Average customer rating:
- A great tale of the American West!!
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Dreams Of Eagles (Pinnacle Western)
William W. Johnstone
Manufacturer: Pinnacle
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General | Westerns | Genre Fiction | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
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ASIN: 0786016590 |
Customer Reviews:
A great tale of the American West!!.......1999-06-30
This book was the first mountain man book I have ever read besides Give Your Heart to the Hawks by Win Blevins. The hero of the book is Jamie Ian McCallister, and he settles a small valley, known as McCallister's Valley, and, throoughout the book, the sittlement is attack by various outlaws, and Jamie has to go on the warpath to get back at them. The tale also includes McCallister's sons who also do the same thing. I loved this book and I think it is a great book to start out on if you are reading westerns!
Book Description
In praise of books by the author: "Bodio writes like Pavarotti sings. He is a master." --Tony Hillerman (for Querencia)
"Stephen Bodio has written an unpretentious yet thrilling book about falconry, one of man's oldest and most mysterious alliances in the natural world; and he takes us afield under the wild skies of birds of prey." --Thomas McGuane (for A Rage for Falcons)
"Fascinating, funny, sad, beautiful . . . Aloft is full of wonderful images and energy." --Annie Proulx
When Stephen Bodio was a young boy in the early 50's he saw an image in National Geographic which became forever etched in his mind: it was a photograph of a Kazakh nomad, dressed in a long coat and wearing a fur hat, holding a huge tame eagle on his fist. And a life-long fascination with Central Asia was born.
Mongolia, a vast country located between Siberia and China and little known to outsiders, was long under Soviet domination and inaccessible to westerners. When it became independent in 1990 Bodio began planning a pilgrimage to see if the eagle hunters of "The Picture" had survived. A life-long falconer himself, he longed to visit the birth place of falconry and observe the traditions that had survived intact through the ages. His fantasy was realized when he traveled independently twice to the westernmost region of Mongolia and spent months with the people and birds of his dreams. The ancient rituals of hunting with eagles are fascinating and the remarkable relationship these nomadic people have with their birds of prey is thrilling. With vivid prose and humor, Bodio gives life to his dreams and the people, landscapes, and animals of Mongolia that have become part of his soul.
Customer Reviews:
A Road to Eagle Hunting and Freedom.......2006-05-28
This book came in with others on Mongolia I had ordered a month ago and so I thought it was just another aspect of this fascinating country I am presently dedicating my attention to. Instead, as usual, generalization is not for human sprit. Opening the book I found out this naturalist grew up in New England as I did, he has italian chromosomes and is a novel Federick II. Immediate simpathy arised. So I dived into this unknown ornitological world (by the way I am scared of birds and I live with terror of an annoying pidgeon that once in a while comes into my kitchen).
First, a notation on the language which is fantastic. I am amazed that such a talented writer writes only about nature and birds and is not better known, but I will surely get my hands on some other books of his.
Second, the cultural milieu that brings the reader to the opening scene (of the eagle actually killing its prey) builds up during the narration and is one of the main subjects of the book. We get an excursus through Marco Polo's travels, Vadim Gorbatov's art work, Andrew's dinosaur discoveries, David Edwards beautiful fotographic images (by the way visit his site and enjoy the eagle and horseman pictures), practically into the author's mind. His references become our references and his dreams ours. One of the fascinanting aspects of this book is the closeness even layman can achieve to the eagle hunting subject.
Third, the book is travelogue or explornography (as the author puts it) and so a get along tale, that as always has the power of getting you to the last page with the curiousity of what is coming up next.
This work is enjoyable, mind and heart raising, didactic and cultural. Truely it can be offered as a gift to curious and encyclopedic friends.
A book for anyone with a dream.......2004-03-23
I don't hunt or fish or tramp around in the wilderness but, despite that, I was entranced by this book - couldn't put it down. To me, it's a story of how one person, in this case a brilliant and engaging writer, managed to achieve a dream he'd held since childhood. Bodio is such a fine (and funny!) storyteller that he makes one of the world's most exotic places accessible without making it a bit less exotic. Hunting with eagles in Mongolia doesn't have to be your dream for this book to be one you'll treasure, just like you didn't have to fish for trout to love "A River Runs Through It." I highly recommend this book.
