Fundamentals of Microbiology, Eleventh Edition
Fundamentals of Microbiology, Eleventh Edition by Jeffrey C. Pommerville Pommerville (Author)
Jones & Bartlett | English | 2018 | ISBN-10: 1284100952 | 841 pages | PDF | 147.16 MB


The Gold Standard in Microbiology Education The Eleventh Edition of Jeffrey Pommerville's best-selling, classic text Fundamentals of Microbiology, continues to set the standard for microbiology textbooks and learning tools. No text better applies microbiology concepts to the learner and the real world and does so with higher quality art and illustrations.

Jan

30

2018

Incognito Toolkit

Incognito Toolkit: Tools, Apps, and Creative Methods for Remaining Anonymous, Private, and Secure While Communicating, Publishing, Buying, and Researching Online by Rob Robideau
English | December 4, 2013 | ISBN: 0985049146 | AZW3 + EPUB | 224 pages | 3.1/2.4 MB


In Primary Light (Iowa Poetry Prize)

In Primary Light (Iowa Poetry Prize) by John Wood
English | May 1, 1994 | ISBN: 0877454507 | 110 Pages | PDF | 3 MB
John Wood is well known for his brilliant writing on the history of photography, but for many years he has also centered on his work as a poet, publishing in some of the very best magazines and gaining the deep admiration of many writers and poets. This book is testimony of his devotion to his craft - a fully realized, mature, and carefully constructed collection.


In Our Own Hands Essays in Deaf History, 1780-1970

In Our Own Hands: Essays in Deaf History, 1780-1970 by Brian H. Greenwald
English | May 30th, 2016 | ISBN: 1563686600 | 288 Pages | EPUB | 4.05 MB
This collection of new research examines the development of deaf people's autonomy and citizenship discourses as they sought access to full citizenship rights in local and national settings. Covering the period of 1780-1970, the essays in this collection explore deaf peoples' claims to autonomy in their personal, religious, social, and organizational lives and make the case that deaf Americans sought to engage, claim, and protect deaf autonomy and citizenship in the face of rising nativism and eugenic currents of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century.