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Topic: Heartbeat (novel)


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In the News (Mon 16 Nov 09)

  
 Lifestyles Therapeutics
Since ozone has a well-known calming and analgesic effect, and is used as a treatment for arrhythmia, ozone therapy causing restoration of heartbeat regularity plays an important role in enhancing the immune system, along with stimulating production of interleukin-2 and gamma interferon.
Rein also found that it was possible to train people to control their heartbeat through biofeedback, and raise their level of immune function.
Ozone reduces or eliminates clumping and red cell flexibility is restored, along with oxygen carrying ability.
www.lifestylestherapeutics.com /TSOOzone.html

  
 Wendy Carlos, TH+H Notes
A novel touch is the use of a 'heartbeat' motive, both as a natural sounding heartbeat, similar to those in Clockwork Black, and as a rhythmic figure, that jumps to a raw jangle.
Admittedly, Tales of Heaven and Hell is not the sort of music you put on and actively listen to; its seems best suited to a low-level ambient playback, wherein its subversion qualities (hollow ringings, disembodied voices, unidentifiable vocalizations, etc.) can work their scary way into your awareness through the back door.
For younger listeners weaned on three-minute pop ditties, the intriguing Tales of Heaven and Hell will be challenging listening, but in the end there is much to discover from it.
www.wendycarlos.com /+thh.html

  
 Eric Stone
Mystery Books, Washington, D.C. In A Heartbeat is a wonderful, stunning novel."
Eric also coaches soccer, goes to PTA meetings, and plays ice hockey.
www.eclectics.com /ericstone   (346 words)

  
 Blank Space
In A Heartbeat, a novel by Elizabeth Adler, is one of the most intriguing books I have read lately.
In A Heartbeat is about a young woman named Melba Eloise Merrydew (aka Zelda), and her boyfriend Ed Vincent.
The book begins with Ed Vincent being shot, and in a coma in the hospital.
sdu.umd.edu /Webzine/archives/2003_4v1/heartbeat.html   (428 words)

  
 eBay - Book: Heartbeat (ISBN: 0440211891)
Heartbeat by Danielle Steel (1992)Free S&H! Heartbeat by Danielle Steel (1992)
But they couldn't help it.Danielle Steel touches the Heartbeat of two wonderful people as their friendship deepens into love, as they meet the obstacles that life presents with humor, humanity, and courage.
NBC-TV movies based on Steel's novels have proven to be the highest-rated entertainment shows in recent history, bringing her major national exposure.
product.ebay.com /Heartbeat_ISBN_0440211891_W0QQfvcsZ2178QQsoprZ140931   (552 words)

  
 Amazon.ca: Books: Bios.
The characters are mostly stock and are removed from the novel one by one in such a way as to give the impression that the book has no real plot.
Zoe Fisher is one of the best heroines to appear in a modern science fiction novel, overcoming many of the clichés of the genre and emerging as an intriguing mystery.
Robert Charles Wilson is the author of Science Fiction Chronicle 's Best SF Novel of 1998, the bestselling Darwinia, and is also an Aurora Award winner and Nebula and Hugo Award finalist.
www.amazon.ca /exec/obidos/ASIN/3453863607   (552 words)

  
 Heartbeat - Books - Contemporary - book sales
Kidder began experiencing an irregular heartbeat a couple weeks ago and has been undergoing tests since to determine the cause, including a catheterization early Thursday.
The wail of horns, the shudder of a keyboard, the insistent heartbeat of drums — and over it, the purr and buzz of voices.
In her 27th bestselling novel, Steel tells an unforgettable story of a man and woman meeting the surprising challenges of love in our time.
www.currentnewsonline.com /buy16/heartbeat_31424.htm   (308 words)

  
 Giving Mars Back its Heartbeat :: Astrobiology Magazine :: Search for Life in the Universe
Cyanobacteria are the culprits involved here; these are the organisms that caused the demise of the original inhabitants of this planet.
As it's turned out, over time organisms have been able to modify this planet, not only in the atmosphere itself, but also all the way down into the mantle.
In fact, we had bacteria that were not really happy when other organisms showed up and started breaking water (molecules), and making oxygen, and releasing it into the atmosphere.
www.astrobio.net /news/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=1017&mode=thread&order=0&thold=0   (1867 words)