A Tribute to Wild Freedom.......2004-01-13
I was a junior in college when my dad sent me a copy of a new magazine he had started receiving at home called Gray's Sporting Journal. An English student and avid sportsman, I turned immediately to the book review section. Typically, I did not expect much from a sporting magazine's book review; seldom did these reviews actually convey much critical information.
This was the first time I read Steve Bodio's by-line. I read his review column, then went back and read it again, and again. In three pages, I knew this was a writer that deserved my attention. In fact, I had never read anyone who so passionately loved books and the sporting life, and who also wrote about those passions so beautifully. As Bodio himself once wrote about another writer: "He's THAT good."
Steve Bodio is a cult writer, a characterization I once heard Bodio himself acknowledge. Those of us who make up this cult cannot figure out why he isn't better known. Quite possibly it is because he is a naturalist who remains an unapologetic hunter, a hunter who would rather discuss natural history than the latest camouflage pattern, and a writer who ignores current fashions and writes about subjects like falconry, pigeons, catfish and wild freedom.
This latest book, on Mongolia, is a wonderful travel book that one hopes will introduce Bodio to a new and expanded readership. "Eagle Dreams" traces Bodio's fascination with the eagle hunters of Mongolia to the realization of the dream during the course of two trips.
Calling "Eagle Dreams" a travel book is perhaps unfair; it is not easily placed into a neat category. It is a travel book, a sporting book, a nature book, a "sense of place" book-but none of those categories convey its real spirit.
Bodio has a naturalist's keen curiosity, conveyed through vivid descriptions of everything from eagles to malaria. He has a fascination with even the more common creatures, writing of the magpies and pigeons he finds with a delight that seems as if he is seeing these creatures for the first time. He captures Mongolia's interesting history, its nomadic culture and the difficulties of travel in a way that is humane, engaging, and, at times, laugh-out-loud funny.
Of course, there is a lot of falconry here, with fascinating writing about the eagle hunters of Mongolia, their methods, their birds and their lives.
Bodio does not take his travels for granted, in stark contrast to the writers of many modern travel books. His travels to Mongolia are the realization of a dream, and he conveys just what it is like for a lover of words and ideas to finally stand in a place one has imagined deeply. I suspect many of us who grew up dreaming of travel that seemed so beyond our means can relate to this; I have never read any writer who conveys this feeling better. His observations on the "sountrack" of such experiences are worth the price of the book.
This book is a good introduction to Steve Bodio, capturing his love of animals and wild places, his opinionated (and true) observations on our society's maddening political correctness and Puritanism, his embodiment of a well-lived life (again, to paraphrase him on another subject, I'm not sure that he is making much of a living but what a life!), his literary musings that lead one to believe he has read EVERYTHING, and a writing style that is just a joy to read.
Ultimately, this book seems to be saying, that, even in an increasingly tamed and conformist world, there is still quarry to hunt, books to read, birds to watch, adventures to live. It's not a message you'll find in many travel-to-unusual places books. If for that reason alone, read this book.
Eagle Dreams: A Superb Book by a Fine Writer.......2003-12-26
Stephen J. Bodio's Eagle Dreams is one of the best books I've ever read. By turns lyrically poetic, hilariously funny, dramatic, touching, and inspiring, this book is travel writing at its very best. Most authors cannot approach Bodio in terms of talent, in the way his masterful prose brings scenes and people (in this case, the wilds of Mongolia and the tribesmen who hunt with golden eagles) to life and puts the reader in the middle of the action. Fascinating, exotic story, beautifully told. Buy this book!
Eagle Dreams: An Anthropologist's View.......2003-12-23
I just finished Steve Bodio's great book, Eagle Dreams. I was swept away by his vivid word imagery to a "time" and a place that is all too hard to find in the modern world. Bodio instinctively understands the people, the culture, and the animals without the sanitized pap that is all too prevalent in adventure books. The similarities between present-day Mongolian Eagle Hunters and the Plains Indians of the l800s are remarkable. In both cultures, the Eagle has an important spiritual significance.
Jack Kerouac wrote "Sometimes it is necessary to put up with dust and rattlesnakes for the sake of pure freedom." Bodio's book oozes freedom. "Eagle Dreams" should be required reading for all undergraduate anthropology majors. If you only buy one adventure book this year, this should be it.
