Frequency: Very rareThe Scarecrow is introduced in the Fiend Folio (1981) and is essentially a regular old Scarecrow that someone with ill-intent enchants not only to scare you but quite possibly to kill you. No two Scarecrow are alike, as various materials will be used to create them, ranging from wood, straw, and vegetables though they will always appear evil. The creation of such a creature is not as simple as stuffing a shirt full of straw and sticking on a pumpkin as a head, however.
No. Appearing: 1-6
Armor Class: 6
Move: 6”
Hit Dice: 5
% in Lair: Nil
Treasure Type: Nil
No. of Attacks: 1
Damage/Attack: 1-6 plus special
Special Attacks: Charm
Special Defenses: Nil
Magic Resistance: Standard
Intelligence: Non-
Alignment: Evil (lawful, neutral, chaotic)
Size: M
Psionic Ability: Nil
Level/XP Value: IV/165+5 per hit point
Note that immobilized characters (those affected by the gaze of the ultrodaemon, floating eye, scarecrow, yeti, or revenant) are subject to double the usual number of attacks for automatic hits and maximum damage (plus incidental damage where appropriate), if their attacker chooses to attack.Well, that’s bad news for those who don’t make their save. Two attacks and 12 points of damage every round until you decide to stop standing their with your mouth all agape.
Dragon #130 (Feburary 1988)
Climate/Terrain: AnyThe Scarecrow is first shown off in the Monstrous Compendium Greyhawk Appendix (1990) and later shows up in the Monstrous Manual (1993). The Scarecrow is still constructed in this edition, still takes 3 weeks, and 1 gold per hit point. Construction is slightly adjusted in that the Scarecrow must be constructed from specific materials, with the frame of the Scarecrow being made from wood bound with hemp rope - not that weird, though it gets weirder. The creator can cover the frame with whatever clothing and accessories they wish, and they can be stuffed with straw or grass if so desired. The head is a hollow gourd with a face carved into it, which means you can pick a traditional pumpkin or go more exotic for butternut squash, or go big and pick one of those creepy, long snake gourds that looks like a cross between a watermelon and cucumber. But that’s not weird.
Frequency: Very Rare
Organization: Solitary
Activity Cycle: Any
Diet: Nil
Intelligence: Non- (0)
Treasure: Nil
Alignment: Neutral
No. Appearing: 1
Armor Class: 6
Movement: 6
Hit Dice: 5
THAC0: 15
No. of Attacks: 1 + gaze
Damage/Attack: 1-6 + charm
Special Attacks: See below
Special Defenses: See below
Magic Resistance: Nil
Size: M (6’ tall)
Morale: Fearless (19-20)
XP Value: 1,400
Medium ConstructUnfortunately for the Scarecrow, 3rd edition almost completely forgets about it. Though there is a spot of light as rears its ugly pumpkin head in Dungeon #84 (2001), but it isn’t until Dragon #355 (2007) that it gets any of the respect it deserves. It first appears in the adventure The Dying of the Light written by Chris Doyle - fun fact, this is also the adventure that first showed off the winged owlbear! This writer just has the best monsters… even if they are only used as side encounters. The Scarecrows, as there are only 2 of them, act as the ‘guardians’ for the vampire Haroun who has taken over a temple formerly dedicated to Pelor. He has brought the foul taint of Nerull to the temple and built some Scarecrows that attack the party. That’s it.
Hit Dice: 47 (5 HD) Dslashing or blugeoning
Initiative: +0
Speed: 20 ft., (4 squares)
Armor Class: 14 (+4 natural), touch 10, flat-footed 14
Base Attack/Grapple: +3/+5
Attacks: 2 claws +5 each (1d6+2 plus cowering touch)
Full Attack: 2 claws + 5 each (1d6+2 plus cowering touch)
Space/Reach: 5 ft./5 ft.
Special Attacks: cowering gaze, cowering touch
Special Qualities: camoflauge, cold immunity, construct traits, darkvision (60 ft.), vulnerable to fire, unsettling presence aura (60 ft., DC 12)
Saves: Fort +1, Ref +1, Will +1
Abilities: Str 15, Dex 10, Con -, Int -, Wis 11, Cha 10
Skills: Search +4, Spot +4
Feats: -
Climate/Terrain: Any
Organization: -
Challenge Rating:
Treasure: -
Alignment: Neutral
Advancement: 6-10 HD (medium), 11-15 HD (large)
Level Adjustment:
Frozen in fear and unable to take actions. A cowering character takes a –2 penalty to Armor Class and loses her Dexterity bonus (if any).Alright, it still sucks to fail the save against a Scarecrow.
Player’s Handbook - 3.5e (2003)
Level 13 LurkerWhile we have to wait until Monster Manual 3 (2010) to get to the Scarecrow, it’s at least an improvement over 3rd edition. These creatures largely reside in the Feywild and are the servants and creations of hags from long ago. Scarecrows roam the Feywild and are used by various creatures, including the eladrin, gnomes, and ritualists. It should come as no surprise then that the Scarecrow appears in the adventure of the most famous of all hags, Baba Yaga’s Dancing Hut from Dungeon #196 (November 2011). While Baba Yaga doesn’t make an actual appearance in the adventure, two Scarecrows do, along with many other incredibly dangerous creatures.
Medium fey animate (construct) / XP 800
Initiative +14 / Senses Perception +9
HP 99; Bloodied 49
AC 27; Fortitude 24, Reflex 26, Will 25
Speed 6 , low light vision
Immune disease, poison, sleep; Vulnerable 10 fire
Lurking Horror When the haunter hits a creature that cannot see it, the attack deals 5 extra damage and increases any of the attack’s forced movement by 2 squares.
Claws At-Will Attack: Melee 1 (one creature); +18 vs. AC Hit: 2d6 + 9 damage.
Haunting Echoes (charm, fear, psychic) At-Will Attack: Area burst 2 within 10 (enemies in burst); +18 vs. Will Hit: The haunter slides the target 2 squares. The target then makes a melee or a ranged basic attack against a creature of the haunter’s choice.
Fluttering Straw (polymorph) At-Will Effect: The haunter shifts 6 squares and then is invisible and insubstantial until the end of its next turn.
