Search Results for: American Airlines 1800-299-7264 Business Class Ticket Booking
Thelma & Louise and Something to Talk About
by Callie Khouri“Their adventures, while tinged with the fatalism that attends any crime spree, have the thrilling, life-affirming energy for which the best road movies are remembered. This time there’s a difference:…
The Sword and the Cross
by Fergus Fleming“[A] searing story of France’s attempt to colonize the vast Sahara desert and of two unforgettable men who dedicated their lives to the effort. . . . Effectively, Fleming contrasts…
Stories I Stole
by Wendell Steavenson…literary travel writing. . . . Stories I Stole reminds us of a truth Americans too easily forgot, globalized world or not: Our planet abounds with countries that don’t work….
Stevenson Under the Palm Trees
by Alberto Manguel“A miniature Gothic horror story that Stevenson himself and even Henry James would have found chilling.” –Anna Mundow, The Boston Globe…
Sports Afield’s Deer Hunter’s Almanac
by Sid Evans“No other deer hunting book like it. The Deer Hunter’s Almanac is the ultimate guide to hunting deer across North America. I read it cover to cover in two sittings!…
Splitting
by Fay Weldon“Adarkly comic portrait of one woman’s shattering response to divorce: the latest from an author rightly celebrated for writing witty cautionary tales about the contemporary sexual jungle.” –Kirkus Reviews…
A Spell of Winter
by Helen Dunmore“[Dunmore] beautifully captures paranoia, how it feels to wonder if people smell guilt on your skin and–most powerfully–how you can rationalize an act until you convince yourself it never even…
Somersault
by Kenzaburo Oe“A power story about fanaticism and faith. . . . [Somersault] shows a Nobel master at work in a huge new novel that takes on great themes and does so…
A Short History of Myth
by Karen Armstrong“What Armstrong does in her skid over the millennia is make comparisons, connections, and contrasts in a way that cannot fail to enlighten the general reader. What myth once did,…
Shards
by Ismet Prcic“Impressive . . . Inventive . . . Pushes against convention, logic, chronology . . . Ambitious and deep . . . [Prcic] succeeds at writing an unsettling and powerful…