( Listen to our conversation with RA Salvatore here.) I can still remember the layout of the bookstore, though, the snarky associate’s blue hair, and even the smell of the brand-new paperback when I thumbed it open and looked at the first map of Icewind Dale. I wish I could say I rode my trusty steed uphill both ways, but the truth is that Amarillo is as flat as a pancake and not nearly as much fun. I was going to pick up The Crystal Shard by R.A. That day was an especially portentous one for I was on a quest, my steed (Huffy bike) carrying me forth to find a dark elf. The year was 1993 AD the place was Amarillo, Texas. This time of year, they had to be taken seriously because they brought fist-sized hail, tornadoes, and flying cows. On my left, the grassland dotted with kine ran unobstructed to the horizon to my right, a few brave homes clung together with scraggly trees and tight shutters. The land around me was bleak, desolate, and bitterly cold. My breath came rapidly as my legs pumped up and down and the wind whipped through my hair.
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Vol 4-7 here since majority of issues contained in these trades aren't connected to any of the main stories at the time, plus Damian, to my knowledge, does not appear in any of these trades, thus setting these before the introduction to Damian in the New 52 universe.)īatman the Dark Knight Volume 2: Cycle of Violence Next, is this chronological reading order correct for New 52 Batman/Robin?īatman the Dark Knight Volume 1: Knight Terrorsĭetective Comics Volume 1: Faces of Death My guess would be to read it sometime after Endgame or during the Superheavy Arc. When should I read Batman and Robin Eternal? I want to read the Batman trades in chronological order. I have two questions for the more knowledgeable comic readers here (if you don't mind me asking). I have read a few DC comics throughout the years, but really started getting into the New 52 this last month, specifically Batman, Aquaman, and Green Lantern (although I have trades from all the main titles). Hey guys, first post here and a somewhat new comic book reader. And joining me on the line today all the way from SoCal is Professor Robert Lustig. See Prof Lustig at the 5th BioCeuticals Research SymposiumĪndrew: This is FX Medicine. Final question: what resources can we direct people to? How practitioners can categorize the obese patient Mitochondrial transcription factors: sertuin 1, 3 Impact of fructose for Type 1 Diabetesįructose: pathology and testing to considerĭevils Advocate: Australia doesn’t have HFCS Why there's a pandemic of NAFLD, even in children Insulin hypersecretion vs insulin resistance Prof Lustig discusses his professional and academic career Today Prof Lustig takes us through his expansive career and how he became a global leader in teaching both peers and public of the perils of sugar, fructose and carbohydrates and the roles they play in the pathogenesis of disease. Prof Robert Lustig is a paediatric neuroendocrinologist, researcher, clinician and pioneer of the anti-sugar movement. The evidence can no longer be ignored, sugar is to blame for the continual rise in chronic disease. Sugar is responsible for a global health crisis! |