When a fan leaves her with custody of a rambunctious toddler, famed lifestyle diva Claire Willoughby finds herself dealing with the unfamiliar world of a young child and with the tyke's tempting uncle, hell-raiser Ramsey Sage, who also wants custody of the youngster. Original.
My wonderful publisher Jane Palfreyman for believing that a man could—and should—write a book on this subject, and then for being brave enough to act on this belief. My agent Jane Novak for being the best agent a writer could possibly ...
been thinking about things, not paying attention to the order of the service. ... This chosen by my mother and handed to me because it will be inclusive of verse 13, Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for ...
As Christopher Dickey wrote in the Daily Beast, Strauss-Kahn “claims that his less-than-seven-minute sexual encounter with this woman he'd never met before was consensual. To be- lieve him, you'd have to buy the line that Diallo took ...
March of the Falsettos" is the title song of this act of the show. William Finn planned on calling the show "The Pettiness of Misogyny", but then he decided to...
The Things They Carried won France's prestigious Prix du Meilleur Livre Etranger and the Chicago Tribune Heartland Prize; it was also a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Critics Circle Award.
In other words, give a man a beer, the remote and a La-Z-Boy and he's a happy camper! This little book celebrates all things caveman and will help you understand that hairy guy beside you.
Tells a story about the strange relationship of two migrant workers who are able to realize their dreams of an easy life until one of them succumbs to his weakness for soft, helpless creatures and strangles a farmer's wife.
The most widely read book in modern African literature tells two overlapping, intertwining stories, both of which center around a fearless Igbo warrior in Nigeria in the late 1800s, before and after the European colonization of the ...
GREAT BOOKS OF THE WESTERN WORLD
Adam Roberts turns his attention to answering the Fermi Paradox with a taut and claustrophobic tale that echoes John Carpenter's The Thing.