Book Description
In the Morland Dynasty series, the majestic sweep of English history is richly and movingly portrayed through the fictional lives of the Morland family. It is 1908, and in the height of Edwardian splendour, Jessie and Violet share a sparkling London debut. At Morland Place, Teddy's business is expanding and he brings home a new wife, to the anxiety of his sister Henrietta who knows there can't be two mistresses of the house. England is a land of confidence and opportunity, but below the surface troubles are stirring. The death of the King brings to a head the constitutional crisis, while abroad the flexing of Russian and German might are an ominous sign of the dangers that lie ahead.
Customer Reviews:
Fantastic book in the Morland Place family saga!.......2007-08-05
A great book in the Morland Place saga. It's the early 1900's and there are several great story lines in this book. There is a debut of two of the Morland Place young girls in London. Morland Place, in York, is brought back to its previous glory. Edwardian England is at its finest. Read the Morland Place books in sequence and you'll enjoy a fine family saga and learn the history of England while you're at it. Highly recommended!
dangerous book.......2007-06-26
any of the incredible books in this amazinzg series is dangerous--housework doesn't get done, food isn't cooked, the cats have to beg for food, and i stay up hours past my bedtime.
i started reading the series a long time ago, when they were first published in this country. they disappeared from all the bookstores in my area after i'd read the fifth or sixth volume. my copies were lost in a move, i forgot the author's name, and i spent yearswishing i could read them again. then, they turned up in my amazon recommendations. i was thrilled and re-started the series.
after twenty-six volumes, i am still entralled with the story of the morlands. and i am amazed at the consistent excellence of the series. the writing, the plotting, the history--all are first rate. the characters are individuals, and reflect the character of their times in fascinating ways. the author has done a stunning job of creating stories that include all levels of society. the plot developments can be surprising, but are never unrealistic.
harrod eagles makes the social, political and military history come alive. she can write about domestic matters and developments, or battles, or the machinations of politicians, or relationships with equal skill and understanding.
these books are historical fiction at its best. the author creates plot lines that illuminate the major historical facts, and also creates characters the reader will care about.
Not entirely a stand-alone read.......2004-06-04
Cynthia Harrod-Eagles' DREAM KINGDOM is the 26th book in 'The Morland Dynasty', so be forewarned: it's not entirely a stand-alone read: not if you want the complete rich tapestry of her Edwardian England setting. The social season of 1908 brings romance and pleasure to the Morlands as wealth and new technology come to life. But the war with Germany looms over all, and even new technologies and romance can't keep back the undercurrent of strife which will reach into the Morland family and change its course.
Average customer rating:
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Eagle Dreams
Sheryl McFarlane
Manufacturer: Philomel
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
General | Ages 4-8 | Children's Books | Subjects | Books
General | Literature | Children's Books | Subjects | Books
ASIN: 0399226958 |
Customer Reviews:
In which voodoo economics takes on a new meaning.......2005-06-21
"You dream of some pastel, mythical country called the United States as you imagine it was forty or fifty years ago, a place that never really existed, and you pander to the prejudices of millions of people who share the same fantasy. The people who are trying to manipulate you dream of a falling eagle, a kind of fascist America where they're free to do just about any damn thing they please without fear of any embarrassing questions being asked by bothersome elected officials who suspect some of the pranks they pull may not really be in the best interests of national or global security. It's a game to them...a Great Game..."
- Mongo Frederickson to politician, herein
DREAM OF A FALLING EAGLE opens in the same style that THE COLD SMELL OF SACRED STONE did, and reads as though it's picking up in the middle of the previous book's cliffhanger and continuing the previous book's story. Here, though, that's not the case; the previous book had nothing to do with DREAM's plot.
DREAM picks up in mid-stanza, as it were, with Mongo and Garth already in mid-investigation for a Presidential Commission that's looking into the question of reorganizing, if not abolishing, the CIA's Operations Directorate. Consequently, the book contains a lot of exposition explaining the story so far, which is a pity because the background sounds as though it would've been interesting - particularly how the Frederickson brothers managed to dig up the information without being killed.