Terrifying Gaze (fear, psychic) Recharge Attack: Close blast 3 (enemies in blast); +16 vs. Will Hit: 1d6 + 5 psychic damage, and the haunter pushes the target 2 squares.
Alignment Unaligned / Languages Common
Skills Stealth +15
Str 14(+8) | Dex 18 (+10) | Wis 17 (+9) | Con 15 (+8) | Int 11 (+1) | Cha 10 (+6)
Equipment light shield, spear
Medium construct, chaotic evilThe Scarecrow makes it into the big leagues and appears in the Monster Manual (2014), with such great recognition we are sure that the Scarecrow is in for a real treat in 5th edition! Of course, we’ve said that a lot about other monsters, and always ends up being wrong. We’re sure this time will be different though.
Armor Class 11
Hit Points 36 (8d8)
Speed 30 ft.
Str 11 (+0) | Dex 13 (+1) | Con 11 (+0) | Int 10 (+0) | Wis 10 (+0) | Cha 13 (+1)
Damage Vulnerabilities fire
Damage Resistances bludgeoning, piercing, and slashing from non magical attacks
Damage Immunities poison
Condition Immunities charmed, exhaustion, frightened, paralyzed, poisoned, unconscious
Senses darkvision 60 ft., passive Perception 10
Languages understands the languages of its creator but can't speak
Challenge 1 (200 XP)
False Appearance. While the scarecrow remains motionless, it is indistiguishable from an ordinary, inanimate scarecrow.
Multiattack. The scarecrow makes two claw attacks.
Claw. Melee Weapon Attack: +3 to hit, reach 5 ft., one target. Hit: 6 (2d4 + 1) slashing damage. If the target is a creature, it must succeed on a DC 11 Wisdom saving throw or be frightened until the end of the scarecrow's next turn.
Terrifying Glare. The scarecrow targets one creature it can see within 30 feet of it. If the target can see the scarecrow, the target mu st succeed on a DC 11 Wisdom saving th row or be magically frightened until the end of the scarecrow's next turn. The frightened target is paralyzed.
“Wrath is a natural reaction. It commands ‘change’ in roaring defiance of that which time hath delivered.”Death, as herself
“Ash is the antithesis to Art.All tablets, arches, scrolls, scribbles, and stages fear the flames. Of that soot-tipped eraser. The greedy flames had a tendency to eat , you see, not only words and deeds, but those who would remember both.Perhaps this is why literature and other art forms shy from depiction and description of Ash. Sure, they embrace the fire, an analogy for will, or love, or knowledge; but to grip the hard truth of a handful of soot? The after ashes destined for an urn, or a scattering unto the wind? This is a greater talisman of the taboo. Search the libraries, the galleries, the temples, and you will see many vehicles of stories centered round the fire, the furnaces, the fuel, the soldiers… but to the Ash, the soot, the cinders left behind? ‘Tis a rare recognition, indeed.The dragon in the room boils down to one’s belief, which one carries at will or at heart, and it is this: do you consider Ash to only ever be a symbol of death? Of nothingness? The end of a great blaze, the last rotten chunks of skin to a carbon skeleton, adrift in the wind?Or…Do embers remain, perhaps even still lit and floating in the air?”
“When an adventuring party wipes, who's to say the BBEG didn’t whip out a molotov cocktail or Fireball spell at the last minute?”Death, tapping her nose, or lack thereof
“Hey, hey, easy. You must be dead, for you to be crying out loud, carrying about like this. What did you expect, orientation? Get a hold of yourself. Take a walk. You might find another fallout spirit willing to listen for a spell. But really now, I must be going. As you can hear, someone else has just burnt to a crisp.”Death, as herself
“Thank the Moon for Darkvision, that’s a start. The spells GoodBerry, Light, and Daylight saw immediate use. Once, we came upon a traveling warlock, whose daemon companion possessed true sight. Pandjed saw this as ingenious, and pursued study of the spell.”Damakos, Tief. Druid
“Breathing was difficult, even through my helmet’s visor. We tore some cloth from our spare clothes, and fastened them around our mouths and faces. I had to take off my helmet, and in the two minutes it was off, my face was covered in grime, and I felt the layer coat my skin like plaque against my tongue along the metal. The air tasted like a dirty piece.”Naeris Nailo, half-elf Paladin
“We mistranslated the word apocalypse. It is not the end of the world or plane. It is a great unveiling, a revelation. The world continues.”Seraphina Hilltopple, halfling translator
“In Brave New Colony, there were many abandoned shops and houses. As we reached closer to the center, we began to see other people among the falling ash. Their very skin seemed made of ash, though they maintained their race and complexion from whence they originated. Some neon graffiti could be seen in the alleyways. One of them spelt “FREE HK,” and it was flanked by two animated suits of scorched armor. I asked a shopkeep about it. Apparently baffled by my ignorance, the racist, he explained they were the initials of the Ashman, that he was imprisoned, and would say no more.Therai, Teif. Rogue
“COULDN’T SEE A [censored] THING!”Pandjed, Db Bard
Name | Region | Abundance (1 low - 5 high) | Use |
---|---|---|---|
Awakened Redwood | RF | 2 | Sages of Lore, Forest Guardians, Mildly acidic / poisonous bark |
Fallout Fern | RF, SD | 4 | Bioluminescent, including underwater |
Creeping Spaniard Ivy | SD, SB | 3 | Used in high quality rope, as well as quipo accounting systems |
White Ash Cyprus | DV | 3 | It’s bark is said to prolong life among mortals, as well as produce a calming buzz to entities of ash |
Conifers of Cinder | SC, W | 5 | Lumber, durable |
Black Pine | SD | 5 | Lumber, brittle |
Singed Elm | SD, SB | 3 | Makes durable bows, sacred drums, and remains the de facto lumber used in airship construction |
Anleaf Bush | G, SD, W | 4 | A long burning wood favored in incense production, highly insect and disease resistant. Mild acidity yields a light pesticide, often dissolved with body fat to produce caulking. |
Scorched Shrub | SC, DV, W | 4 | It’s berries come in several spice varieties, and are used as paint. Subspecies include caffeine, cocoa, nutmeg, and hazelnut. |
Hollow Oak | G, W | 2 | Acidic to livestock, favored in fences guarding gardens. Makes durable weapon hilts and bows. Favored wood for storing alcohol. |
