Tag: Feast

Forage. Gather. Feast. 100+ Recipes from West Coast Forests, Shores, and Urban Spaces


Free Download Forage. Gather. Feast.: 100+ Recipes from West Coast Forests, Shores, and Urban Spaces by Maria Finn
English | April 9th, 2024 | ISBN: 1632174863 | 304 pages | True EPUB | 86.92 MB
Celebrate the pleasure of the wilderness (or even your backyard) with this approachable forage-to-kitchen cookbook featuring 110 recipes using foragable foods-from seaweed love to mushroom lust and everything in between.

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Curiosities of Literature A Feast for Book Lovers


Free Download Martin Rowson, "Curiosities of Literature: A Feast for Book Lovers"
English | 2011 | pages: 304 | ISBN: 1616080744, 1602393710 | EPUB | 6,9 mb
Which author had the heaviest brain? What was the original title of 1984? When did cigarettes first appear in English literature? And, while we’re at it, who wrote the first Western, and is there any link between asthma and literary genius? Sutherland’s irreverent literary exploration illuminates every topic imaginable from author advances to Civil War literature to Victorian sex to odd things eaten by literary characters (think Patrick Bateman’s girlfriend in American Psycho). This is a treasure trove of fascinating information for all book lovers.

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Famine and Feast in Ancient Egypt


Free Download Ellen Morris, "Famine and Feast in Ancient Egypt "
English | ISBN: 100907458X | 2023 | 94 pages | PDF | 6 MB
This Element is about the creation and curation of social memory in pharaonic and Greco-Roman Egypt. Ancient, Classical, Medieval, and Ottoman sources attest to the horror that characterized catastrophic famines. Occurring infrequently and rarely reaching the canonical seven-years’ length, famines appeared and disappeared like nightmares. Communities that remain aware of potentially recurring tragedies are often advantaged in their efforts to avert or ameliorate worst-case scenarios. For this and other reasons, pharaonic and Greco-Roman Egyptians preserved intergenerational memories of hunger and suffering. This Element begins with a consideration of the trajectories typical of severe Nilotic famines and the concept of social memory. It then argues that personal reflection and literature, prophecy, and an annual festival of remembrance functioned-at different times, and with varying degrees of success-to convince the well-fed that famines had the power to unseat established order and to render a comfortably familiar world unrecognizable.

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