Part of the effect is achieved not by excellence in telling this story but in depending on the quality of suspense stories by quite different writers. Much of DREAM's backstory is supplied simply by saying that, like the plot in the TV series THE PRISONER, the CIA maintained its own "village" for on-the-shelf agents, whether retired or untrustworthy - in this case, supposedly in Haiti. DREAM's conclusion, at the opposite end of the book, seems like an uncredited ripoff of THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE (the original novel).
One good scene, introducing a more active subplot and (of course) ultimately connected investigation involves a sanitation worker who's an ex-con and freelance poet, who wants the Fredericksons to find out who's been plagiarizing his work in literary journals. Garth pushes Mongo to take the case on the grounds that they can help Thomas Dickens, while their efforts at cleaning up the CIA seem unlikely to have a long-term effect. Unfortunately, that plot doesn't get enough development to make the story a more active investigation.
Points of interest:
- Lots of dead bodies, many of which are "voodoo ritual murders".
- Zombies.
- Torture.
- Insignificant involvement of significant others, despite dealing with very unscrupulous opponents and throwing in a far-too-rushed appearance of both Mary and Harper in the epilogue.
- Increased use of Francisco, Mongo's assistant at Frederickson & Frederickson.
- Insufficient use of Mongo's intelligence connections (one of whom was Director of Operations only a few books back).
- Insufficient tie-ins with THE LANGUAGE OF CANNIBALS, which makes DREAM sound like an isolated diatribe against the evils of the CIA, disconnected from narrative reality.
Amazon.com
The Dream of the Vixen Tor reads like the waking dream that inspired it. As Ken Eagle Feather (Tracking Freedom, A Toltec Path) drifts through his fables and teachings, one senses there is no left brain at work--only the meandering of the right brain as it delves into the unconscious world. Like a modern-day Carlos Castaneda, Eagle Feather works from the Toltec traditions and produces writing that is often ethereal and unconventional.
Eagle Feather begins by telling a mystical tale about a ranger's quest to restore the crown of King Arthur. (By this he means restoring the relationship between humans and the "spirit of all things goods and whole.") The old-fashioned tale is thick with symbolism--including a waif, an evil shape-shifting vixen, coachmen, and a hidden cave. After the fable ends, Eagle Feather explains the story within the story--how it grew from a real-life waking dream he had on a tor (a natural rock formation on the top of a hill) in England. Finally, the ethereal prose shifts into a series of concise, step-by-step guided meditations on how to live more in the realm of imagination and how to bring the dream world into the waking world, and vice versa.
What's the payoff? "Remember, heightened awareness is often called dreaming-awake, as your environment takes on a dreamlike quality," he writes. "Colors are clearer, sharper. You feel connected. You feel more capable. You feel like you're not at the mercy of the world, and that you can actively shape your dream... your life." --Gail Hudson
Book Description
The Dream of Vixen Tor
A Restoring the Crown Book
Ken Eagle Feather
Illustrated by Charles Duffie
Poems by Harriet Louisa Coleman
"Dreaming-awake" -- also known as "dreaming while awake" -- is a growing area of interest in the field of perception. Anthropologists such as Carlos Castaneda and psychologists such as Dr. Arnold Mindell have written about it. Through dreaming-awake, you transform your everyday environment into, in essence, a dream come to life. As a result, your senses are sharper and clearer; you feel more alive. Originating from a real dreaming awake adventure, "The Dream of Vixen Tor" offers an original blend of illustrated storytelling, perspective, poetry, and how-to exercises -- all designed to help you awaken your own creative potential and turn your everyday experiences into adventures of consciousness.
- From the author of "Traveling with Power," "A Toltec Path," and "Tracking Freedom," whose books have sold over 35,000 copies
- A new twist on an old legend guaranteed to awaken the senses -- followed by a practical guide to achieving a state of heightened awareness in "everyday" life
- Combines storytelling, illustrations, poetry, information, how-to exercises, and a personal journey section in one of the most unique guidebooks to creativity on the market
- Dreaming is a hot topic for both new age and mainstream audiences; many bookstores already have their own sections
Customer Reviews:
Practicing Dreaming-Awake.......2004-08-06
This is an interesting and unusual introduction to a technique known as "Dreaming-awake." Ken Eagle-Feather, a practitioner of Toltec spirituality, starts off with a tale (though he says it's based on reality) of three travellers who venture to Vixen Tor, a mystical spot somewhere in the British Isles. This tale is about a "ranger" --defined here as knights/wizards who were trained in the ways of Arthur's mythic Roundtable-- who seeks to "restore the crown" -- a mystical quest dedicated to "restoring the relationship of the people to the spirit of all things good and whole, and to the spiriit that contained all worlds." During this quest, the ranger and his companions, described only as a coachmen and waif, encounter the Vixen, a frightening female spirit who presides over the area. During this encounter, in which they face both physical dangers and psychological and spiritual tests, they learn more about themselves and their own spiritual paths.
