Sunday, February 15, 2009

Hospitality or Recipes Even God Will Love

Hospitality: A Social Lens

Author: Conrad Lashley

Hospitality: a social lens follows on from the unique contribution made by In Search of Hospitality: theoretical perspectives and debates. It progresses debate, challenges the boundaries of ways of knowing hospitality, and offers intellectual insights stimulated by the study of hospitality.

The contributing authors provide tangible evidence of continuing advancement and development of knowledge pertaining to the phenomenon of hospitality. They draw on the richness of the social sciences, taking host and guest relations as a means of studying in-group and out-group relations with and between societies. The chapter contributors represent a multi-disciplinary, international grouping of leading academics with expertise in hospitality management and education, human resource management, linguistics, modern languages, gastronomy, history, human geography, art, architecture, anthropology, and sociology. Each lends their expertise to apply as a social lens through which to view, analyse, and explore hospitality within a range of contexts. Through this process novel ways of interpreting, knowing and sense-making emerge that are captured in the final chapter of the book, and have informed future research themes which are explored.

*Promotes debate, challenges boundaries and offers insights into the study of hospitality
*Muli-disciplinary and international contributors
*An excellent reference for researchers interested in the sociology within the hospitality and tourism industries



Interesting book: Making of Irans Islamic Revolution or Industrial Pollution Prevention

Recipes Even God Will Love: Well! Maybe Most of Them

Author: Lanny Alan Yesk

Author Lanny Alan Yeske, PhD, was never a cook. However, his family and friends were. He began collecting their recipes decades ago, and then combined those with others from submarine and university days.

Then he found some incredible recipes from America in the early 1800s, Ancient Persia 5000 years ago, and the deepest parts of the South. These are supplemented with some of the worst recipes existing on the Planet, as well as a few dozen for making wine and alcoholic beverages.

This is a guy's cookbook, no feminine frills, except where Dr. Yeske was brow-beaten to submission by family. Many of the recipes contained are rare and hard-to-find. Let Dr. Yeske take your kitchen to a new level. Recipes Even God Will Love will be the most unusual and entertaining cookbook you have ever seen.



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