And Epic Martial Mystery
The Trail to Twilight for the Gods is a poem about martial odds and the epic struggle sans cease between the Gods of War and Peace. A nest of martial mysteries regarding conflicts through the centuries. Though men may fight to do what’s right, they often use might and clash by night. Yet, is this plight the fault of man, or is it part of heaven’s plan? Do some famed Gods give mankind dreams that promise peace but bring extremes, while others play to change man’s way and delay Twilight for his Day? And is a masked grand plan in play to break the Gods’ veiled war-prone sway and hasten Twilight for their Day?
This Trail leads on to trenchant rhymes that sing about our troubled times, bring our darkening world more light on why men fight and clash by night, give us hope we can do what’s right and show us trails that skirt Twilight.

Why are some nations far richer than others? Why do riches and employment grow unsteadily? What can we do about it?
Macroeconomists ask these important questions, and this introductory textbook is the first to simply and comprehensively explain the latest way to answer them. The answers come from the relatively new, but impeccably pedigreed, theory that people rationally anticipate their probable future wealth when deciding how much of their current income to save or spend. This theory is exciting and even revolutionary because it identifies tax policies, such as those long used by booming Hong Kong, that can significantly boost saving and wealth. Furthermore, the theory fits recent facts far better than the traditional textbook theory of saving which stars current income rather than probable future wealth. Ironically, these presently-competing theories stem from initially-different views about probability held by two friends at Cambridge University who greatly admired each other’s ideas about saving, the famous economist John Maynard Keynes and the young philosopher Frank Plumpton Ramsey.