sixties, Rain is a multigenerational family saga that chronicles the lives of three generations of the Wallin sawmilling dynasty. It explores the often difficult but enduring ties between mothers and daughters, men and women: the sacrifices, compromises, and patterns of emotion that repeat themselves through generations.  By turn dark and amusing, Rain delivers an emotionally charged revelation about love, loss, guilt, self-discovery and redemption. The enduring question of family bonds—escapable or not, divides, conquers, and triumphs.

      • October 2022

        Pssst

        by Vesna Corovic Butric

        A girl older than a girl. What is that? What does the bathroom mirror say? In this heartwarming novel, a little girl is on her way to becoming a young woman. The girl lives in a multigenerational house, her parents get divorced, her grandmother is dying and she gets her first menstruation. These are life events of a young girl who comes out of the story stronger and with inner growth. During this transitional period, she encounters various life challenges, emotions and events that accompany her. The author vividly describes how play becomes worry and how the sun rises again after winter. This is a story about children's love, growing up, family, happiness and important human role models in life. Age recommendation: 9-15 years and for adults.

      • Health & Personal Development
        June 2022

        Decoding Your Emotional Blueprint

        A Powerful Guide to Transformation Through Disentangling Multigenerational Patterns

        by Judy Wilkins-Smith

        Break free from the patterns that hold you back and achieve new heights of success with a groundbreaking approach to constellations work. Transformational and systemic coach Judy Wilkins-Smith says, “While everyone knows that we inherit our physical DNA from our ancestors, few people realize that we also inherit multiple generations of patterns of decisions, thoughts, feelings, actions, and mindsets—an ‘emotional blueprint’ that is deeply unconscious, yet faithfully repeated.” According to Wilkins-Smith, one of the most effective ways to shift these unconscious, inherited patterns is by working with systems dynamics and constellations. Here she makes the profound implications of these models immediately accessible to anyone searching for personal healing and transformation. Drawing from neuroscience, epigenetics, genealogy, and quantum physics, Wilkins- Smith shares a variety of strategies and practices that will help you detect hidden and multigenerational patterns, recognize their purpose, and then break the cycles, to create an extraordinary life.

      • September 2021

        Pops

        by Gavin Bishop

        Pops is a warm and comforting board book about a visit to grandad. The bond between grandfather and child is shown through powerful images and simple text. The child and their pops explore the day— a small hand in a big one, they go for a walk, collect food from the garden to make a sandwich, tell stories, then settle down for a nap. Pops is a starting point for conversation—the simplicity of the images and text lets readers build their own stories about their  visit to a loved member of the family.

      • Fiction
        February 2018

        Eye of the Moon

        by Ivan Obolensky

        Built upon the fabric of the author’s background as a member of the 1%, yet woven from whole cloth, Eye of the Moon is an enchanting web of multigenerational intrigue, secret love affairs, sumptuous black- and white-tie dinner parties, potential murders, Egyptian occultism, vicious curses, unexpected magic, and secrets that break, or reshape, lives. It is peopled by characters like Russian dolls, with shocking elements revealed in layers over the five-day house party in Rhinebeck. Though the opening chapters are perhaps benign, readers and reviewers alike rave that they become ensnared in the story and can’t put the novel down, even if it means they burn their dinner or stay up to 4 am. Percy, the narrator, begins as someone raised on the fringes of the elite, quasi-abandoned by his traveling parents. He is abruptly reunited with his pseudo-brother and pulled into his hijinks. They stumble upon the dark story of Johnny's Aunt Alice, the legendary socialite who had died mysteriously twenty years earlier. Her letters and journals bring a more sinister world to the light and the two men dive headlong into the shadows. This inadvertently involves everyone at the estate, including the butler, Stanley, who was the only confidante of Alice with hidden knowledge of what happened behind closed doors before her death. She still lives in the places lit with magic, her narrative woven tightly with Percy’s. What will be the cost of revealing the truth? Where does Percy ultimately belong?

      • Fiction

        Before The Fall: A Novel (An Irish Trilogy Book 2)

        by Orna Ross

        A historical murder mystery of love and revenge against the background of intimate war.   It's August in the long, hot summer of 1995 and Jo Devereux can't believe that she still hasn't returned home to San Francisco, though the time for her to have her baby draws near. Why is she staying on in Ireland, in this crumbling shed at  the edge of the ocean?   Jo has spent months writing about her great-uncle death at the hands of Dan O'Donovan -- but now she is brought to consider just who led Dan to his grisly murder, by suffocation in Mucknamore's notorious sinking sands.   Was her beloved Granny Peg really capable of luring him out there in revenge for the killing of her brother?   Or perhaps for more intimate reasons? Or was her grandmother, as Jo would like to believe, innocent of all?   Combing family letters and diaries for what has gone unsaid, Jo is unprepared for her reaction, as Civil War reaches its peak and she comes to realise the price she, and her people, had to pay for freedom.   But what does it mean for her relationship with Rory, Dan’s great-nephew, as he draws ever closer? Will her mission to redeem the past turn out to be the key to her future?   Or is she about to lose out, all over again?   BEFORE THE FALL (sequel to AFTER THE RISING) is a sweeping, multigenerational tale set in 1920s and 1990s Ireland and 1980s San Francisco. The second book in Orna's Ross's Irish trilogy, this acclaimed, bestselling novel has now been reissued by the author.

