Kirjailija
Terry Wilson
Kirjat ja teokset yhdessä paikassa: 14 kirjaa, julkaisuja vuosilta 2006-2025, suosituimpien joukossa Detour. Vertaile teosten hintoja ja tarkista saatavuus suomalaisista kirjakaupoista.
14 kirjaa
Kirjojen julkaisuhaarukka 2006-2025.
After penning his previous collection The Lane and Other Poems, Wilson remains ensconced in his Hocking Place residence - known locally as 'the Lane' - while compiling this new selection. Though soon he will graduate from this phase of life, the Lane has proven a fecund wellspring of experiences and inspiration. Wilson is not yet ready to depart from this creative oasis. As he explains: 'One guy we knew well once told me, 'I do like to drink at the Blue Doors, ' as if our very doorstep was his favourite pub. The name stuck, and now it graces this book's cover as well.
After penning his previous collection The Lane and Other Poems, Wilson remains ensconced in his Hocking Place residence - known locally as 'the Lane' - while compiling this new selection. Though soon he will graduate from this phase of life, the Lane has proven a fecund wellspring of experiences and inspiration. Wilson is not yet ready to depart from this creative oasis. As he explains: 'One guy we knew well once told me, 'I do like to drink at the Blue Doors, ' as if our very doorstep was his favourite pub. The name stuck, and now it graces this book's cover as well.
In The Lane and Other Poems, readers are transported to a unique setting: opposite a sobering-up unit in the heart of Adelaide's CBD. Amidst the nightly commotion and close encounters with the rawness of humanity, one might expect tales of chaos. Yet, these poems are imbued with the serenity of nature, the whisper of trees, and the vast expanse of the sky. The moon, a recurring muse, casts its gaze upon the world below, often reflecting on the crowns of human heads. While the collection does not shy away from the grittier aspects of life, presenting poignant portraits of individuals in turmoil, it also captures moments of genuine connection. The author's interactions with many of these souls, from casual conversations to a memorable embrace and blessing from an African spiritualist, add depth and humanity to the narrative. This anthology is a testament to finding beauty and connection in unexpected places, and the resilience of the human spirit amidst adversity.
A Camino Addiction it's God's Cocaine. This book is a republish of the book God's Cocaine the addiction of the Camino.It has some new material but is basically the same book. O yes that is exactly how it feels. Terry went back three times inside two years. He like many others gets drawn back to the Camino time and again.His edgy humor hides the fact that he was hurting.After the first day he regained his faith and love for God and himself.
I wrote a book for new and experienced agents called Hiking the Real Estate Trail. It's chock full of information to help you get your business up and running or keep it going. What it lacked, however, was a field guide that you could take on the hike with you. That's the purpose of this guide. So welcome to the Hiking the Real Estate Trail Companion Guide. Before we get started let's talk about how this guide can help you succeed in real estate. To develop the proper habits, you will use this guide for 66 days. The day field is left blank, so you can start anytime. Simply fill in the first day and get hiking. Each morning you will enter the activities for the day and track how you're doing. If you need ideas for inexpensive or free lead generation ideas, check out page 28. There are 50 inexpensive ways to build your business. (with apologies to Paul Simon). Each day you will fill in the morning section regarding what your activities will be to lead generate for the day, track your progress and then in the evening review how the day went. You can keep your notes regarding your lead generating activity on the facing page along with notes for what worked and didn't work and what needs to be improved. There is a six-day running total that you'll add to each day, so you can see your progress. Why not seven days? Because everybody needs a day off On the sixth day you'll do a quick review of what went right, what went wrong, what scripts and types of meetings worked, and which didn't. Basically, you're adjusting as you go so you don't get too far down the wrong path before you realize you're lost and frustrated. Finally there is a guidebook for both new and experienced agents to help you follow the winding trails of building your real estate business or blaze new trails. It's easy to follow and can work with any system you currently use, but now you can have it with you and make notes and ponder your success (and failures) while on the go. Could you use your phone? Sure, but think how easily distracting and a time waster it can be. Use this guide for 66 days and your business will reach new heights and you'll cover more ground. Think of it as your ultimate take-along field guide while hiking the real estate trail.
This story is an account of Wilson's lifetime apprenticeship under the master shamanic practitioner, Brion Gysin, the hidden master of the avant-garde, of whom William Burroughs said, "He is the only man I respect." The book focuses on events as they developed just prior to and after Gysin's death in 1986. This book details the extreme psychic "Third Mind" effects known as The Process and includes transcribed audio hallucinations, notes, cut-ups, the interview format and collaged material. PERILOUS PASSAGE is a cautionary tale about the uses and abuses of power, a paranoid espionage thriller. Like Gysin and Burroughs, Wilson treats language itself as a parasitic invader which must be resisted, broken up and reassembled. This book is about how the magic was passed on and carried into the future. PERILOUS PASSAGE finalises Wilson's Green Base Trilogy which commenced with Dreams of a Green Base and "D" Train.
Growing up in rural Yorkshire in the 1940s and 50s, Terry Wilson spent his school days hunting down Just William books, cutting up apples to help with fractions and staring out the window dreaming up new schemes. But it was on the Dales themselves that Terry came into his own. Whether he was 'out-fishing' the adults with his homemade rod, grouse-beating for the lady of the manor, helping to bring in the farmers' hay in exchange for rabbit shooting rights, or growing his own prize caulis, his idiosyncratic and inventive mind is only matched by his love of nature. Told with affection, dry humour and a respect for the landscape and its people, through Terry's eyes we meet farmers, mill owners and 'gentlemen of the road'. Beautifully illustrated with newly-commissioned line-drawn illustrations by Don Grant, A Boy's Own Dale is a magical memoir of a long-lost world.