  
 Teachers@Random Catalog Me, Mop, and the Moondance Kid by Walter Dean Myers
Myer’s recent work, 145th Street: Short Stories (A Boston Globe-Horn Book Honor Book) captures the heartbeat of one memorable block in Harlem, New York.
It is clear that Myers' understanding of both the world he was raised in and the world of his children allows him to bring an authority to his work that resonates with his young readers.
It was difficult for Myers' father to raise eight children alone, and eventually, a nearby couple, Herbert and Florence Dean, took in three-year old Walter and moved to Harlem, New York.
www.randomhouse.com /teachers/catalog/display.pperl?isbn=9780440403968   (821 words)

  
 Borders - Store Inventory - Title Detail - Norwegian Wood, Vintage International Ser.
Description: This stunning and elegiac novel by the author of the internationally acclaimed Wind-Up Bird Chronicle has sold over 4 million copies in Japan and is now available to American audiences for the first time.
Murakami captures the heartbeat of his generation and draws the reader in so completely you mourn when the story is done." --The Baltimore Sun
A poignant story of one college student's romantic coming-of-age, Norwegian Wood takes us to that distant place of a young man's first, hopeless, and heroic love.
www.bordersstores.com /search/search.jsp?srchType=ISBN&srchTerms=0375704027   (300 words)

  
 KEN FOREE
What a wonderful group of people, I would do it again in a heartbeat.
Two time Bram Stoker winning writer, Brian Keene takes the zombie mythos to a whole new level.
Gencon has some of the best Executives and Volunteers of any convention I've had the privilege of being assisotated with.
www.kenforee.us   (300 words)

  
 The Fortress of Solitude by Jonathan Lethem - read review
Overall, however, the novel is a huge and imaginative recreation of growing up in the city a generation ago, with Brooklyn itself providing the heartbeat for the characters.
Superman imagery fills this huge novel, as Dylan and Mingus grow up, and Mingus, in particular, begins to prove his neighborhood influence by leaving his mark in graffiti all over the neighborhood.
Superman, a DC Comics hero, is considered a "flattened reality," an ineffective presence living in his "Fortress of Solitude," much like Dylan's artist father living in his studio.
mostlyfiction.com /contemp/lethem.htm   (1292 words)

  
 Publications from the Research Resource for Complex Physiologic Signals
Sleep-wake differences in scaling behavior of the human heartbeat: analysis of terrestrial and long-term space flight data.
Linguistic analysis of the human heartbeat using frequency and rank order statistics.
Novel multiscale regulation in human motor activity, in fluctuations and noise.
www.physionet.org /publications/resource-pubs.shtml   (4165 words)

  
 progbibliography.de
Peter Currell Brown: Smallcreep's Day (A 1965 novel, described as a ‘surreal satire of automation', that inspired Mike Rutherford's first solo album.
Nobody, who goes about his daily tasks at the factory, ensnared in a nine to five routine, and a boring life style alleviated by dreams of love.) William Seward Burroughs: The Soft Machine A novel that gave it's name to one of the most important bands of the late sixties.
Carolyn Casady: Heartbeat Revisiting the Beat writers during the time of recording ‘Beat', Adrian Belew christened his song after Casady's memoirs of her times with Jack Kerouac and Neal Casady, published in 1976.
www.progbibliography.de   (4165 words)

  
 The Duck Speaks » Misery
What’s frustrating is that her criticism- that Paul’s first attempt at resurrecting Misery, by ignoring certain events of the previous novel is a cheat- isn’t stupid, that it’s in fact perfectly justified, and in the novel, Paul realizes it.
The jumpiness of the narrative bothers her, as does the swearing, but really, at the heart of things, what bothers her most is that it’s not Misery (the lead character of a series of romance/adventure novels by Sheldon) that he’s writing about.
To bring it back to my interminable opening digression, Misery is one of the only stories I’ve read or seen that manages to bring me back to that sickly awful feeling I’d get every time I walked in Aunt Cathy’s front door, the way I became overly conscious of my heartbeat- too fast?
www.badmovieplanet.com /duckspeaks/reviews/2005/misery   (5663 words)