Ken Eagle-Feather follows up the tale with an introduction to Toltec spirituality and the technique known as Dreaming-Awake. It might seem odd to some to combine the British Isles mythology of King Arthur with the Toltec tradition (which the Carlos Castanada books are also rooted in), but today many are looking for common elements of different traditions. Dreaming-Awake is related to lucid dreaming --remaining awake and alert while you are in a dream-- but it also refers to your awareness while in the waking world. Ideally, we should cultivate a heightened sense of awareness while both sleeping and awake. The exercises he gives are useful, and based on staying in touch with the physical body at all times.
The Dream of Vixen Tor also contains photos and illustrations by Charles Duffie and several evocative poems by Harriet Louisa Coleman, who was only eleven when this was published. The Dream of Vixen Tor is described as the first in a series of books on the "Restoring the Crown" theme, but I don't know if any others have come out since this one. I would recommend this book to students of spirituality or meditation.
Amazon.com
Jack Whyte continues his long, thoughtful exploration of one of our most resonant myths, the legend of Camelot. The Sorcerer: Metamorphosis is the sixth book in his Camulod Chronicles, and it takes up the story just as Arthur makes the transition from boy to man. Whyte's focus, however, is on Caius Merlyn Britannicus. Merlyn, descended from Britain's Roman rulers, is one of the co-rulers of Camulod, a stronghold of civilization under perpetual threat from invading Saxons and Danes. Merlyn leads an eventful yet happy life: he has a loving fiancjée, Tressa; a fine ward, Arthur; a magnificent black horse, Germanicus; many allies; and grand plans for Camulod's expansion and Britain's safety. Merlyn's reflections on one campaign sum up his easy victories throughout the first half of the book: "It was slaughter--nothing less. One pass we made, from west to east, and scarce a living man was left to face us."
But even the mightiest ship must one day be tested on the shoals. The suspense gains momentum when Whyte breaks Merlyn free of his brooding, reactive role and propels him and his companions into danger. In despair, Merlyn takes a new, subtler tack against his archenemies Ironhair and Carthac ("And then I truly saw the size of him. He towered over everyone about him, hulking and huge, his shoulders leviathan and his great, deep, hairless chest unarmoured").
Whyte shines at interpreting the mythos of Camelot in a surprising yet believable way. He can squeeze a sword out of a stone without opting for the glib explanations of fantasy-land magic. The Camulod Chronicles, and The Sorcerer: Metamorphosis in particular, provide an engaging take on the chivalric world of knights and High Kings. --Blaise Selby
Book Description
Throughout the widely praised Camulod Chronicles, Merlyn Britannicus has been driven by one sacred dream--to see Britain united under one just, powerful king. In The Sorcerer: Metamorphosis, it is time for the Sorcerer to fulfill his promise--to present the battle-proven Arthur as the Riothamus, the High King of Britain. When Arthur miraculously withdraws the Sword of Kingship from the stone in which it is set, he proves himself the true and deserving king--sworn to defend the Christian faith against invaders, and to preserve Britain as a powerful, united force.
The Sorcerer has fulfilled his promise. The King is crowned, Britain is united--and the face of history and legend is forever changed.
Customer Reviews:
spectacular!.......2007-03-12
"A gigantic ball of flame roared from the pit with a concussive, deafening sound that sucked all the air in the room, it seemed, into its heart, then belched it out again in a terrifying rain of sparks and embers and great, whirling clouds of choking smoke."
