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Brothers and Keepers

by John Edgar Wideman

The author/novelist tells the true story of his brother's imprisonment for murder.

It Changed My Life: Writings on the Women's Movement

by Betty Friedan

Betty Friedan writes on her experiences starting and maintaining the women's liberation movement.

The Mottled Lizard

by Elspeth Huxley

A story of a young lady returning to her beloved Africa after World War II. She has to deal with what is left after the war, with her houseboy, local help, other European friends. She learns that there are diseases and emergencies that can't be dealt with, this far from Nairobi.

The Mosby Myth: A Confederate Hero In Life And Legend

by Paul Ashdown Edward Caudill

Scholarly analysis of the life and legend of John S. Mosby, the Gray Ghost.

No Place to Cry: The Hurt and Healing of Sexual Abuse

by Doris Vanstone Erwin W. Lutzer

Jeremiah knew that healing was possible. God's name is Jehovah Rapha, which means the God who heals, and God has a balm, a healing salve--His Word. That's why Jeremiah was dismayed. He knew that there was no wound or hurt so great, so horrible, so seemingly destructive that our sovereign God could not heal it. He is God, the God of all flesh, and nothing is too hard for Him. If there is any story that will illustrate this truth, you will find it within the covers of No Place to Cry.

Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions, Second Edition

by Gloria Steinem

Most of these essays were originally published in Ms. Magazine in the 1970s and early 1980s. In many cases Steinem has added postscripts to update the material and to describe how the original article was received. The subject matter ranges widely. In one piece Steinem celebrates the life of her mother, who battled mental illness for decades. In "I Was a Playboy Bunny" she describes a week working at the Playboy Club as an undercover reporter. In the section called Five Women Steinem reflects on the lives and legacies of such figures as Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, Marilyn Monroe, and Linda Lovelace. One piece is an outcry again the horrors of female genital mutilation.

Myths and Legends of California and the Old Southwest

by Katharine Berry Judson

Myths and Legends of California and the Old Southwest

Social Science 10th Standard - Tamilnadu Board

by State Council of Educational Research Training

Social Science Textbook for the 10th Standard Students, preparing for Tamil Nadu State Board Exam.

Geography 12th Standard - Tamilnadu Board

by State Council of Educational Research Training

Geography Textbook for the 12th Standard Students, preparing for Tamil Nadu State Board Exam.

Puvi Iyal (Geography) 12th Standard - Tamilnadu Board

by State Council of Educational Research Training

Puvi Iyal (Geography) Textbook for the 12th Standard Students, preparing for Tamil Nadu State Board Exam.

Geography 11th Standard - Tamilnadu Board

by State Council of Educational Research Training

Geography Textbook for the 11th Standard Students, preparing for Tamil Nadu State Board Exam.

Puvi Iyal (Geography) 11th Standard - Tamilnadu Board

by State Council of Educational Research Training

Puvi Iyal (Geography) Textbook for the 11th Standard Students, preparing for Tamil Nadu State Board Exam.

Homophobia: A Weapon of Sexism

by Suzanne Pharr

For anyone wishing a greater understanding of how homophobia functions to keep all people not just lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or questioning from realizing their full potential.

Samooka Ariviyal (Social Science) 10th Standard - Tamilnadu Board

by State Council of Educational Research Training

Samooka Ariviyal (Social Science) Textbook for the 10th Standard Students, preparing for Tamil Nadu State Board Exam.

The Pillow Book of Sei Shonagon

by Ivan Morris Sei Shonagon

Musings and observations of a Japanese lady-in-waiting at the Imperial Court at the end of the 9th century.

Up Against It

by Mike Royko

Mike Royko is a talented, witty young columnist with a big heart, a skeptical outlook, and a sure-footed way among the back alleys of Chicago, where he finds real-life characters.

Japanese Inn

by Oliver Statler

The history of Minaguchi-ya, a Japanese inn, from its unintentional inception in 1569 to a visit from the Emperor and Empress in 1957.

Legends, Lies and Cherished Myths of American History

by Richard Shenkman

*The story that Columbus discovered that the world was round was invented by Washington Irving. * The pilgrims never lived in log cabins. *In Concord, Massachusetts,a third of all babies born in the twenty years before the Revolution were conceived out of wedlock. *Washington may have never told a lie, but he loved to drink and dance, and he fell in love with his best friend s wife. * Independence wasn't declared on July 4 (and the Liberty Bell was so little regarded that Philadelphia tried to sell it for scrap metal but nobody wanted it). * There's no evidence that anyone died in a frontier shootout at high noon. * After World War II, the U.S. Government concluded that Japan would have surrendered within months, even if we had not bombed Hiroshima and Nagasaki. "Richard Shenkman has done a superb job of uncovering our most cherished myths.

Free Culture: How Big Media Uses Technology and the Law to Lock Down Culture and Control Creativity

by Lawrence Lessig

Discusses the ramifications of copyright law for culture. The author of this book donated a digital copy of this book. Join us in thanking Lawrence Lessig for providing his accessible digital book to this community.

The Wounded Spirit

by Frank E. Peretti

Frank Peretti's story of growing up with a medical condition that left him disfigured. Surgery and the miracle of prayer took care of the deformity, but not the reality of being different.

Black Students, Middle Class Teachers

by Jawanza Kunjufu

A compelling look at the relationship between the majority of African American students and their teachers.

Yazoo: Integration in a Deep-Southern Town

by Willie Morris

"At a time when the whole notion of meaningful racial integration seems either passé or under attack in America from both right and left, "Yazoo" is a reminder, with its warm human portraits and its deep feeling for our history as a people, that the South is still a truly unique land and has much to offer in leading America out of its racial impasse."<P> This moving book takes place during a time when integration was forced on public schools. The story takes place in the deep south on the edge of the Mississippi Delta. When the author of this book, Willie Morris, was six months old, his parents moved to Yazoo City, Mississippi, a small town on the edge of the delta.

I Never Walked Alone

by Jessie Hickford

In this sequel to Eyes at My Feet, the author tells further adventures she had with her golden retriever German Shepherd cross guide dog Prudence. She talks about their presentations and talks to different civic groups, their vacations at the sea, some mishaps with water, and the final sadness and transition between Prudence and her successor Suki. Heartwarming and truly written for any dog lover.

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