Withered Willow | SD, RF | 2 | Painkiller Bark, Prevent Soil Erosion |
Ash Rose | SB | 1 | A rare herb used in many jealously guarded alchemical recipes. It’s use is underplayed to the uninitiated. |
Twilight Coral (3-5 sub-species) | G, DV | 3 | A general herb used in alchemy, often as a bonding agent, especially key when combined with acidic ingredients. |
Fallen Leaves (mutated flora-insectoid hybrids) | G, W | 5 | Pests of mild nutritional value. Flavors are surprisingly varied, and are a favorite of culinary experts. |
Whitecap | W, RF | 2 | A mushroom capable of bio-degrading calcium. It’s known in alchemy to increase one’s resistance to Ice and cold. |
Bark-Clingers | RF, SD | 5 | A mushroom mostly used for its edible flavor and nutrition. Many specimens grow to be quite large, some growing as long as forearms. |
Snowshroom | G | 4 | A mushroom containing many anti-oxidants. Used in alchemy to soothe nausea, reduce headaches, cramping, muscle bruising and tension. Mild hallucigan. |
Needleshroom | SD, SC, W | 3 | Extreme Hallucigan. Mildly toxic to many races. Used in Alchemy for manic insight. Also used by some local religions. |
Blackcap | DV, SB | 1 | A mushroom capable of boring through chitan. An extreme pesticide. It is known in alchemy to increase one’s resistance to Fire and Heat. |
“What do you mean, there isn't any vegetation on the Plane of Ash? Have you seen all the things we smoke and burn?”Damakos
“It’s full splendor stays veiled behind smoke clouds. Hints of it’s dark majesty are mirrored in the interior, though even the spirits of the dead dare not study it, for in the near infinite dungeon like depths, that which eternal lies, and it is said that some abominations can not truly die, even by the cosmic inferno that set this plane asunder. What remains of the victims of these abominations is only the anti-matter of the void, conveniently beyond my own jurisdiction.”
“It is a dead sea. A truly, truly, intentionally dead body of water. Oxygen and light do not penetrate it’s depths. And freed of thirst, the beings of ash will find little incentive for either venture or adventure along it’s shores. This is perhaps less true in the present, with the recent discovery of the Grey Lake Scrolls, and the book of San Waking.”
“Here you will find no Charon, no ferry. One might say it is a pale reminder of what water was, is, could be, were it not for the singed sentiments polluting it’s purity. Such a reclamation would require legions of druids. And those — thankfully, I suppose — are rare indeed on this plane. For now.”
“The fiery hearts of actors — I’ve stopped saying actresses — are often found in unlikely places. Most of us are actors, in our own way, behaving according to how our ancestors wrote the lines of the great cosmic play we find ourselves in. This theater itself is in the middle of nowhere, and yet it somehow draws a full house for every show, even though both the audience and actors are a bunch of perceived hill-billies, nomads, and vagabonds. How spectacular; and how tragic, in its fall to the flames of bigotry and hate.”
“It was here that San Waking (San’Wa King), lord of the monkeys, was pinned under a mountain for five hundred years by the Jade Emperor. Following his pilgrimage of redemption with a mortal monk in his Journey to the West, the immortal ape returns to the plane of Ash to judge wanderers he deems commendable. He has been rumored to advise the living on how to return to the Prime Material Plane.”
“Some monks and clerics perpetuate that it is faith before action that guides one’s path to the Light. If that’s true, these addicts are some of the most holy do-nothings in all the planes. Light it up, I guess, in our so-called den of hippies and thieves.”
“The tribal shaman kindly requests that nothing be burned in the cavern, so as not to disturb their neighbors on the ceiling. Their guano turns rather fiery when they’re annoyed. Best leave the sleeping bats lie.”
“Little is known of the Lex Andrea Empire, other than their hieroglyphic depictions of the Clockwork Gate, contact with the Netherese, and the Plane of Steam. The Empire fell midway through the second age to an apocalyptic catastrophe, which turned their lands to blackened swamps and radiated deserts. At least, that is what is known to Prime Material Worlders. The location of this legendary library is not yet known, but accounting for the historical records, and the laws governing the plane, its existence is all but confirmed.”
“Leave sleeping Dragons lie. This goes double for a Dracolich.”
“As the cavalry of conquerors crossed the western sea, the ninjas of Torii looked to their grandmaster for guidance. The monastery had heard the news of these wars in years past, and of their exponential, disproportionate violence. Grandmaster Lee brandished a torch, and held it to the walls of his own domain, he said ‘they have not burned their own ships, yet they will not hesitate to burn our own homes — and so we must outdo their determination.’ As the blaze spread, it is known that some monks chose to reenter, and perish among the flames. So began the Great Conqueror's War to maintain our newfound appreciation of independence.”
“Led by the cries of ‘It’s all just a witch hunt, It’s all just a witch hunt,’ cults of inquisitors form around many a demagogue. At first glance, it’s perhaps ironic that they too fall to the flames. But you must remember, the plane of Ash is not a refuge for the moral or informed, that is, enlightened, but for all who burn. At best, it’s a timeless refuge where one may still attain these traits. At worst, it is akin to Carceri, or Tartarus, where a riot has broken the peace between guard and detainee. On this hilltop, their political ring of stones is occasionally assaulted by specters of these hags derived from their own personal, psionic paranoia.”
“The Wise Woman Ny’alana Moore taught me several lessons, a few of which I even remember. The first was that the older one got, the less magic they tended to use. The second lesson was that there comes a point where rules must be broken. And that there was a kind of spell that triumphed over magic in a different way, and that was the way of words. She also divined the location of my teenage journal reincarnated on the plane of ash, which my mother the dragon-queen Tethis burned in my youth.”
