Tom Wolfe

The Bonfire of the Vanities

87.00 

Tom Wolfe’s biting social commentary comes alive in The Bonfire of the Vanities, a powerful fiction that exposes the moral bankruptcy lurking beneath urban prosperity. When stockbrokers and bankers collide with street-level reality through a fateful traffic accident, their privileged world unravels spectacularly. This unflinching examination of city life reveals how greed and ambition corrupt even the most successful.

Man in Full

87.00 

Tom Wolfe’s A Man in Full delivers a gripping examination of African American lawyers confronting serious social challenges including acquaintance rape. This substantial novel from Penguin Random House showcases Wolfe’s trademark social observation and storytelling prowess, creating an unflinching portrait of contemporary American society that resonates with modern readers seeking powerful, thought-provoking fiction.

The electric kool-aid acid test

58.00 

Tom Wolfe’s iconic chronicle of Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters’ legendary cross-country bus journey during the psychedelic sixties. This essential counterculture classic captures the wild world of legal LSD, spontaneous jam sessions, and revolutionary figures who defined a generation. Wolfe’s masterful new journalism brings readers inside the hippie movement’s most transformative moments, from dodging federal authorities to spreading acid consciousness across America.

Online Sports Nutrition and Natural Dietetics.

Chances are there wasn't collaboration, communication, and checkpoints, there wasn't a process agreed upon or specified with the granularity required. It's content strategy gone awry right from the start. Forswearing the use of Lorem Ipsum wouldn't have helped, won't help now. It's like saying you're a bad designer, use less bold text, don't use italics in every other paragraph. True enough, but that's not all that it takes to get things back on track.

The villagers are out there with a vengeance to get that Frankenstein

You made all the required mock ups for commissioned layout, got all the approvals, built a tested code base or had them built, you decided on a content management system, got a license for it or adapted:

  • The toppings you may chose for that TV dinner pizza slice when you forgot to shop for foods, the paint you may slap on your face to impress the new boss is your business.
  • But what about your daily bread? Design comps, layouts, wireframes—will your clients accept that you go about things the facile way?
  • Authorities in our business will tell in no uncertain terms that Lorem Ipsum is that huge, huge no no to forswear forever.
  • Not so fast, I'd say, there are some redeeming factors in favor of greeking text, as its use is merely the symptom of a worse problem to take into consideration.
  • Websites in professional use templating systems.
  • Commercial publishing platforms and content management systems ensure that you can show different text, different data using the same template.
  • When it's about controlling hundreds of articles, product pages for web shops, or user profiles in social networks, all of them potentially with different sizes, formats, rules for differing elements things can break, designs agreed upon can have unintended consequences and look much different than expected.

This is quite a problem to solve, but just doing without greeking text won't fix it. Using test items of real content and data in designs will help, but there's no guarantee that every oddity will be found and corrected. Do you want to be sure? Then a prototype or beta site with real content published from the real CMS is needed—but you’re not going that far until you go through an initial design cycle.