Books on the topic 'System apocalypse'

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1

Neal, Kirtland. Apocalypse Virus: System Failure. Kirtland D. Neal, 2022.

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2

Alexander, Otis. Otis Leveling System in Apocalypse World. Independently Published, 2022.

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3

Brow, Cameron. Moral Apocalypse: A Modern RPG System. Independently Published, 2021.

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4

Moral Apocalypse: A Modern RPG System. Independently Published, 2021.

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5

Wong, Tao. Cost of Survival : A LitRPG Apocalypse : The System Apocalypse: Book 3. Tao Roung Wong, 2020.

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6

Wong, Tao. Life in the North : A LitRPG Apocalypse : The System Apocalypse: Book 1. Starlit Publishing, 2019.

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7

Wong, Tao. Redeemer of the Dead : A LitRPG Apocalypse : The System Apocalypse: Book 2. Tao Roung Wong, 2020.

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8

Lapiz, Black, Mike Caliban, Wolfe Locke, and Ahmet Nergiz. Third Apocalypse: A Generic Reincarnation Apocalypse Epic LitRPG Fantasy Adventure with a System. Independently Published, 2022.

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9

Wong, Tao. Stars Asunder: Book 9 in The System Apocalypse. Starlit Publishing, 2020.

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10

Burns, John. John Re Ultimate Weapons System in an Apocalypse World. Independently Published, 2022.

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11

HEX: Zombie Apocalypse LitRPG — a Sundered Divinity Novel. Royal Road, 2023.

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12

It's Dangerous to Go Alone During an Apocalypse: System Interface Day 1. Watson, Joshua, 2022.

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13

Gladstone, Wayne. Agents of the Internet Apocalypse: A Novel. St. Martin's Press, 2015.

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14

Agents of the Internet Apocalypse: A Novel. St. Martin's Press, 2016.

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15

Keane, Alexis, IX Phoen, and L. A. Batt. The System Apocalypse Short Story Anthology Volume 1: A LitRPG post-apocalyptic fantasy and science fiction anthology. Tao Wong, 2019.

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16

Kellner, Mark A. Y2K: Apocalypse or Opportunity? Harold Shaw Publications, 1999.

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17

Mullane, Kathleen M. Alimentary Antimicrobial Apocalypse. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199938568.003.0004.

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These case studies illustrate infections encountered in hospitals among patients with compromised immune systems. As a result of immunocompromise, the patients are vulnerable to common and uncommon infections. These cases are carefully chosen to reflect the most frequently encountered infections in the patient population, with an emphasis on illustrations and lucid presentations to explain state-of-the-art approaches in diagnosis and treatment. Common and uncommon presentations of infections are presented while the rare ones are not emphasized. The cases are written and edited by clinicians and experts in the field. Each of these cases highlights the immune dysfunction that uniquely predisposed the patient to the specific infection, and the cases deal with infections in the cancer patient, infections in the solid organ transplant recipient, infections in the stem cell recipient, infections in patients receiving immunosuppressive drugs, and infections in patients with immunocompromise that is caused by miscellaneous conditions.
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18

Legion: The enemy divisions in shadow. Iser Krishin, 2015.

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19

Rehill, Anne. The Apocalypse Is Everywhere. ABC-CLIO, LLC, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9798400613647.

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This wide-ranging exploration of the apocalypse in Western culture seeks to understand how we have come to be so preoccupied with spectacular visions of our own annihilation—offering abundant examples of the changing nature of our imagined destruction, and predisposing readers to discover many more all around them. The Apocalypse Is Everywhere: A Popular History of America’s Favorite Nightmare explores why apocalyptic thinking exists, how it has been manifested in Western culture through the ages, and how it has woven itself so thoroughly into our popular culture today. Beginning with contemporary apocalyptic expressions, the book demonstrates how surprisingly widespread they are. It then discusses how we inherited them and where they arose. Author Annie Rehill surveys the ancient belief systems from which Christianity evolved, including ancient Judaism and other faiths. She explores the vision outlined in the Book of Revelation and traces the apocalyptic thread through the Middle Ages, across the Reformation and Enlightenment, and to the Americas. Finally, to prove that the Apocalypse is indeed everywhere, Rehill returns to the present to consider the idea of apocalypse as it occurs in movies, books, comics and graphic novels, games, music, and art, as well asin televangelism and even presidential speeches. Her fascinating scholarship will surely have readers looking about them with new eyes.
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20

The dynamics of apocalypse: A systems simulation of the classic Maya collapse. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1985.

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21

Natsios, Andrew S. U.S. Foreign Policy and the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc., 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9798216028406.

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This book explores the emerging phenomenon of complex humanitarian emergencies and the evolving policies of the United States in responding to these emergencies. In addition, Andrew Natsios examines the relationship of disaster response to U.S. foreign policy and national interest, and makes suggestions for improving both relief strategies and systems for designing those strategies. To these issues Natsios brings his first-hand experience in numerous key positions. Mr. Natsios provides case study analysis from these experiences over the past five years to illustrate the arguments presented in the book, particularly regarding Somalia, Angola, Sudan, Panama, and Kuwait and Kurdistan following the Gulf War. As former president George Bush indicates in his foreword to the volume, this book will make a substantive contribution to continuing and enhancing vitally important work. Of great interest to scholars, researchers, and policy makers in the areas of contemporary American foreign policy and humanitarian activities abroad.
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22

Sugden, Edward. Emergent Worlds. NYU Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9781479899692.001.0001.

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Emergent Worlds reframes the modernity of nineteenth-century America by displacing three central critical narratives about the era: the westward spread of imperialism, the redemptionist story of black freedom, and the notion that the United States constituted a new world. It begins by identifying dissonant forms of time that ought not to have existed if these three metanarratives were total: chance on a Pacific whaling vessel, a calm on a Caribbean slave ship, and a near apocalypse on an Atlantic merchant ship. These oceanic times provide a gateway into larger historical and geographical frames. They reveal that nineteenth-century America existed in historical interstices in the world-system: between colonialism and the nation, slavery and freedom, subject and citizen, old world and new. With this historical repositioning, Emergent Worlds makes visible a series of transitional ideologies and figures that emblematize them, such as the queer migrant, the suspended state, and the living dead, which are passed over if the modernity of the era is assumed. Such configurations in turn produced symptomatic forms of consciousness oriented around the perception of time. These four domains—oceanic space, transitional historical position, emergent ideology, and dissonant time—created the conditions of possibility for three previously uncataloged genres of the 1850s: the Pacific elegy, the black counterfactual, and the immigrant gothic. Emergent Worlds thus carries out a generic reclassification that brings together this international mix of canonical and noncanonical books of the 1850s, showing how they internalized and attempted to transcend their own historical conditions of possibility.
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