Ivey Funeral Home Bainbridge Ga
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Ivey Funeral Home Bainbridge Ga
- Bainbridge is a city in Decatur County, Georgia, United States. The town was named after U.S. Navy Commodore William Bainbridge. The population was 11,722 at the 2000 census. The city is the county seat of Decatur County.
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- (Funeral Homes) A matchcover category whose advertisement mentions funeral parlors, funeral homes, casket makers, or funeral accouterments.
- A funeral home, funeral parlor or mortuary, is a business that provides burial and funeral services for the deceased and their families. These services may include a prepared wake and funeral, and the provision of a chapel for the funeral.
- a mortuary where those who knew the deceased can come to pay their last respects
- An establishment where the dead are prepared for burial or cremation
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- (The Iveys) Badfinger was a rock band formed in Swansea, Wales in the early 1960s who became one of the earliest representatives of the post-’60s power pop genre.
- The Ivey Science Center, recently constructed in 2004, houses the Natural Sciences department which accommodates eight laboratories and six classrooms, faculty and student offices and a 180-seat auditorium located on the first floor
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ivey funeral home bainbridge ga – I'D Rather
Downtown Bainbridge, GA
Bainbridge GA. 05
ivey funeral home bainbridge ga
Set in such a world, Human Sister is the story of a prodigy, Sara Jensen, the granddaughter of Professor Severn Jensen, one of the world’s leading experts on conscious artificial intelligences, who, with his wife, raises and homeschools Sara on their beautiful California vineyard. Sara’s family also includes a secret fourth member—her illegal bioroid brother, Michael, whom she helps raise and who was made by her grandfather in part from Sara’s neurons and other cells and who is capable of accessing her thoughts and affections. Amidst a dangerous and darkening outer world, Sara discovers that she also must contend with the secrets and deceptions of those she loves—her grandfather, her boyfriend, and Michael—and she learns that even the best of intentions diligently pursued often have unintended, and tragic, consequences.
Jim Bainbridge’s novel, Human Sister, is a fast-paced, exciting, and beautifully-written account of an all-too-possible, near-future world in which the ethics and choices of humanity are put to the test. The novel is deceptively easy reading—I say “deceptive” because the plot is intense and the writing smooth—but underneath, the book is anchored by complex philosophical and ethical questions, complex characters, and the power of new and innovative ideas. Human Sister takes science fiction into literary territory that it too seldom visits: a place where well-developed characters emerge with sparkling originality through sensuous language and imagery. —Laura Pritchett, author and winner of the PEN USA Award, Milkweed National Fiction Prize, and WILLA Fiction Prize
Human Sister proves Jim Bainbridge a writer gifted with far-reaching intelligence, unbounded imagination, and a most caring and empathetic soul. Love and family reign here, threatened as they are by charging science, fluxing societal norms, and an intricate drama of wayward global politics. —Mark Wisniewski, winner of a Pushcart Prize and the Tobias Wolff Award
Jim Bainbridge has crafted a dark, chilling, future thriller that will keep you up late into the night—until the final searing page. Set in a time when androids battle humans for control, Human Sister is ultimately about the most human of themes: love, loyalty, family, betrayal, sacrifice; and it has as its heroine one of the most original, brave and fascinating young women to live in literature. If you’re looking for something you haven’t seen before, Human Sister is it. —Paulette Bates Alden, author of Feeding the Eagles and Crossing the Moon
Jim Bainbridge is a graduate of Harvard Law School and a National Science Foundation Fellowship recipient for graduate studies at UC Berkeley, from which he received a PhD Candidate Degree in mathematics. He has received numerous awards for his poetry and short stories, which have appeared in more than 40 literary journals in the USA, UK, Canada, Australia, and Japan.