The Sorcerer Metamorphosis is an ingenius fiction of the Arthurian legend by Jack Whyte and it is the fifth book in the Camulod Chronicles series. It is about how Merlyn and Arthur return to their stronghold of Camulod but instead of peace and prosperity, they find themselves in the middle of a desperate war with their longtime neighbor and ally, the now distrought, Cambria! While Merlyn loses everything he ever cared about and morphs into a powerful sorcerer, Arthur fights in the war to learn how to become a man, a soldier, and a leader.
I would recommend this book to anyone who enjoyed the previous books in the series and anyone who likes books on the Arthurian legend or just books about medieval warfare.
the Sorcere: Metamorphosis.......2005-10-17
book is great and most impressed with ordering and delivery, actually received in under 3 weeks
Book review.......2005-06-14
The book, The Sorcerer Metamorphosis, by Jack Whyte, is another adventure tale of King Arthur. With the ageing of Arthur, he is welcomed back to his home, Camulod. Arthur's arrival has been one step closer to his crowning of High King of Briton. Merlin has gone lengths to ensure the crowning of the true king, Arthur. The close families encounter troubles, and some friends don't make it. This book is a thrilling tale that is worth every star in gets.
This book is not up to par with the series..........2004-03-09
I have read with great enjoyment the other books in this series and I was really looking forward to reading "The Sorcerer" but boy...it is sadly lacking what Whyte put into the other books in this series. I had a hard time forcing myself to read this one because it is so slow moving and just plain boring. It seems as if Whyte lost his train of thought here or was himself bored with the telling of the Camulod tale. Either way, his editor needs a kick in the rear for letting this one be published as is.
For those who are reading the series and haven't yet gotten to this one I do suggest you read it just to keep following the story to the end but I finally resorted to skiming paragraphs/pages just to get through the really boring parts.
Very disappointing this book is.
Gosh - I just expected more..........2003-05-18
First off, I love the way Mr. Whyte writes. It's been a while since I last found a series of modern works worth reading, and the Camulod series really satisfies the true reader. The words fly through the brain effortlessly and the thousands of pages are turned with amazing speed. A good read, and that is no lie. But! After all that, I am gravely disappointed that Arthur was not given more attention. This book, and this series, just ended - WHAM! Halfway through "Sorcerer," I panicked. Arthur was still only 15. That was when I finally excepted that Jack had no intention of telling the actual Arthur story. He instead has told the events leading up to the Arthur legend - the story of the making of Camelot. He has left the actual Arthur story largely untold. I guess this is what he intended, and I will not blame him, yet I am left languishing for the actual tales of Arthur in his manhood. Maybe... just maybe... there will be another book after "Uther" ??? I can always hope... In any event, I am a Jack Whyte fan and promote his work shamelessly.
Average customer rating:
- A thoughtful and engaging fairytale for young readers
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Dream Song of the Eagle
Ted Andrews
Manufacturer: Hampton Roads Publishing Company
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
General | Fiction | Explore the World | People & Places | Children's Books | Subjects | Books
General | Ages 4-8 | Children's Books | Subjects | Books
General | Literature | Children's Books | Subjects | Books
ASIN: 1571742948 |
Customer Reviews:
A thoughtful and engaging fairytale for young readers.......2002-09-05
Written by Ted Andrews and enhanced with the full color artwork of Deborah Hayner, Dreamsong Of The Eagle is a unique storybook for intermediate to advanced readers. A mute girl and a clumsy boy are outcast and shunned among their home village. They retreat to a secret shelter in the woods, and care for animals who come to them. Then one day an injured eagle changes everything forever, in this thoughtful and engaging fairytale for young readers.
Books:
- Eclipse (Twilight, Book 3)
- Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas: A Savage Journey to the Heart of the American Dream
- Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas: A Savage Journey to the Heart of the American Dream
- First Things First: To Live, to Love, to Learn, to Leave a Legacy
- Flawless Execution: Use the Techniques and Systems of America's Fighter Pilots to Perform at Your Peak and Win the Battles of the Business World
- Free Fall (Revenge of the Sisterhood (Hardcover))
- Good Night, Sleep Tight: The Sleep Lady's Gentle Guide to Helping Your Child Go to Sleep , Stay Asleep, And Wake Up Happy
- Hannibal Rising
- Happy Accidents: Serendipity in Modern Medical Breakthroughs
- His Princess: Love Letters from Your King (His Princess)
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