“If only laying the dead to rest /was as easy as cremation.”“If only peace could replace this battle fatigue /my only sacrifice -- a single burnt offering /Charred bones spread among the ash /Could they, would they, if only, reignite”
“Near an abandoned city lies this building within a meat shipping center. Notable spirits have been disappearing around here for weeks, and unless there’s been some sort of second wave of religion I don’t know about, I don’t think they’ve ascended. I passed a wandering Pilgrim raving about the Cult of the Djinni. Can’t say I’ve heard of them”
“BNC is the main hub of the Ashen wasteland — both the Geechago Central School and Sheldon Theater are landmarks there. As far as landmarks can go in a plane of smoke. The citizens there are largely of a decent alignment, with notable outliers. A small faction broke away to form the New Richmond suburb, though recent reports indicate that it’s been pretty much destroyed.”
“Vermin is a broad term. Many imagine them as only rodents, but it encompasses almost all wild animals, including insects, worms, and parasites. In many societies, the term may refer to people.”Seraphina Hilltopple
“They called us what? Dead? Honey, not only has that ship sailed, it was burned by savages on another world. Sure we’re dead, but the jury’s still out on where we’re at.”
“No señor cook, you don’t quit, you’re fired! What’s that? The Chief of Staff resigned? But that’s the tenth one in three years! Well get an acting employee to fill the position for now. What’s that? A crystal ball call for me? Oh, hey [REDACTED]. Hey, you had my back with that testimony, right? Oh yeah? Well [bleep] you too, you [bleep] Sonderland!”
“‘Who conceived of the attack?’ I bellowed, my bow’s length pinning him to the wall outside. ‘No, fuck that. Who said to torch the place?’ And the little twit had the nerve to roll his eyes. ‘You cannot judge us,’ he self-righteously replied, before looking skywards and somehow slipping from my grasp, as he rapidly launched upwards. With hardly a twitch of effort, he ascended with such speed and precision, on such a straight trajectory, the likes of which I'd never witnessed before.”
“Bartender, another round. Bard, another song. Friends, another hug. Tonight, we feast like it’s Valhalla.”
Name | Location | Category: RPG, Dungeon |
---|---|---|
Scorched Towers of Lore | all | both |
Razed Theaters | SD, SB, RF, G | Dungeons, small |
Blackstone Amphitheaters | DV, W, SB | RPG, events, encounters |
Netherese Greenhouses | SB, G, DV, SC | RPG |
Firewatch Towers (Stations) (shelters) | SB, W, RF, G | both |
Watchtowers | SB, RF, G, DV | Dungeons, small |
Whitepaint Mineshafts | SC, W | Dungeons |
Ruined Temples | all | both |
Toppled Steeples | all | both |
Singed Sepulchers | all | both |
Ghost Town | all | Dungeon, surface |
Mostly Abandoned City | all | both |
“Regardless of how the information is gleaned, there are four logical directions of escape from the Plane of Ash: through the three planar border regions of Sunset Canyon (Radiance), Greywaste (Ice), and Duerma Volcana (Magma); a fourth is thought to exist about the Whitecaps, in the upper atmospheric layer of Sho’El. Of these routes, only two seem survivable to living entities existing on the Plane: travel to the Greywaste by means of expedition, and travel to the Sunset Canyon in hopes of divine intervention. The puzzle of it boils down to one’s thermal resistance to ice and fire. Travel to the Plane of Fire or Magma usually leads to one’s incineration, unless in a spectral form or under powerful Magiks. And travel to the Plane of Ice is often as equally deadly. If there is a fourth escape above the Whitecaps, it seems reserved for the dead.”
“The only escape we knew was through the Greywaste.”
Exhaustion: “All living and spectral entities suffer 1 level of exhaustion for every ten miles they travel this way, refreshing upon a long rest.” [Hardmode: refreshing only 1 level of exhaustion per day.]Conrad Ungin
Skill Check: “...Comparable to those required to cast Fly. I.e. 5th level wizard, 6th level sorcerer, 13th level rogue, 9th Ranger, etc. Note: fly does not require specific classes to access on this plane. Only “Wielders of higher intellects and temperaments are able to fly at will,” eg. spellcasting modifier (CHA, WIS, INT). Specialists of the modifiers STR, DEX, and CON may still cast flight with approximately a +2 modifier. Final homebrew ruling.”Eagin Sungerain
Survival: “The largest threats to the living include atmospheric inhalation and encounters. Those, and sudden cliffs or towers. Pay attention, and don’t daydream.”Death
Encounters: “By the sound of those screams, it seems that little runaway twit forgot about the Ash Sharks and Sky Spiders.”Naeris Nailo
Environment: Volcanic (Umberlands) | |
---|---|
Druid Level | Circle Spells |
3rd | Gust of Wind, Feign Death |
5th | Scorching Ray, Gaseous Form |
7th | Dominate Beast, Polymorph |
9th | Counter Spell, Leomund’s Tiny Hut |
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In 2019 I set out to read 36 books and create a portrait for each author. By the end I read 88 books and created 52 author portraits. Reddit, goodreads, the Libby app and the local library, helped keep a steady flow and variety of book suggestions. submitted by BerSTUzzi to 52book [link] [comments] The image below is the additional portraits beyond the “first 36” that I shared earlier in 2019. https://preview.redd.it/1yfbziwnvzc41.jpg?width=2048&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=8294f543e76fa3689fad46ca2a6df250afe77ec7 **Authors Pictured by Grid*\* 1A. Rachel Carson 1B. Maria Popova 1C. Delia Owens 1D. Jorge Luis Borges 2A. Sylvia Plath 2B. Ruth Benedict 2C. Dan Ariely 2D. Ryszard Kapuscinski 3A. Blake Crouch 3B. Edith Hall 3C. Scott Hawkins 3D. Michael Diamond 4A. Joseph Heller 4B. Ann Leckie 4C. Becky Chambers 4D. Madeline Miller Link to the First 36 Portraits: https://www.reddit.com/52book/comments/ch3vdx/36_books_36_portraits_this_year_i_challenged/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x **The Break Down*\* Non-fiction: 37 Science Fiction: 25 Other Fiction: 26 **Some Favorites*\* Best Non-Fiction Investigatory: Bad Blood Best Non-Fiction History: The Edge of the World Best Non-fiction Memoir: Lab Girl or Shoe Dog Best Science Fiction: The Dark Forest Best Fiction: A Gentleman in Moscow Best Short Stories: Exhalation **All 2019 Books*\*
