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Books with author William Oscar Bates

  • The Raid: A Revolutionary War Story

    William Bates

    eBook
    None
  • Immortal Poems of the English Language

    Oscar Williams

    Mass Market Paperback (Pocket Books, Aug. 3, 1983)
    Immortal Poems Here is the most inclusive anthology of verse ever published at so low a price. It contains not only the best-known works of the British and American masters but also the verse of the most brillant poets of our own day. Oscar Williams, who compiled Immortal Poems, was a distinguished editor and poet in his own right, of whom Robert Lowell wrote in the Sewanee Review: "Mr. Williams is probably the best anthologist in America today."
  • Immortal Poems of the English Language by Oscar Williams

    Oscar Williams

    Paperback (Pocket Books, Aug. 16, 1755)
    Noticeable wear to cover and pages. May have some markings on the inside. Fast shipping. Will be shipped from US. Used books may not include companion materials.
  • Immortal Poems of the English Language: An Anthology

    Oscar Williams

    Library Binding (Publisher, April 9, 2009)
    None
  • Better Eyesight without Glasses

    William H. Bates

    Paperback (Hind Pocket Books, Jan. 4, 2003)
    A revised edition of a self-help handbook, first published in 1919, which outlines the Bates method of retraining eyes, using exercises which relax the eye muscles and then retrain them to focus efficiently and without strain. Includes a pull-out wall chart.
  • Pawns: The Brat Prince

    William Bates

    eBook
    Thirteen-year-old Tom Knight, the only child of two loving parents, is dealing with typical teenage challenges such as a bully who lives across the street and balancing video game time with school time when his parents suddenly vanish from his home. Following instructions left by a shape shifting blob of Jell-O on the kitchen counter, Tom enters a nondescript doorway on the side of an antique store that miraculously transports him 26.2 light years away to the planet Chosroes. There a petulant and bored Prince holds Tom’s parents captive in a large cage, the eventual victims of an extremely slow moving, but carnivorous maggoricus—picture an elephant sized slug with big teeth—that shares the cage with them. The Prince explains to Tom that it will take a week for the beast to reach his parents and in that time, Tom must steal a vital piece of equipment, a hypertime stone, from the Prince’s enemies on the neighboring planet of Chatrang. Feeling overwhelmed, ill-equipped and terrified, Tom enlists the help of his two best friends, his math teacher and even the bully across the street to help him on his quest to steal the hypertime stone and save his parents. Pawns is a fun—and at times funny—read, but also addresses serious issues such as bullying, the impact of war on civilians and the importance of friendship. The story uses chess as its overarching theme with character and place names taken from the chess board and from historical figures who were known to be associated with the game.
  • Better Eyesight without Glasses

    William H. Bates

    Paperback (Orient Paperbacks, March 30, 2005)
    A revised edition of a self-help handbook, first published in 1919, which outlines the Bates method of retraining eyes, using exercises which relax the eye muscles and then retrain them to focus efficiently and without strain. Includes a pull-out wall chart.
  • The Mentor Book of Major British Poets

    OSCAR WILLIAMS

    Hardcover (EVERBIND BOOKS, Jan. 1, 1963)
    None
  • Pawns: The Brat Prince

    William Bates

    Paperback (Independently published, April 25, 2019)
    Thirteen-year-old Tom Knight, the only child of two loving parents, is dealing with typical teenage challenges such as a bully who lives across the street and balancing video game time with school time when his parents suddenly vanish from his home. Following instructions left by a shape shifting blob of Jell-O on the kitchen counter, Tom enters a nondescript doorway on the side of an antique store that miraculously transports him 26.2 light years away to the planet Chosroes. There a petulant and bored Prince holds Tom’s parents captive in a large cage, the eventual victims of an extremely slow moving, but carnivorous maggoricus—picture an elephant sized slug with big teeth—that shares the cage with them. The Prince explains to Tom that it will take a week for the beast to reach his parents and in that time, Tom must steal a vital piece of equipment, a hypertime stone, from the Prince’s enemies on the neighboring planet of Chatrang. Feeling overwhelmed, ill-equipped and terrified, Tom enlists the help of his two best friends, his math teacher and even the bully across the street to help him on his quest to steal the hypertime stone and save his parents. Pawns is a fun—and at times funny—read, but also addresses serious issues such as bullying, the impact of war on civilians and the importance of friendship. The story uses chess as its overarching theme with character and place names taken from the chess board and from historical figures who were known to be associated with the game.
  • Mendel's Principles of Heredity: A Defence, with a Translation of Mendel's Original Papers on Hybridisation

    William Bateson

    Paperback (Cambridge University Press, July 20, 2009)
    William Bateson (1861-1926) began his academic career working on variation in animals in the light of evolutionary theory. He was inspired by the rediscovery in 1900 of the 1860s work on plant hybridisation by the Austrian monk Gregor Mendel (included here as an appendix) to pursue further experimental work in what he named 'genetics'. He realised that Mendel's results could help to solve difficult biological questions and controversies and to challenge the status quo in evolutionary studies. Annoyed by the 'apathetic' stance of his evolutionist colleagues, and incensed by a scathing critique of Mendel by the Oxford professor Raphael Weldon, Bateson incorporated an English translation of Mendel's work into this 1902 book along with a defence of Mendel's statistical experiments and the principles of heredity derived from them. His book is an impassioned appeal for scientists to adopt this 'brilliant method' which he felt could revolutionise both scholarship and industry.
  • Mentor Book of Major British Poets

    Oscar Williams

    Paperback (Demco Media, Feb. 1, 2002)
    A must for poetry fans.
  • Better eyesight without glasses

    William H Bates

    Hardcover (HOLT RINEHART & WINSTON, Jan. 1, 1967)
    Dr. Bates method; this is the method recommended by Aldous Huxley