  
 The List: Vote for your Best Scottish Book of all time
Gunn, a fisherman’s son from Dunbeath, had his finger on the heartbeat of Highland life and got into Zen Buddhism as he got older, an interest he expounds upon in his autobiography, The Atom of Delight (1956).
Finn, at the novel’s end, sprawls on the knoll at the House of Peace and imagines himself as a white-haired old man: ‘Life had come for him.’ This is a novel brimful of what Finn’s mother calls ‘the sweetness of life’.
Growing up, I knew Gunn was a founding figure in the Scottish Renaissance, but the only books of his I read as a boy were Butcher’s Broom (1934), all doom and gloom, and The Green Isle of the Great Deep (1944), which I remembered only for its title.
www.list.co.uk /bestbooks/b81.html   (5663 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Books: Reconsidering Riley
Riley Davis Jayne's ex doesn't know that he is the man who inspired her Heartbreak 101 novel and is even more surprised when he founds out Jayne is the author he takes it upon himself to help "get over the bozo" that made her write the book.
Reconsidering Riley by Lisa Plumley Is truly a opposites attract novel Jayne Murphy is your typical "girlie-girl" her whole wardrobe consist of her favorite color baby blue and she can not go anywhere without her bath products.
Jayne fell in love with Riley, but he did not miss a heartbeat as he skipped town without a look back.
www.amazon.com /exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0821773402?v=glance   (1252 words)

  
 The Afternoon of March 30 -- by Nathaniel Blumberg
Blumberg has written, in the form of a novel, a polemic on the present state of the press.
Journalism professor Nathaniel Blumberg was so disturbed about the investigation into the attempted assassination of President Reagan that he turned his suspicions into a 377-page novel.
, Blumberg blends fact and fiction in looking at the unreported "connections" between Hinckley's family and that of Vice President George Bush, the man who came within a heartbeat of the presidency of the United States.
www.nathanielblumberg.com /bush.htm   (2283 words)

  
 The Fortress of Solitude by Jonathan Lethem - read review
Overall, however, the novel is a huge and imaginative recreation of growing up in the city a generation ago, with Brooklyn itself providing the heartbeat for the characters.
The Fortress of Solitude by Jonathan Lethem - read review
Read a chapter excerpt from The Fortress of Solitude at MostlyFiction.com
mostlyfiction.com /contemp/lethem.htm   (2283 words)

  
 Alex Wheatle, author of 'Brixton Rock', 'East Of Acre Lane, 'The Seven Sisters'
The title East Of Acre Lane is another homage, this time to reggae legend Augustus Pablo's haunting melodica led masterpiece East Of The River Nile, to which Alex Wheatle listened incessantly while writing the novel.
All you had to do was walk towards the sound of the bass.' In Wheatle's early eighties Brixton, reggae music is the unifying heartbeat of a community, the sound of how it knows itself, no matter how fractured its individual lives.
Brixton has come under intense scrutiny of late.
www.reggaezine.co.uk /alexwheatle.html   (2283 words)

  
 interview.txt
INTERVIEW WITH THE VAMPIRE Adapted by Neil Jordan From the novel by Anne Rice INT.
The vampire theme rises, with the sound of a heartbeat.
I was drowning in a sea of human guilt and regret, with all the heightened senses of a vampire...
scifiscripts.com /scripts/interview.txt   (14314 words)

  
 Mark Allen's "I Suffered Stendhal Syndrome At Universal Studios Hollywood!"
Apparently, Stendhal Syndrome is a temporary disorder that causes rapid heartbeat, dizziness, confusion, hallucinations and sometimes unconsciousness when an individual is exposed to excessive amounts of profound art, paintings, sculpture or architecture.
I use the word "bragging" because, according to Graziella Magherini, Italian psychiatrist and author of the novel "The Stendhal Syndrome", Europeans visiting the city are the only ones ever afflicted by the condition.
Italian doctors may crack a smile when they inform a patient that they have succumbed to "Stendhal Syndrome" - and it's use in the medical field may come with a bit of mirth - but it is a medical term in Europe nonetheless.
www.markallencam.com /stendhalsyndrome.html   (5936 words)

  
 a real book
RomAnce Novel BOOK ~ HeArtbeAt by DAnielle Steel
MArk Victor HAnsen DREAMS to REALITY 6 CD's ReAl EstAte
Protect And Defend by RichArd North PAtterson (2000)
www.piscinasvander.com /A-REAL-BOOK,i6939545414,c45110,ur.html   (253 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Books: Texaco : A Novel (Vintage International)
Texaco, the place, is the heartbeat of the Creole nation of Martinique.
It ends with her founding Texaco, a shanty town built on the grounds of an old oil refinery on the outskirts of Fort-de-France.
Texaco, the book is peppered with ideas that are more eloquently described by Creole words or phrases.
www.amazon.com /exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0679751750?v=glance   (253 words)