I mostly enjoyed hearing of the early years and the groups influences. Adam Yauch is a very inspiring character. There are also a lot of good music references and playlists. **Iain M. Banks, Use of Weapons*\* A Culture Novel. The Culture Series is a post scarcity space opera. The Culture is made up of advance A.I. Ships, space colonies and humans and other societies to be indulged. The series deals with exploring, contacting other societies, and the special circumstances that arise in a society of influence and excess. “But in Special Circumstances we deal in the moral equivalent of black holes, where the normal laws — the rules of right and wrong that people imagine apply everywhere else in the universe — break down; beyond those metaphysical event horizons, there exist . . . special circumstances.” She smiled. “That’s us. That’s our territory; our domain.” Each novel is self contained, but some are better at introducing certain aspects of the universe. I like recommend starting with Consider Phlebas or Player of Games. Use of Weapons deals with the mechanisms of war and how they could still be used in a post-scarcity setting. **Audrey Schulman, Theory of Bastards*\* Audrey’s novel is fiction with science at its roots, feeding a story with personality. It focuses on a scientist who lived her life suffering from physical limitations, her history, her study of Bonobos in a not too distant future, and the unexpected events that surround her study. **Ted Chiang, Exhalation\* A new collection of thoughtful short stories by Ted Chiang. His speculative fiction stories often explore language, human challenges, the quest for knowledge, and investigate across a variety of disciplines. **Roberto Bolãno, The History of Science Fiction*\* Young poets coming of age in Mexico City are enchanted by unknown potential. They are further encouraged while investigating the breadth and variety of creative activity throughout the city. The admiration for the city and place in life shines. “But sunrise came, and the fear went away. It was a sunrise that said, ‘Hello, hello, little cowards, hello, hello. Do you know who I am?’ As it pushed on the windowpane and pressed our shadows against the wall. ‘Of course’ I said. Five minutes later, half asleep and pulling the sheet over his head, Jan said ‘Of course, you're the incredible sunrise that promised to show up every three days.’ ‘Exactly, exactly’ said the sunrise, and we yawned, made tea- ‘Kind of a pain in the ass, this sunrise, don't you think?’ -we smoked, we told each other our dreams. ‘Hello, hello, yippee! I’m the Mexican Sunrise that always beats death.’” **Kameron Hurley, The Light Brigade*\* A nonlinear military science fiction with a effective mix of themes from Forever War, Slaughter House Five, All You Need is Kill, and Starship Troopers. Fighting against Mars, soldiers are broken down into light to get them to the front lines. A ride of a novel in first person narrative that keeps you in the dark, takes you to even darker places and slowly sheds light on pieces of the bigger story. “What I learned, as I looked back on those times, was that the lies are what sustained us. The lies kept us going. Gave us hope. Without lies we have to face the truth long before we are ready for it. Long before we are prepared to fight it.” **Ta-Nehisi Coates, Between the World and Me*\* Coates takes readers along on his journey through America's history of race and its resonances. A mix of personal narrative, reimagined history, essayistic argument, and reportage -- Coates provides readers a new framework for understanding race: its history, our contemporary dilemma, and where we go from here. “And still I urge you to struggle. Struggle for the memory of your ancestors. Struggle for wisdom. Struggle for the warmth of The Mecca. Struggle for your grandmother and grandfather, for your name. But do not struggle for the Dreamers. Hope for them. Pray for them, if you are so moved. But do not pin your struggle on their conversion. The Dreamers will have to learn to struggle themselves, to understand that the field for their Dream, the stage where they have painted themselves white, is the deathbed of us all.” **Frank Herbert, Dune*\* A far future setting with sprawling feudal interstellar empire. The story focuses on young Paul Atreides after his family accepts control of a desert planet Arrakis. Arrakis, the only source of the 'spice', the most valuable substance in the cosmos. The story explores the complex, multi-layered interactions of politics, religion, ecology, technology, and human emotion as the forces of the empire confront each other for control of Arrakis. “My father once told me that respect for truth comes close to being the basis for all morality. 'Something cannot emerge from nothing,' he said. This is profound thinking if you understand how unstable 'the truth' can be.” **Victor S. Navasky, The Art of Controversy*\* As the past editor for The New York Times and The Nation, Victor provides a sweeping history of political cartoons their influences, impacts, and historical reactions. I enjoyed his personal account of his discussions with the staff, examining the interpretation and connotation of various controversial cartoons, and what made them so. The book includes references and career histories of a wide range of cartoonists. And offers a timeline in an appendix. The book mostly covers caricature, propaganda posters, and traditional political cartoons. I would love to see a book with this detailed of a discussion on the increasingly controversial use of (and access to) art and memes in the age of the internet. **Marina Abramović, Walking Through Walls*\* Serbian Performance Artist Her memoir covers over four decades of an incomparable artistic career that involves pushing her body past the limits of fear, pain, exhaustion, and danger in an uncompromising quest for emotional and spiritual transformation. She shares her thought process of various pieces, what spurred them, challenges that arose, and how they were received. She recounts spending time with Indigenous Australians, Tibetan Monks, the Dali Lama, a risky but fruitful real estate deal in the heart of Amsterdam, getting approval and walking the Great Wall of China, moving to New York, her MoMA retrospective The Artist is Present, Lady Gaga and starting her own educational institute. The method Marina developed through these experiences is an exploration of being present in both time and space. It incorporates exercises that focus on breath, motion, stillness, and concentration. **Phil Knight, Shoe Dog*\* Phil Knight and his band of Shoe Dogs: Bill Bowerman and Jeff Johnson, all runners, were focused on innovation of the running shoe. They went on from 1962, selling and tinkering with Tiger brand shoes out of Knight’s garage, to developing Nike and taking it public in 1980. Venerable with a focus on creativity, they were on the brink of bankruptcy for those first two decades: fighting for distribution rights, working with manufactures on improvements, protecting their innovations, balancing finances with lenders, transitioning from selling someone else’s brand to developing their own, branching out from the running shoe, establishing themselves from other top brands, developing relationships with athletes, and finding their edge. **Russell Shorto, Amsterdam: A History of the World’s Most Liberal City*\* In his book Russel Shorto provides Amsterdam’s history of tolerance and liberalism as a hub for commerce and the arts. Sprinkled with his personal experience moving to the city with his family, detailed historical accounts of the city’s beginnings and regions complexities. “For liberalism is a delicate thing. It encompasses so much -- constitutional government, democratic elections, freedom of worship, civil rights, free trade -- that we think of it as timeless and universal. But liberalism came into being in a real place and time, like a flame it has wavered in various eras, and it can be snuffed out.” **W. Somerset Maugham. The Moon and Sixpence. 