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Hemingway's Chair
by Palin, Michael
A Python Gets Literary
Hemingway's Chair's greatest charm is in its detailed, lifelike descriptions of both major and minor characters. |
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Make Bright the Arrows
by Palletti, Larry
Over Hill, Over Dale
Make Bright the Arrows is an excellent first novel, one you'll hang onto for repeated reading. |
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Behind the Mask: My Double Life in Baseball
by Pallone, Dave
Is Baseball Ready for This?
Gays have played baseball for years, and Major League Baseball certainly has its share of homosexuals (despite the denials). Former umpire Dave Pallone gives an inside view. |
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Castlevania: Lament of Innocence Official Strategy Guide
by Parkinson, Laura
Become the Best Vampire Killer You can Be! Castlevania: Lament of Innocence Official Strategy Guide
Stuck in the game? This book can help. |
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Thoughts
by Pascal, Blaise
Is Yellow Good?
Pascal states that people give the universe qualities and categories that are all essentially the same because, while humans can only perceive a small amount of information about the world, there is no hierarchy of knowledge. Since there is no understanding within the world, we must have faith that there are answers that we cannot understand. |
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Little Jesus of Sicily, The
by Pasqualino, Fortunato
An Insightful Recollection of Impoverished Sicily
The boy thinks deeply about what miracles he should perform while he is Jesus. He does not understand that he is an actor playing a role; he fully expects to become divine for St. Joseph's day. |
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The Masked Rider: Cycling in West Africa
by Peart, Neil
Big-name music guy roughs it in Cameroon
WAWA: "West Africa Wins Again" |
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Before the Storm
by Perlstein, Rick
Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American Consensus
The 60s were revolutionary times. But in addition to Civil Rights and Vietnam, others were spreading revolutionary seeds that reached fruition in the 1980's. Rick Perlstein eloquently chronicles the American "radical right" here. |
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Design for Living: Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne
by Peters, Margot
Private Lives?
Margot Peters uncovers the design for living of Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne. |
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Catfish and Mandala
by Pham, Andrew X.
Harrowing journeys transformed into a great book
It is hard to imagine a reader who would not learn from the book. . . and I would not want to meet anyone who is not moved by its emotional force. |
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