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Showing 2,176 through 2,200 of 2,869 results

Wolfsbane

by Craig Thomas

Richard Gardiner is a successful, smalltown English solicitor, whose violent past suddenly catches up with him while on vacation.

Wolverine

by Jack Slade

Lassiter tangles with some bad guys in this Western.

...Y no se lo tragó la tierra

by Tomás Rivera

No disponible, not available

A Call to Virginity?

by Fr. Thomas Dubay

This book offers women a theologian's view of virginal dedication, as well as reasons for choosing this lifestyle, by presenting a positive view of virginity.

Agatha Christie: An Autobiography

by Agatha Christie

Christie began this book in 1950 and finished it 15 years later at age 75. She wrote 68 novels, over 100 short stories, 17 plays, published in 103 languages. This book begins from her early childhood growing up in Victorian era England to living abroad in France and Egypt, returning, marrying Archie Christie, travelling around the world with him, again returning home, meeting Max Malowan, etc. There is a lot about the middle east, various parts of England, France, and other countries. She also talks about how she became a writer and began writing novels as well as outlining when certain books were written and what gave her the ideas for them. It is a fascinating read.

Anpao: An American Indian Odyssey

by Jamake Highwater

Anpao is young and Handsome and Brave -- a man any maiden would be proud to call her husband. Any maiden but Ko-Ko-Mik-e-is, that is, who calims she belongs to the Sun alone. And so Anpao sets off for the house of the Sun to ask permission to marry the woman he loves. But Anpao's journey is not an easy one. Before he can reach the Sun, Anapao must travel back in time to the dawn of the world. He must relive his own creation, venture through The World Beneath the World, and battle the many magical mystical creatures of Native American legends. For only by doing so can Anpao discover who he really is, and rove to the Sun why he alone is worthy of the fair Ko-komik-e-is<P><P> Newbery Medal Honor book

Bad Moon Rising

by Jonathan Kirsch

The doctor lay mutilated in his living room while his wife and daughters turned the swimming pool red. Sick and twisted hatred swelled to strike again!

Beethoven

by Maynard Solomon

Biography of the composer with selective bibliography and an index of his compositions

Fat Men from Space

by Daniel Pinkwater

Hungry aliens plot a sinister junk food takeover of Earth.

Five True Dog Stories

by Margaret Davidson

This collection of true dog stories will fascinate young readers. Dox finds jewels, and criminals. Grip picks pockets, and Barry rescues people from the snow. Adventure, suspense, and animals are all here.

Full Disclosure

by William Safire

What would happen if the 41st President, while meeting with Russian leaders in the mid-1980s, were blinded in an assassination attempt?

George the Drummer Boy (I Can Read! #Level 3)

by Nathaniel Benchley

More than two hundred years ago, Boston belonged to the British. George was a drummer boy with the King's soldiers there. He wanted to be friends with the people of Boston. But they did not like the soldiers. They shouted and threw things at them. One night, George and the other soldiers were sent on a secret mission. They crossed the river and headed toward Concord. George had no idea that this was the start of the American Revolution. In this I Can Read Book, Don Bolognese's vibrant pictures capture the drama and humor of Nathaniel Benchley's exciting story.

It's Alive!

by Richard Woodley

Lenore and Frank Davis were a loving family, looking forward to their new baby, but it was a grotesque mutation, a tiny rampaging aberration.

It's Okay If You Don't Love Me

by Norma Klein

New Yorker Jody has what she thinks is a very liberated view of sex, while Midwesterner Lyle still thinks love means having to say you're sorry. "The trauma and confusion of the sexual coming-of-age by a liberated woman is presented with skill and understanding. " LIBRARY JOURNAL

Jubilee Trail

by Gwen Bristow

In a moment of ecstasy, Garnet Cameron decides to leave New York and go with Oliver Hale to the far-off place called California. Historical romance set in the 1840s.

Last Ditch (Roderick Alleyn #29)

by Ngaio Marsh

Inspector Alleyn's novelist son Ricky thought he had inherited none of his father's detecting powers. Writing was his forte.

Men of Mystery

by Colin Wilson

9 articles about Rasputin, Gurdjieff, Blavatsky, Tesla, Crowley, Dashwood, Geller, Mesmer and Nostradamus

On Photography

by Susan Sontag

6 essays on photography (In Plato's Cave; America, Seen Through Photographs, Darkly; Melancholy Objects; The Heroism of Vision; Photographic Evangels; The Image-World), and a brief anthology of quotations.

Phobia Free: How to Fight Your Fears

by E. Ann Sutherland Zalman Amit Andrew Weiner

How a phobic sufferer can make himself completely phobia-free, without a therapist and with only the support of a friend, and stay that way for good.

Poor People's Movements: Why They Succeed, How They Fail

by Frances F. Piven Richard A. Cloward

Have the poor fared best by participating in conventional electoral politics or by engaging in mass defiance and disruption? The authors of the classic Regulating The Poor assess the successes and failures of these two strategies as they examine, in this provocative study, four protest movements of lower-class groups in 20th century America: -- The mobilization of the unemployed during the Great Depression that gave rise to the Workers' Alliance of America -- The industrial strikes that resulted in the formation of the CIO -- The Southern Civil Rights Movement -- The movement of welfare recipients led by the National Welfare Rights Organization.

Scarlett O'Hara's Younger Sister

by Evelyn Keyes

This story of a movie star by the star herself is vulgar, very real, very innocent by turns, with her views on Fredric March, Artie Shaw, John Huston, Kirk Douglas, Mike Todd and many more.

Secret Rendezvous

by Kobo Abe

From the moment that an ambulance appears in the middle of the night to take his wife, who protests that she is perfectly healthy, her bewildered husband realizes that things are not as they should be. His covert explorations reveal that the enormous hospital she was taken to is home to a network of constant surveillance, outlandish sex experiments, and an array of very odd and even violent characters. Within a few days, though no closer to finding his wife, the unnamed narrator finds himself appointed the hospital’s chief of security, reporting to a man who thinks he’s a horse. With its nightmarish vision of modern medicine and modern life, Secret Rendezvous is another masterpiece from Japan’s most gifted and original writer of serious fiction.

Shyness: What It Is, What to Do About It

by Philip Zimbardo

Using hundreds of examples, this book is about the causes and consequences of shyness, along with techniques to use to overcome it.

Six Men

by Alistair Cooke

Cooke looks at Charlie Chaplin, H. L. Mencken, Humphrey Bogart, Adlai Stevenson, Bertrand Russell, and Edward VIII.

The Age of Uncertainty

by John Kenneth Galbraith

The book traces how ideas of economists and social philosophers shape actions and events even when we are unaware of their sources.

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