About two young boys and how they coped with the Great Depression, working at various jobs to earn spending money: Circus Roustabouts, gathering scrap metal from alleys, caddying, delivery rider for the Western Union, to mention a few. Arnold, the younger of the two, but street wise, finds the jobs, and by hook or crook, always gets more than his share, but he’s such a lovable little rogue, you find yourself forgiving him.
Like the greatest works of Don Delillo, Richard Powers, and Jonathan Franzen, Arnold Hitler turns a powerful humor and a compassionate and cutting satire on the darkest issues of the age: the persistence of war and racism, the intractable ...
Winningly combining the grit of Chinatown with the quirky charm of Harry Potter, this series opener is sure to have readers coming back for more." ―Publishers Weekly "A marvelous noir voice; Arnold has captured the spirit of the genre ...
I counted the blessings of my fun, supportive family, my loyal lifetime friends, and the expanding circle of new ones. ... I owned the pink slip for my co–signed car and in the driver's seat sat a Weight Watcher's body.
A biography of the Austrian bodybuilder who became an international action film star, an American citizen, and the governor of California.
After nearly thirty years in the public eye, Arnold Schwarzenegger's rise to fame and fortune--and statesmanship--represents a celebrity the likes of which we've never seen before. As co-authors and longtime...
Session: October 26-27, 1965, RCA Victor Studios, Nashville Producer: Atkins Musicians: H. Bradley (gtr), Cramer (pno), Edenton (gtr), Harman (drm), Kennedy (gtr), Strzelecki (b), string acc cond Walker, voc acc October 26 You'd Better ...
THE STORY: Barry and Grace Enterprise, a couple in their seventies, have two sons; one a thriving two-year-old and the other Arnold, a young man in his thirties who crawls on all fours, insists on a lemon peel in his martini, and is forever ...
Best of all, though, this book lets you learn from the winning attitude and approach of the Legend, Arnold Palmer, in golf, business, and life.
The book will look at the prospective candidates in 2010 and also at the long-term prospects of both parties and various ethnic and interest groups.
This book is not a chronological history of the expedition, but rather offers details and new information about the lives of the men who participated and, equally important, the journals that chronicaled the hardships of the march.