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Juego de Tronos, a Spanish edition of the Game of Thrones board game, from Devir by license from Fantasy Flight Games.

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A sealed, boxed counter display of Booster Packs for A Game of Thrones, Westeros edition, for the Fantasy Flights collectible card game, based on Martin’s fantasy series, A Song of Fire and Ice.

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A sealed, boxed counter display of Booster Packs for A Sea of Storms, an expansion set for Fantasy Flight’s collectible card game of A Game of Thrones.

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A Game of Thrones: Collectible Card Game, Ice and Fire Edition. Fantasy Flight Games, 2003. 1 box.

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A Game of Thrones: A Song of Ice and Fire, Book One. New York: Random House Audio, 2004. 19 audiocassettes, in shrinkwrap.

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A Clash of Kings: A Song of Ice and Fire, Book Two. New York: Random House Audio, 2004. 21 audiocassettes, in shrinkwrap.

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A Throne of Blades, boxed counter display of Fantasy Flight’s A Throne of Blades, an expansion set for their collectible card game of A Game of Thrones.

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A promotional Game of Thrones" “card coffin" from Fantasy Flight Games, a decorative tin designed to store decks from their collectible card game, sealed, with a few special promo cards inside.

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Selections from Dreamsongs, Volume 1. New York: Random House Audio, undated. 12 compact discs, 15 hours.

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Selections from Dreamsongs, Volume 2. New York: Random House Audio, undated. 14 compact discs, 17 hours.

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Songs of the Dying Earth: Stories in Honor of Jack Vance. Grand Haven, MI: Brilliance Audio, 2009. 24 compact discs, 25 hours.

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Boxed set of Battles of Westeros, a Battlelore Game. Tribes of the Vale Expansion Set. Fantasy Flight Games, 2011.

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Game of Thrones Season One DVD set. Best Buy limited edition with dragon art work. Home Box Office Productions, 2012.

Hung I-hsiang; VHS

DVD access copy
This disk contains three separate segments from totally different sources.
The first segment is taken from a professionally filmed BBC television broadcast series entitled: The Way of the Warrior. The episode shown here is entitled: “T’ai Chi – The Soft Way”; however, this title is somewhat misleading. The focus of the episode is not on T’ai-chi but, rather, on Master Hung I-hsiang, one of Mr. Smith’s teachers in Taipei, Taiwan in the 1960s. The episode was filmed in Taipei in the late 1970s or early 1980s. It show-cases Master Hung’s teaching of the “soft arts” of Hsing-i Ch’uan, Pa Kua Chang, and T’ai-chi Ch’uan, as well as containing a few scenes of Shaolin Boxing. See YouTube post:
< https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CQ4t7mWdKsw>

The second segment is a home movie filmed in Taiwan probably sometime in the late 1960s or early 1970s. In a small, indoor venue, a series of performers demonstrate their respective arts to a panel of distinguished guest or judges who are seated at the end of the narrow room. Arts demonstrated include Preying Mantis (Tang Lang), White Crane, Monkey, Linear Pa Kua, Hsing-i Linking form, and various Southern Shaolin forms. Of particular interest is a brief clip of Master Hung I-hsiang demonstrating how to escape from and reverse various arm joint-locks. Some of this footage has been posted to YouTube:
< https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g_O7RqV8BYU>
The post refers to the website: “sacredpeaks.net”, but I couldn’t identify it.
The third segment consists of a color film made in Beijing, China on Ba Gua Zhang.
It appears to have been aired on television and consists of high quality demonstrations of bare-handed forms, weapon forms, and martial applications.
The final entry consists of two disks (“Part 1” and “Part 2”).

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