/var/www/dpr_slims_baru/lib/SearchEngine/SearchBiblioEngine.php:687 "Search Engine Debug 🔎 🪲"
Engine Type ⚙️: "SLiMS\SearchEngine\SearchBiblioEngine"
SQL ⚙️: array:2 [ "count" => "select count(sb.biblio_id) from search_biblio as sb where sb.opac_hide=0 and ((match (sb.author) against (:author in boolean mode)))" "query" => "select sb.biblio_id, sb.title, sb.author, sb.topic, sb.image, sb.isbn_issn, sb.publisher, sb.publish_place, sb.publish_year, sb.labels, sb.input_date, sb.edition, sb.collation, sb.series_title, sb.call_number from search_biblio as sb where sb.opac_hide=0 and ((match (sb.author) against (:author in boolean mode))) order by sb.last_update desc limit 20 offset 0" ]
Bind Value ⚒️: array:1 [ ":author" => "'+woo Hwang'" ]
This is the dialogue between Master Suroso Moon and Soosunjae members about meditation and about Seon-gye. This book is for the daydreamers who resolutely believe that the unseen world undoubtedly exists.
Ji-woo Hwang’s poems describe a life governed by the inescapable reality that all hell can break loose at any time, a reality that now permates our own culture. How, we might wonder, can we live like this? Hwang’s response, in a poem addressed to Charlie Chaplin. His poems continue to find readers in his newly democratic land, for they mix lyrical intensity with an acute political sensibili…