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Showing 451 through 475 of 2,869 results

Writing 1B: Unit-Lessons in Composition

by Albert Lavin Jeanne M. Fratessa Vicki Cox Nancy L. Cossitt Katherine M. Blickhahn Don P. Brown

This book presents a fundamental approach to learning how to write in high school.

Awakenings; A Leg to Stand On; The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat and Other Clinical Tales; Seeing Voices

by Oliver Sacks

Four of Sacks' books in one volume, that form a canon of the most fascinating, enlightening, and inspiring medical writing of our age.

One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich

by Alexander Solzhenitsyn Max Hayward Ronald Hingley

Story of one day in a Soviet work camp, and one man's heroic struggle to survive in the face of the most determined efforts to destroy him, by the Nobel Prize winning author. Includes Solzhenitsyn's now-classic letter of protest against censorship.

The Good Master

by Kate Seredy

Jancsi is overjoyed to hear that his cousin from Budapest is coming to spend the summer on his father's ranch on the Hungarian plains. But their summer proves more adventurous than he had hoped when headstrong Kate arrives, as together they share horseback races across the plains, country fairs and festivals, and a dangerous run-in with the gypsies.<P><P> In vividly detailed scenes and beautiful illustrations, this Newbery Award-winning author presents an unforgettable world and characters who will be remembered forever.<P> Newbery Honor Book

Davy Crockett

by Constance Rourke

Blending myth and reality, Constance Rourke aimed to get at the heart of Davy Crockett, whose hold on the American imagination was firm even before he died at the Alamo. Davy Crockett, published in 1934, pioneered in showing the backwoodsman’s transformation into a folk hero. It remains a basic in the Crockett literature.<P><P> A Newbery Honor Book.

The Colonel's Ladies

by Eric Hatch

Scholar, horseman, professor at a rich girl's college, author of books on military history, Dr. Enos Barney has reached 43, a confirmed bachelor. But he meets a young student in his class, who begins to make him want to LIVE adventurously. Add to the mix a working replica of a 19th century cannon with a devilish mind of its own, a six-pack of friends who discover the joys of horse-drawn artillery, and let the fireworks begin!

The Odyssey

by Homer Robert Fitzgerald

Winner of the 1961 Bollingen Award for the best translation of a poem into English, Homer's epic poem shines through this perceptive translation. [This text is listed as an example that meets Common Core Standards in English language arts in grades 9-10 at http://www.corestandards.org.]

Barabbas

by Par Lagerkvist Alan Blair

Barabbas is the acquitted: the man whose life was exchanged for that of Jesus of Nazareth, crucified upon the hill of Golgotha. By the Nobel Prize winning author.

Ape and Essence

by Aldous Huxley

A savagely satiric successor to Brave New World, this is Huxley's horrific view of the world in the 22nd century, after the Third World War, when a civilization dedicated to 'perfection' attempts to suppress all man's rebellious desires.

The Age of Reason

by Jean-Paul Sartre Eric Sutton

Paris in the agonizing years before World War II provides the background and sets the tone of this famed novel. A guilt-ridden intellectual; his pregnant mistress; the impulsive university girl he loves; an aging nightclub singer and her young lover; a cruel and self-tormented homosexual; and a coldly implacable Communist logician - these characters play their parts in a taut drama that is both a dissection of a society in moral crisis and a piercing examination of the basic questions of human existence.

Preserving the Anthropological Record (Second Edition)

by Sydel Silverman Nancy J. Parezo

Topics include: Institutional Resources, The Preservation and Use of Cultural Materials, Preservation Issues in the Field of Anthropology, and Guidelines and Strategies.

Maigret and the Enigmatic Lett

by Georges Simenon Daphne Woodward

Pietr the Lett had been clocked across the European frontiers by Interpol. Who was he, this international swindler with the skin of a chameleon?

Forward in Time

by Ben Bova

10 short stories by the science fiction master

Getting a Feel for Lunar Craters

by David Hurd

The text from a Braille, tactile book written for visually impaired people to feel what lunar craters are like.

Statler: America's Extraordinary Hotelman

by Floyd Miller

Biography of E. M. Statler, one of America's great hotelmen who devised management techniques that were applicable far beyond the hotel business and contributed greatly to the nation's general efficiency in the early 1900s.

365 Days

by Ronald J. Glasser

Several accounts of what it was like to be a soldier in Vietnam.

Pentimento

by Lillian Hellman

Lillian Hellman, a renowned playwright, looks back and recounts the people who have affected her life.

Emily Dickinson

by Emily Dickinson Richard Wilbur

A collection of Emily Dickinson's poetry

Future Shock

by Alvin Toffler

Description of the world's response to change and how it affects our lives.

The Life of the Christian

by G. Campbell Morgan

This book is designed to give practical help and guidance in the everyday life of the Christian and deals with holiness, growth, service and temptation.

The Man Who Walked Through Time

by Colin Fletcher

Fletcher is the first man ever to walk the entire length of the Grand Canyon. This is the story of his journey, 2 months of struggle against heat and cold, lack of water, dwindling supplies, and almost impassable terrain. But more than a mere adventure story, this is also a spiritual odyssey during which one man began to understand mankind's unique place in the vastness of nature.

A Personal Matter

by John Nathan Kenzaburo Oë

A father comes to terms with his abnormal child, by the Nobel Prize winner for Literature.

Love and Fortune

by Charlotte Mcpherren

Everything had been perfect - the moonlight, the swirling red veil she wore to disguise her face, the sizzling sensuality she felt as she gazed into the Confederate officer's eyes. Yes, Fortune Landry was certain the sultry Gypsy dance had irrevocably bonded her to Grady MacNair. But it had also led to a terrible betrayal on that long-ago night.

A Portrait of Jane Austen

by David Cecil

This book is intended neither as a straightforward biographical narrative not as a critical study of Jane Austen's works, but rather as an attempt to reconstruct her life and character, drawing on her letters, her novels, and the recollections of her contemporaries. Often regarded as an obscure figure living in a small, dull world, Jane Austen is here revealed as a strong, unusually delightful personality, reflecting a lively and important cross-section of 18th century and Regency society.

The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume III, Nebula Award Winners 1965-1969

by Arthur C. Clarke George W. Proctor

All of the Nebula award winners for short stories, novellas, and novelets from 1965 to 1969

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