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Great stuff!
Excellent time-travel/alternate-universe short stories.

Cry Wild by R.D. Lawrence
A wonderful look into the life of a timber wolf.

read it!
An excellent resource

Excellent yet concise overview of almost all psychotropics .
Excellent book for psychiatric meds

A Good Place to StartDescriptions of each culture, along with major archaeological sites representing each, as well as respectable interpretations of major archaeological findings blend to form an indispensible resource for any student of prehistoric North America. I wish I had found this book years ago.
So interesting...

An erudite and meticulously reasoned account
A highly illuminating study

Excellence is a Function of Cooper et al.
great DEA models and advances

The flip side of the Doctor Who universeBernice, battered from recent adventures, does not appear in this book. Rather, the story focuses on ex-Seventh Doctor companion Chris Cwej. Only he isn't quite the man he used to be.
An agent for a nameless, time-travelling race, he believes he used to travel with an "Evil Renegade" who manipulated and tortured him and killed his colleague Roz.
In London in the 1970s, he meets a young woman called Christine Summerfield, who narrates the novel in the form of a diary. Only it's not the London of the "Doctor Who" universe, where the solar system has fourteen planets and the fifth is locked in a time loop. This is our rather more ordinary Earth, recovering from the Summer of Love, entering the hangover period induced by the 1960s.
Cwej is cagey about his mission, which somehow involves Christine, and shows a cynical, manipulative side which signifies the end of the naive character we know and love. The apocalypse the book promises is a fitting closing chapter in the life of the younger Chris.
Dead Romance ranks among my favourite New Adventures (including the old Doctor Who books), with the guts to take an established universe: Time Lords, Daleks, The People, The Doctor and get under their skin, re-writing them where necessary, showing them from an outsider's point of view.
The Eighth Doctor might be in the middle of all the action, but it's these very real characters who experience and suffer the consequences and side-effects of what he does.
Brilliantly written and eminently re-readable.
Stars in their eyes...

Wonderful history of American politics in 1880's and 1890's
The best book on American populism

A solace of farming and love in the middle of moral decayMitsuo Wada, a young farmer in Japan's countryside, chooses to do the latter as he struggles to keep his tomato-plantation hothouse afloat, and as his philandering father, greedy brother and bitchy tenement housewife neighbors seem to only look for themselves, Ayako, his life's love whom he had to meet at a marriage arrangement, provides him the spiritual help needed to withstand all the selfishness around him and find satisfaction and pride in his farm work.
Mitsuo on his own gives us a gritty outlook at a farmer with a strong will who wants his family and friends to do things for the good of all. He and Ayako together give us very sexy scenes as well. A very good translation who gives us a proposal for finding solace in the middle of the worldly environment we live in.
Distant Thunder by Wahei Tatematsu
Now, this said, it maybe explains why my most favorite theme is time-travel/parallel universes.
Too bad it's one of those less written-about sub-genres in science-fiction.
Anyhow, I think it was almost 10 years ago (I think I was about 16) when I picked an issue of "Amazing Stories", and fell in love with a certain short story there. It was called "The Drifter", written by Lawrence Watt-Evans; A beautiful, parallel-universe short story. It was the best short sci-fi story I ever read. (Again, I never read those "heavy" Asimov stories and the likes..). I liked it a lot, put the magazine away someplace, and didn't give it much thought for a few years.
A few months ago, I found the magazine and read the story. And it rekindled my love for it. But now - I've got Amazon. I logged in and searched for Lawrence Watt-Evans items.
And among various novels he's written, I've found this book - a collection of short stories. One of which is the Drifter!!! Wow... Moreover, there are a couple of stories here that actually won the Hugo award!
I had to have this book!
I got it, I read it, and I enjoyed. All the stories were just right for my love of "soft core" science-fiction and fantasy. Twenty of them.
I enjoyed most of the stories very much. There were a couple of very bad stories as well (Luckily they were very short), that the author himself describe as his early, premature, work.
In short, I can recommend this book. If you want to remember the stories that got you hooked on it as a kid. If you love short, science fiction and fantasy stories, dealing with different aspects not always touched by other writers, time-travel, parallel-worlds, and other cool stuff - buy this book!