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Oh, The Things I Know!: A Guide To Success, Or, Failing That, Happiness

by Al Franken

More advanced than Robert Fulghum, more fit than Maria Shriver's husband, Oh, the Things I Know! is Franken's commencement address for the 21st century. A cradle-to-grave guide for living, it takes young grads from their first job ("Oh, Are You Going to Hate Your First Job!") through their twenties and thirties ("Oh, the person of Your Dreams vs. the Person You Can Actually Attract!"), into marriage and parenthood ("Oh, Just Looking at Your Spouse Will Make Your Skin Crawl!"), and all the way up to senior citizenship ("Oh, the Nursing Home You'll Wind Up In!"). What does a mega success like Al Franken have to say to ordinary people? "There's no point in getting advice from hopeless failures." Filled with wit, wisdom, observations, and practical tips, this is an easy-to-follow user's manual for human existence. Why travel life's highway all by your lonesome when you can bring Al Franken along?

According To Hoyle

by Richard L. Frey

OFFICIAL RULES OF MORE THAN 200 POPULAR GAMES OF SKILL AND CHANCE WITH EXPERT ADVICE ON WINNING PLAY

Prize Boners for 1932

by Alexander Abingdon

Humorous answers drawn from class rooms and examination papers.

Musical Stages: An Autobiography

by Richard Rodgers

Richard Rodgers was one of the most successful, prolific composers of the last century. His songs are as well known today as when he created them more than 50 years ago, for musicals such as South Pacific, Pal Joey, Carousel, the King and I, The Sound of Music and Oklahoma! At 16 he began a long working relationship with the brilliant but tormented lyricist Lorenz hart and then went on to collaborate for another 20 years with the sturdier and equally inspired Oscar Hammerstein II. Late in his extraordinary life, Rodgers wrote what has sine become a celebrated autobiography and a classic of the theatre world, Musical Stages.

Wake Up, I'm Fat!

by Camryn Manheim

The cover blurb is in the etext.

Fractured English

by Richard Lederer

More bloopers of the English language.

Making Movies

by Sidney Lumet

Sidney Lumet writes about his experiences in the movie industry and the difficulties faced in making films.

Glory Days

by Dave Marsh

Profile of Bruce Springsteen in the 1980s.

Comp City, A guide to Free Las Vegas Vacations

by Max Rubin

Win every time you gamble? Is that possible? It is if you play for comps. Every year, U.S. casinos give away more than a billion dollars worth of amenities to customers in return for their gambling action. These giveaways, known as "comps" (short for complimentaries), range from parking and drinks to gourmet meals and airfare. Are you getting your share? From nickel slot players to $500 a hand blackjack high rollers, Comp City has shown tens of thousands of gamblers how to get free casino vacations.

Rock Hudson: His Story

by Rock Hudson Sara Davidson

Autobiography of the actor, written in the days after he went public with his homosexuality and battle with AIDS.

Trial By Fire

by Nancy Taylor Rosenberg

The labyrinth of the law, the dark secrets of the human heart, together with the forces of lust, greed, ambition, and power combine to give us a breathless page-turning thriller set in Texas.

The Long Night of Centauri Prime (Babylon 5: Legions of Fire, Book 1)

by Peter David

The Shadows have gone, but there minions the evil drakh, remain. And, they find a home on Centauri Prime, and a useful puppet in newly crowned Emperror Londo Molari.

Bravo! (I Can Read! #13)

by Herman Parish

Amelia is suppose to help the conductor, what trouble will she get into this time.

The Girls: Sappho Goes To Hollywood

by Diana Mclellan

McLellan's investigative account of the lives of Hollywood's most glamorous and uninhibited goddesses plunges deep into the rich stew of love, money, and passion that was the dawn of the movie business. The Girls reveals an early marriage to a communist spy that Marlene Dietrich fought all her life to keep secret and unearths an equally shrouded fling between Dietrich and Greta Garbo as starlets in Berlin. From the complex love life of the elegant Mercedes de Acosta through Isadora Duncan and Tallulah Bankhead to Garbo's lover Salka Viertel, McLellan untangles a passionate skein of connections that stretches from the theater in New York through brazenly bisexual socialites deep into the heart of the film industry.

Quisters 1, Logic Riddles for Thinkers of all Ages

by John Zax

QUISTERS are puzzles which require only logic and abstract thinking to solve. To play, one person (who knows the solution) presents the problem to other players who attempt to solve it by asking questions the presenter may answer only with "Yes" or "No". An occasional "Sort of" or "Irrelevant" may be helpful.

Wired: The Short Life and Fast Times of John Belushi

by Bob Woodward

Story of John Belushi.

Bette

by Charles Higham

This candid biography vividly captures Bette Davis as she really was and includes a complete filmography.

The Movies That Changed Us: Reflections On The Screen

by Nick Clooney

Twenty movies that had an impact on society.

This Just In: What I couldn't Tell You On TV

by Bob Schieffer

From Publishers Weekly It might not have occurred to anyone to clamor for longtime CBS reporter Schieffer's memoir, but now that it's in print, it makes for a highly engaging read. He's seen it all and has much wisdom about journalism and governance to impart. The book spans virtually every important domestic story of the past 40-odd years; among his captivating subjects are the 1962 integration of the University of Alabama, JFK's assassination, Vietnam, Nixon-era peace protests and Watergate. The book's emphasis changes subtly from events to personalities when Schieffer takes over Face the Nation. As the subtitle suggests, Schieffer wisely forgoes rehashing familiar tales like Watergate or the Clinton-Lewinsky scandal in favor of revealing the background action that went unreported at the time. He structures the book as a collection of anecdotes, and, unsurprisingly for such a seasoned pro, Schieffer has a sharp eye for intriguing details and an instinct for maintaining the proper focus on his subjects rather than on himself. When he does get personal, he admirably questions his occasional missteps in balancing family and career. The telling is so unfussy, modest and straightforward that it rarely prompts speculation about the juicy bits that he couldn't write in a book. Indeed, the work succeeds not only as America over the past 40 years.

Without Reservation: How a Controversial Indian Tribe Rose to Power and Built the World's Largest Casino

by Jeff Benedict

All about the founding of Foxwood Casino and the Indian tribe responsible. Very interesting.

Quentins

by Maeve Binchy

Is it possible to tell the story of a generation and a city through the history of a restaurent? A story of the lives of many people who ate at the famous Quentins.

Ladies First: Revelations of a Strong Woman

by Queen Latifah Karen Hunter

Autobiography of a rap star.

Good Moon Rising

by Nancy Garden

Lambda Literary Award winner Good Moon Rising is about two young women who fall in love while rehearsing a school play, realize they're gay, and resist a homophobic campaign against them.

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