1919*\* “Why should you think that beauty, which is the most precious thing in the world, lies like a stone on the beach for the careless passer-by to pick up idly? Beauty is something wonderful and strange that the artist fashions out of the chaos of the world in the torment of his soul. And when he has made it, it is not given to all to know it. To recognize it you must repeat the adventure of the artist. It is a melody he sings to you, and to hear it again in your own heart you want knowledge and sensitiveness and imagination.” A writer takes an interest in the life of a painter, based on Paul Gauguin. This novel offers advice for aspiring writers, shows the ironic humor of life, and nature of art. It focuses on a painters unquenchable desire to create art. I picked this up in the Libby App, based on a list of recommendations for books on and for artists. The writing and characters stood out, making me excited to revisit Razor’s Edge, by Maugham. **Hope Jahren, Lab Girl*\* My true potential had more to do with my willingness to struggle than with my past and present circumstances Once people begin to roll their eyes and gently tell you that you’re crazy, laugh with gratification. When you’re a scientist, it means that you’re doing it right. Science lectures dealt with social problems that still could be solved, not defunct political systems for which both the proponents and the opponents had died before my birth. Science didn't talk about books that had been written to analyze other books that had originally been written as retellings of ancient books; it talked about what was happening now and of a future that might yet be. The very attributes that rendered me a nuisance to all of my previous teachers - my inability to let things go coupled with my tendency to overdo everything - were exactly what my science professors liked to see. They accepted me despite the fact that I was just a girl, and assured me of what I already suspected: that my true potential had more to do with my willingness to struggle than with my past and present circumstances. People will tell you that you have to know math to be a scientist, or physics or chemistry. They’re wrong. That’s like saying you have to know how to knit to be a housewife, or that you have to know Latin to study the Bible. Sure, it helps, but there will be time for that. What comes first is a question, and you’re already there. It's not nearly as involved as people make it out to be. Science has taught me that everything is more complicated than we first assume, and that being able to derive happiness from discovery is a recipe for a beautiful life. **John C. Maxwell, Good Leaders Ask Great Questions*\* This book had some great insights into what it takes to be a leader. “People do not care how much you know, until they know how much you care.” The author stresses the value of questions and strategies for using questions to reach goals. In this later portion, the author shares questions he has been asked as a way to talk about how questions impacted his life. Then focuses on his experience leading leaders as way to fulfill his goal to leave a legacy. **Connie Willis.To Say Nothing of the Dog*\* A clever, humorous, and entertaining time travel mystery novel that deals with free will, chaos theory, and how events influence history. Set along the Thames River. Pays homage to Jerome K Jerome’s Three Men in a Boat in style and setting. “History was indeed controlled by blind forces, as well as character and courage and treachery and love. And accident and random chance. And stray bullets and telegrams and tips. And cats.” **Christopher Moore. Noir*\* This was books Bookclub selection for April 2019. Set in 1947 San Francisco. This book is full of jokes and snappy exchanges. Following a noir theme on a surface level, the book opens with a death and mystery. True to form Moore takes the adventure into the extraordinary and absurd. Moore does not disappoint. The snake narrating and alien element offered a welcomed further lightening of mood and exploration into the absurd. The afterword was a nice bonus. It was great to get some insight into the creative choices and research that was done for the novel. **Joyce Carol Oates, Hazards of Time Travel*\* Set in an extreme totalitarian and surveillance states of America of 2039. A 17-year-old approaching graduation begins to question her intentions to go against unspoken policies. Setting off an unexpected change in her situation. **Sue Prideaux, I Am Dynamite!*\* This book provides the life of Fredrick Nietzsche from his childhood to the archiving of his works by his sister after his death. His life story is the backbone of the book. His philosophy is presented as it applies to events in his life. It also provides context to the interconnections of other notable figures in his life. His life shows the dangers of individualism leading to an anxiety towards self overcoming, perhaps. “Here the ways of men divide. If you wish to strive for peace of soul and happiness, then believe; if you wish to be a disciple of truth, then inquire.” “You must have chaos within you to give birth to a dancing star.” Nietzsche goes on to promote finding fulfillment, peace with oneself, joy in earthly purpose, rejoicing in existence, and content with mortality, perhaps. Prideaux has also done a biography on Edvard Munch which I am excited to read. **Neil Gaiman & Terry Pratchett, Good Omens*\* Angels and demons embrace the coming apocalypse with a couple exceptions. This novel is packed with social and religious commentary within the humorous banter of its wide cast of characters. A collaboration of Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett who’s styles complement each other well. They would talk daily and exchange disk throughout the novels development. Published in 1990. The mini-series adaptation is released on Amazon Prime. **Shirley Jackson, We Have Always Lived in a Castle*\* This odd ball of a book is engrossing. Shirley takes us into the meandering mind of an eighteen year old Mary Blackwood after her family dies of a poisoned laced meal. She is survived by her sister Constance and Uncle Julian. They are left to manage the estate and their own devices. Things escalate when a visitor arrives and the towns-people’s inquiries persist. This is a book of isolation, family, and festering thoughts. **Jared Diamond, Guns Germs and Steel: the fates of human societies\* Jared uses a multidisciplinary approach to analyze the factors that influence societies, combining the scientific method and years of experience interacting with a wide variety of cultures working in New Guinea. He shows how geography is at the root of what historically causes societies to rise and fall. Geography played a role in the development of guns, impact of germs, and access to steel and ingenuity. This includes: Climate, natural barriers, transportation access, availability of food sources, access to raw materials, biological diversity’s effects on germ cultures, population and cultural