Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Last Place You Look was the first book starring private investigator Roxane Weary. The Roxane Weary books have been praised for their representation of bisexuality. [3] [4] [5] Since 2015, Lepionka has been the editor of Betty Fedora, feminist crime fiction journal. [6] [2] She co-hosts a podcast called "Unlikeable Female Characters". [7]
The group released a single, "Once You Understand", on Laurie Records which consists mostly of a dialogue between teenagers and their parents over the growing culture change; [1] the teenagers have liberal viewpoints, while their parents are more conservative. Throughout the record, the words "things get a little easier/ once you understand ...
Created Date: 8/30/2012 4:52:52 PM
%PDF-1.4 %âãÏÓ 6 0 obj > endobj xref 6 120 0000000016 00000 n 0000003048 00000 n 0000003161 00000 n 0000003893 00000 n 0000004342 00000 n 0000004557 00000 n 0000004733 00000 n 0000005165 00000 n 0000005587 00000 n 0000005635 00000 n 0000006853 00000 n 0000007332 00000 n 0000008190 00000 n 0000008584 00000 n 0000009570 00000 n 0000010489 00000 n 0000011402 00000 n 0000011640 00000 n ...
How to Do Nothing With Nobody All Alone By Yourself (1958) is a how-to book, illustrated by Robert Paul Smith's wife Elinor Goulding Smith. It gives step-by-step directions on how to: play mumbly-peg; build a spool tank; make polly-noses; construct an indoor boomerang, etc. It was republished in 2010 by Tin House Books.
13 at that over the break as far as what the 14 actual language was used. 15 MS. SULLIVAN: All right. Thank you, 16 Your Honor. 17 THE COURT: All right. Okay. Thank 18 you. We will take a recess and let's just 19 get whatever that is. We'll clarify that, 20 okay. 21 COURT CRIER: Yes, Your Honor. 22 This court stands in recess. 23 - - -
How Far Can You Go? (1980) is a novel by British writer and academic David Lodge.It was renamed Souls and Bodies when published in the United States. [1] It won the Whitbread Book of the Year award (1980), and went straight into paperback in Penguin Books in 1981.
On a hot summer day in 1963, more than 200,000 demonstrators calling for civil rights joined Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. for the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.