      • November 2022

        Cocoa Magic

        by Sandra Bradley, illustrated Gabrielle Grimard

        Daniel cherishes the time he spends with Great-Uncle in his chocolate shop as they mix, temper, pour, and mold chocoloate delights ccreating "magic, my boy", says Uncle Lewis. When a new girl joins his class Daniel decides to hide chocolates in her desk to ease her arrival and bring a smile. Soon he is hiding chocolates in the desks of other classmates with troubles. But when Daniel is the one feeling sad and alone, who will know to comfort him? Rich and nostalgic illustrations pair with text that celebrates the wonders that happen in bringing kindness to others, and the universal need to be seen and understood.

      • Personal & social issues
        March 2022

        My Dad, My Rock

        by Victor Dias de Oliveira Santos, Anna Forlati

        ⭑ A Kirkus Reviews Best Indie Book of July 2022   A MOVING, KIRKUS-STARRED-REVIEW CHILDREN'S BOOK ABOUT THE BEAUTIFUL RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN A FATHER AND SON AND ABOUT THE POWER OF LOVE.   Summary: Oliver never met his grandpa. He wonders what he would tell Grandpa if the two of them could meet, even once. Oliver decides that he would tell him about an amazing man that Grandpa never met: Oliver's dad, Grandpa's own son. In this touching and heartfelt story, you will be taken on a journey of what it means to be a dad and to be the master of your own destiny.

      • Education
        April 2020

        Leading Healthy and Thriving Schools in Hong Kong

        Theory and Practice

        by Robin M. B. Cheung with Amelia S. C. Lo, Vera M. W. Keung and Amy C. M. Kwong

        The academic setting has a significant influence on the well-being of children and teens. Effective school leadership is, therefore, essential in promoting a healthy school environment. This book, the first of its kind in Hong Kong, establishes the kind of leadership a health-promoting school needs to be successful. It explains the steps school leaders should take to promote health, beginning with an explanation of the link between health and education and then moving into a discussion of how schools can be transformed and what sort of leaders are required for such a transformation. These changes can be applied in individual classrooms and schools as well as more broadly across whole education systems. The theoretical healthy school framework outlined in the main text by Dr Robin Cheung, a seasoned scholar-practitioner in the field of school health promotion, is complemented by success stories written from interviews conducted by Dr Cheung’s co-authors, which are included in the supplemental material of the book. These anecdotes and quotes from these stories enliven the text and narrate how principals in Hong Kong have transformed their schools into successful and thriving health-promoting educational settings. This volume draws particular attention to the role of leadership and management in promoting health and learning in educational and academic settings that will be of interest to school leaders, policy makers, and educators alike. Leading Healthy and Thriving Schools in Hong Kong: Theory and Practice is the first book in the Healthy Settings Series, which focuses on the upstream, midstream, and downstream approaches for improving population health and reducing health inequity in various settings and contexts.

      • July 2013

        Parabolas of Science Fiction

        by Edited by Brian Attebery, edited by Veronica Hollinger

        Essays about the inherently collaborative nature of science fiction

      • March 2022

        Searching for Sweetness

        Women’s Mobile Lives in China and Lesotho

        by Sarah Hanisch

        Traversing from the rapidly urbanising county-level city of Fuqing to the remote mountainous kingdom of Lesotho in Southern Africa, Searching for Sweetness is one of the first and most extensive ethnographies linking rural-to-urban migration in China with Chinese migration to Africa. Against the backdrop of China’s national struggle for modernity and globalisation, Sarah Hanisch examines Chinese migrant women’s complex and ever-shifting struggles for upward social mobility across different generations and localities in China and Lesotho. Embedding the women’s individual portraits into larger historical contexts, Hanisch illustrates how these women interpret and narrate their migratory and everyday experiences through and beyond powerful state metanarratives on ‘sweetness’ and ‘bitterness’. In her exploration of migratory identities and projects that have been overlooked by previous studies, Hanisch brings uniquely gendered, multi-sited, and intergenerational perspectives to existing scholarship on Chinese internal and international migration.

      • June 2010

        Connecticut Needlework

        Women, Art, and Family, 1740–1840

        by Susan P. Schoelwer, other Kate Steinway

        Masterworks from the extraordinary needlework collections of the Connecticut Historical Society

      • November 2011

        With Needle and Brush

        Schoolgirl Embroidery from the Connecticut River Valley, 1740–1840

        by Carol Huber, Stephen Huber, Susan P. Schoelwer

        First book to explore schoolgirl needlework of the Connecticut River Valley

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