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Keith M.:
Powell's Picks Spotlight: Jacqueline Woodson and Leo Espinosa's 'The World Belonged to Us'
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I’m a nostalgia skeptic. I say that as someone in the final days of his thirties, an age when all the normal human inclinations — pushed along by
Big Culture
— are driving many of us elder millennials to remember just how good things — especially products — used to be...
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Ayun Halliday:
The Symbiotic Relationship Between Used Bookstores and Small Potatoes
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Kelsey Ford:
Celebrate Short Story Month: 9 Craft Books to Help You Write Your Collection
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Customer Comments
randolph.jim has commented on (3) products
Harry Potter and the Goblet Of Fire: Harry Potter 4
by
J K Rowling
randolph.jim
, September 21, 2011
This is where the series really hit it's stride. The Dementors in book 3 were a great addition, but it wasn't until Voldemort actually killed someone that he became a good nemesis. I hate to say one book in a well-connected series is the "best," but this is certainly a highlight.
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Where the Mountain Meets the Moon
by
Lin, Grace
randolph.jim
, September 21, 2011
This is gorgeous on so many levels. The writing, the artwork, even the fonts. It's full of fairy-tale like stories that wrap around each other and lead to an extremely satisfying conclusion. Everyone I've recommended it to, from third graders to grandparents have a deep love for this book. It's truly timeless. One cool thing: in most stories of this type, the lone child goes off on her adventures and we never hear from the parents again. Not so here. The parents, and their longing for their adventuring child, play an important role in the tale as well. A true triumph of the power of storytelling.
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Freethinkers A History of American Secularism
by
Susan Jacoby
randolph.jim
, January 01, 2011
Should be required reading in American history classes.
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