Search Results for: VIPREG2024 promo code for 1xbet free bet Liberia
The Battle of the Tanks
by Lloyd ClarkFrom celebrated military historian Lloyd Clark comes the riveting and richly detailed account of the greatest land battle of all time and a crucial turning point in World War II–the…
A Certain Curve of Horn
by John Frederick Walker“Walker writes with insight and compassion. . . . A Certain Curve of Horn deserves to be ranked with Peter Mathiessen’s classic, The Snow Leopard. It underscores the sanctity of…
The Curse of Oak Island
by Randall SullivanAn investigation into the “curse” of Oak Island, where rumors of buried riches have beguiled treasure hunters over the past two centuries.
Ambient
by Jack Womack“Fascinating and well written . . . wonderfully inventive.” –The New York Times Book Review…
Gigantic
by Marc Nesbitt“[The] stories are suffused with a sort of poetry. . . . Beautiful . . . Nesbitt is smart, dark, and funny, like a young Elmore Leonard with a drinking…
Hurlyburly and Those the River Keeps
by David Rabe“Fresh, glittering, entertaining, full of wit and blisteringly funny. A stunning comic drama of contemporary life in the Hollywood hills and beyond.” –Richard David Story, USA Today…
An Invisible Spectator
by Christopher Sawyer-Lauçanno“A gripping page-turner. Sawyer-Lau”anno’s biography is better than brilliant, it is Bowlesian: exhaustively researched and impeccably written.” ––Mark Dery, The Philadelphia Inquirer…
Carry Me Down
by M.J. Hyland“John Egan is a brave, resourceful boy, intelligent and self-aware, yet skating on the edge of madness. The story of John’s thirteenth year is both sympathetic and disturbing. It is…
War Reporting for Cowards
by Chris Ayres“We find ourselves in good hands throughout the journey. . . . Once in a while his descriptions actually take on a terse Hemingwayesque brilliance. . . . Ayres happened…
Three Novels
by Samuel Beckett“More powerful and important than Godot. . . . Mr. Beckett seeks to empty the novel of its usual recognizable objects—plot, situation, characters—and yet keep the reader interested and moved….