diversity’s effects on leadership, social organization, innovation through idea diffusion and cost benefit analysis. I picked this one up after enjoying Yuval Harari’s Sapiens. **Tara Westover, Educated*\* Tara reveals in her memoir, parents that sometimes have misguided preconceived dangers while being blind to dangers on other fronts. In her case, her devout Mormon and survivalist father, a remarkable but selectively passive mother, and an abusive brother provide a unique perspective but stunt her conception of the world. Encouraged by other family members Tara sets to educate herself. **George Saunders. Lincoln in the Bardo** I was drawn to his work when hearing it compared to Kurt Vonnegut satirical tone and the fact his novel’s audiobook was read by Nick Offerman and a whole cast of characters. Lincoln in the Bardo is an experimental novel dealing with the space between life and death through the voices and accounts of those around Lincoln’s sons sickness. **Kamau Bell, In The Awkward Thoughts of W. Kamau Bell: Tales of a 6'4, African American, Heterosexual, Cisgender, Left-Leaning, Asthmatic, Black and Proud Blerd, Mama's Boy, Dad, and Stand-Up Comedian*\* Kamau recounts his life with a good mix of comedy, politics, and pop culture. I enjoyed hearing about the development of his comedy career from developing his original standup routines up to his most recent show on CNN, United Shades of America. **Neal Stephenson, Seveneves*\* Speculative Fiction Writer. In Seveneves, a well researched hard science fiction epic, Neal explores the answer to the question: what could happen if the moon were to fracture into multiple chunks? Then takes it 5,000 years into the future for the last part of the book. It’s a trip. If you enjoyed the by-the-moment problem solving in Andy Weir’s The Martian, this book has that on a much larger scale. **Simone de Beauvoir, The Women Destroyed*\* The Partially Examined Life podcast episode on Simone de Beauvoir’s Ethics of Ambiguity lead me to seek out her work. The Woman Destroyed, her collection of novellas, includes three stories of women struggling with a crisis of identity brought about by a failure of expectations and/or crises of those around them. **Yuval Noah Harari, Sapiens*\* In Sapiens Yuval Noah Harari recounts a high clip history of humans through our biological beginnings to our current social and political conditions. It is an approachable presentation of the expanding and shifting of power and priorities within our species. Throughout the book he questions the impacts of theses stages on the human quality of life and ecology. Overall, with this history of our biology, religions, industry, economy, and politics, we are given context to better question the social, humanitarian and environmental implications of our efforts. He begins to scratches the surface speculating where we might be headed. By the end he leaves us to question for ourselves where and how we might want to steer our future. **Oliver Sacks, Gratitude*\* British Neurologist. Gratitude is a collection of essays by Oliver Sacks, written as a reflection on a life well lived, his attachment to the periodic table, and a sort of manifesto for his life after being diagnosed with a recurrence of cancer. Oliver’s open and kind nature shines through in this quick read. **Bruce Springsteen, Born to Run*\* American Songwriter. Bruce takes you on a journey through his autobiography, Born to Run. In a story that, when listened to on audio, can make you feel like you are riding shotgun on a road trip with the man himself. These vividly described moments throughout his adventure to stardom include a sprinkling of small moments that pull you into his experience. His focus and dedication starting at as young performer along with the ups and downs, developing a band, touring, rediscovery, studio and family life. **Emily St. John Mandel, Station Eleven*\* Canadian Novelist. Emily’s award winning novel, Station Eleven, explores the value of various forms of creation and what survives when a civilization collapses after a plague/virus hits fast and hard. There is more focus on the people and after effects than details on the plague itself. This story follows a Hollywood actors life before the plague and a group of traveling performers as civilization starts to rebuild. **Hermann Hesse, Siddartha*\* German Writer. Siddartha (1922) is Hermann Hesse’s novel dealing with eastern philosophy and a character’s search for enlightenment. Siddhartha explores many roles understanding early in his journey that he must find personal meaning through experience. **John Kaag, Hiking with Nietzsche*\* Philosophy Professor. Hiking with Nietzsche provides Kaag’s personal experience with the works of Friedrich Nietzsche. Specifically, Kaag’s two journeys to immerse himself in the Swiss Alps, where Nietzsche wrote Thus Spoke Zarathustra: once as a young student and again in his mid thirties with his wife and daughter. Given Nietzsche’s focus on the individual in his writings, this first person narrative was fitting. It was interesting to hear how Kaag’s interpretation and reflection of Nietzsche works and life, and how those differed at these two stages of his life. He reflects on solitude, companionship, marriage, parenthood, and return to childhood. He also provides consideration for Schopenhauer’s influences on Nietzsche and Nietzsche’s influence on Hesse. The value of making time to walk and think. His call for reassessment of the values. His struggles with doubt. The dangers of individualism to lead to an anxiety towards self overcoming. Not to love thy neighbor as a denial of the self. **Virginia Woolf, A Room of One’s Own (1929)*\* Woolf takes on the persona of various Marys, in A Room of One’s Own, to examine and consider the place of Women and Fiction. These reflections encourage writers to write for oneself and that to do so effectively requires independence and solitude. She playfully reflects on the barriers to do so in a piercing analysis thru history. To name a few: availability of time and space to focus, education, community, oppression, patriarchy, and emotional frustration from these circumstances. She promotes a separate identity, showing Equality is not about sameness. How could it be given these circumstances. She writes specific to gender. However, it is easy to see this applied to other struggles. Although these barriers can be a fuel for the writer, she warns not to let these barriers impact the integrity of the writing. “What one means by integrity, in the case of the novelist, is the conviction that he gives one that this is the truth. Yes, one feels, I should never have thought that this could be so; I have never known people behaving like that. But you have convinced me that so it is, so it happens. One holds every phrase, every scene to the light as one reads—for Nature seems, very oddly, to have provided us with an inner light by which to judge of the novelist’s integrity or disintegrity. Or perhaps it is rather that Nature, in her most irrational mood, has traced in invisible ink on the walls of the mind a premonition which these great artists confirm; a sketch which