  
 TheForce.Net - Books - Tertiary
John F. Coppinger, a key man in the creation of Jabba the Hutt for Return of the Jedi has just published his first Sci-Fi novel titled Tertiary.
I would in a heartbeat if it wasn't packaged with the Special Edition.
You can read a free sample here online.
www.theforce.net /books/story/Tertiary_96111.asp   (279 words)

  
 Big Brother is watching you
If a person so much as twitches his face or has a suspicious heartbeat, he or she may be arrested by the thought police, who spy unpredictably and undetected through the telescreen.
The single most prevalent piece of technology, found in every Party member’s home, in the novel is the telescreen.
As the eyes and ears of Big Brother, the telescreen prohibits all but the most thought out and carefully planned subversion.
www-scf.usc.edu /~bbecker/Technology.html   (1592 words)

  
 Whitby on the North Yorkshire Coast
Whitby and the abbey feature in several films and television programmes such as Heartbeat and the video for Simply Red's Holding Back The Years was filmed here and on the North York Moors Railway.
The town is dominated by the ruins of Whitby Abbey, a victim of Henry VIII's Reformation and the place where Dracula came ashore in Bram Stoker's novel.
I visited Whitby on one of the hottest days of the summer 2002 and as can be expected the town was busy with tourists but car parking was still possible by the harbour near the main attractions.
mysite.wanadoo-members.co.uk /northyorkshiremoors/coast/whitby.html   (250 words)

  
 "F***ing A" by Suzan-Lori Parks
Parks is a playwright, songwriter, screenwriter and novelist - her first novel, Getting Mother's Body, will be published this spring by Random House.
In "F***ing A", Parks' shows us a world where, as one character says, "Freedom Ain't Free." But she also shows us the heartbeat of a range of people who keep struggling for decency, equity, and some kind of restitution.
Parks' slip of the A raises contemporary questions about rights to life, the death penalty, the inequitable incarceration of black men, and the torture of prisoners held without legal recourse.
riroads.com /news/20041121fa.htm   (492 words)

  
 Spring 2004 Sneak Previews - 7/21/2003 - Publishers Weekly
Spring reprints include Stand Tall by Joan Bauer, Bronx Masquerade by Nikki Giovanni, My Heartbeat by Garret Freymann-Weyr and This Lullaby by Sarah Dessen.
Philomel packs its bags for The Big Trip by Valeri Gorbachev, in which Pig wants to travel and Goat thinks it's a bad idea; The Stick Kid by Peter Holwitz, an ode to parenthood; Eagle Strike by Anthony Horowitz, an adventure novel starring teen spy Alex Rider; Oh, Look!
by Craig Orback, a history of the delivery system told by its youngest rider; Mallard Ducks by Shannon Zemlicka, an easy-to-read life study of these birds; and Ambulances by Laura Hamilton Waxman, Police Cars by Jill Briathwaite and Motorcycles by Lee Sullivan Hill, all up-close photographic looks at these vehicles.
www.publishersweekly.com /article/CA311924.html?pubdate=7/21/2003&display=archive   (6454 words)

  
 Nevison The Yorkshire Highwayman Main Page
Nevison is also thought to be "Swiftnicks" - the highwayman who made the epic ride to York, which was later ascribed to Dick Turpin in the novel Rookwood by Harrison Ainsworth.
John Nevison, the Glamorous Highwayman by Nicholas Rhea (http://www.heartbeat.demon.co.uk/yorkshire_folklore.htm);
A Highwayman who, dying Of the Plague as was thought, reappeared as his own Ghost, and was finally executed at York in 1684 (see Note 1).
www.overtown.sgt.btinternet.co.uk /Highwaymen/nevison-main.htm   (1530 words)

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