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Search Results for: Dial 1800-299-7264 Allegiant Airlines Phone Number for Reservations

The Curse of Oak Island

by Randall Sullivan

An investigation into the “curse” of Oak Island, where rumors of buried riches have beguiled treasure hunters over the past two centuries.

Zen: Tradition and Transition

by Kenneth Kraft

“A significant collection of essays . . . Unlike most books about Zen, which state or imply that (like Gertrude Stein’s rose) enlightenment is enlightenment is enlightenment, essays in this…

The Victorian Visitors

by Rupert Christiansen

“Delightful . . . This eloquent and witty book does much to rescue Victorian Britain from its traditional image as a place of stolid public rectitude.” –Ben MacIntyre, The New…

The Wretched of the Earth

by Frantz Fanon

“This century’s most compelling theorist of racism and colonialism.”—Angela Davis

Worst Fears

by Fay Weldon

“A hundred years hence, if people can still read, Weldon’s books will likely have the unblunted edge of Jane Austen, an unsentimental Baedeker guide to sexual manners in an ill-mannered…

World Hunger

by Frances Moore Lappé

Full of new insight and astonishing facts, World Hunger: 10 Myths is the definitive text on hunger from the internationally recognized Institute for Food and Development Policy/Food First….

The Woman Who Lost Her Soul

by Bob Shacochis

“Engrossing . . . a soaring literary epic about the forces that have driven us to the 9/11 age . . . always so relentlessly captivating that you don’t dare…

The Unfortunate Englishman

by John Lawton

The second book in the new series featuring Joe Wilderness, a portrait of 1960s Berlin and Khrushchev’s Moscow, centering around the exchange of two spies, a Russian working for the…

The White City

by Karolina Ramqvist

A celebrated bestseller in Sweden, and the winner of the prestigious Per Olov Enquist Literary Prize, The White City is a novel “with a vulnerability that brings to mind Cormac…

What Are You Like?

by Anne Enright

“An eloquent writer . . . dazzlingly funny. . . . For Enright the recognizable dimensions of time, speech, and thought . . . are fluid and interchangeable, while metaphors…