only needs to be held to the fire of genius to become visible. When one so exposes it and sees it come to life one exclaims in rapture, But this is what I have always felt and known and desired!” **Atul Gawande, Better*\* In his book Better, Atul dissects contentious medical issues in the US, including the development, implementation, and varied success of ingenuity within this complex industry. These examples show “A readiness to recognize problems and a determination to remedy them, arriving at meaningful solutions, is an inevitably slow and difficult process. Nevertheless, better is possible. It does not take genius, it takes diligence, moral clarity, ingenuity, and above all a willingness to try.” **Ada Palmer, Too Like the Lightning*\* Ada utilizes her experience as a historian and understanding of how the world has changed over the past four centuries to develop a world four centuries from now. The story take place over a short period of time but is full of twists and turns. It also is dense with thoughts on culture, language, gender, philosophy and religion. The narrator breaks the fourth wall throughout book in a way that adds another layer, questioning its intentions and your reactions. The world of Too Like the Lightning has a transportation system that allows travel anywhere in the world in under two hours. This has lead to globalism to the point only small percentages associate with their nationality. Gender is not spoken and religion is individual and private. These are only a few features of the world Ada has built. ‘Observe, Chagatai, the protagonist of every work of fiction is Humanity, and the antagonist is God.’ **Valeria Luiselli, The Story of My Teeth*\* Valeria examines the gap between the art gallery and an industrial district in Mexico with humor, wit, and consideration, through the voice and character of Gustavo ‘Highway’ Sanchez Sanchez. Highway applies his love of objects, collections, and storytelling to become an auctioneer. “I was not just a lowly seller of objects, but, first and foremost, a lover and collector of good stories, which is the only honest way of modifying the value of an object.” “He fell into a solemn silence, which he only eventually broke to say, “I think I’ve become a terrible person. In fact, I’ve become a reptile. Do you know that reptiles are stupid because almost their entire brain capacity is used to feel fear?” |
TABLE 2-1 HAZARDOUS WASTE/CONTAMINATED MATERIALS INVENTORY IDENTIFIED MATERIALS Former American Malting Company Buildings 1 & 2 Material Identified Location Item Size / Description Est. Number of Items Notes Building 1 Building 2 Gas Cylinders See floor location table in Appendix B Appendix A Sites of Concern Priority Ranking Table Appendix B Sites of Concern Priority Maps Appendix C Potential Environmental Concern Maps Appendix D EDR I-495 & I-270 Managed Lanes Study Reports: – I The purpose of the Hazardous Materials Technical Report (HMTR) is to present the existing conditions Hazardous Materials Table 172.101 HMT Appendix A (Hazardous Substances) Appendix A AP A Appendix B (Marine Pollutants) Appendix B AP B Special Provisions 172.102 SP PR Shipping Papers 172.200 SHP PAP Certification 172.204 CERT Hazardous Waste Manifest 172.205 MANFST Marking 172.300 MRK Labeling 172.400 LBL Placarding 172.500 PLAC (a) The Hazardous Materials Table (Table) in this section designates the materials listed therein as hazardous materials for the purpose of transportation of those materials. For each listed material, the Table identifies the hazard class or specifies that the material is forbidden in transportation, and gives the proper shipping name or directs the user to the preferred proper shipping name. 172.101 Purpose and use of hazardous materials table. § 172.101 Purpose and use of hazardous materials table. Link to an amendment published at 85 FR 83374, Dec. 21, 2020. The effective date of this amendment was corrected to read January 21, 2021, at 86 FR 2504, Jan. 13, 2021. Hazardous Materials Table from the information provided in Tables 1 and 2 to Appendix A of the HMT. 4. Identify marine pollutants and severe marine pollutants using Appendix B of the HMT. Purpose and Scope The HMT lists alphabetically, by proper shipping name, those materials The information in this article applies solely to the classification of a marine pollutant subject to the U.S. regulations of the PHMSA/USDOT . It is not to be used for international transportation by vessel or by air. The definition of marine pollutants at 49 CFR 171.8 refers to Appendix B of the Hazardous Materials Table found at 49 CFR 172.101. Part 172 - Hazardous Materials Table, Special Provisions, Hazardous Materials Communications, Emergency Response Information, Appendix B to Part 172 - Trefoil Symbol: 49:2.1.1.3.9.11.25.1.5: APPENDIX Appendix C Appendix C to Part 172 - Dimensional Specifications for Recommended Placard Holder: Hazardous Materials; Standard Number: 1910.120 App B Title: (See Part B of this appendix for further explanation of Levels A, B, C, and D hazards.) I. Level A - To be selected when the greatest level of skin, respiratory, and eye protection is required. HAZARDOUS MATERIALS GUIDE §172.101 172--25 §172.101 HAZARDOUS MATERIALS TABLE, Continued Sym-bols (10) Vessel stowage (9) Quantity limitations (8) Packaging Special (§173.***) provisions (§172.102) Label PG Codes Identifi-cation Numbers Hazard class or Division Hazardous materials descriptions and proper shipping names Cargo Location Other
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Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration Recommended for you 21:43 Intro to Chemistry, Basic Concepts - Periodic Table, Elements, Metric System & Unit Conversion - Duration: 3:01:41. It is commonly used medicinally as a calcium supplement or as an antacid, but excessive consumption can be hazardous.The vast majority of calcium carbonate used in industry is extracted by mining ... My name is Erik and on my channel you can find funny videos of games I love to play! Mostly GTA 5! Subscribe today to never miss an upload! I don’t see them in any of my coding materials. None of my class work covers them. Nobody seems to use them but they are prominent in the ICD Index and there is a whole appendix all about them ... See more: http://www.ehow.com/tech/ George Fox University's Portland Writing Center If the word forbidden appears in the hazard class column of the Hazardous Materials Table, You must not transport the material. 21. Explosives A and B must never be parked within 5 feet of the ... This first of six videos will take you through fictional employee "Andy" and his first day on the job in shipping and receiving.The trainer demonstrates how ... Woodworking Tips: Table Saw Safety Tips by WoodWorkers Guild Of America. 6:51. Play next; Play now ; Workplace Accidents - Prevent-It.ca (All 5 Ads) by Dark Umbra. 3:07. Play next; Play now ... Modular Lab Limited provides laboratory turnkey project service all of the word. When design a lab, we need confirm what kinds of lab furniture and lab equipment. For lab furniture worktops, lab ...
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