Cart
|
|
my account
|
wish list
|
help
|
800-878-7323
Hello, |
Login
MENU
Browse
New Arrivals
Bestsellers
Featured Preorders
Award Winners
Audio Books
See All Subjects
Used
Staff Picks
Staff Picks
Picks of the Month
Bookseller Displays
50 Books for 50 Years
25 Best 21st Century Sci-Fi & Fantasy
25 PNW Books to Read Before You Die
25 Books From the 21st Century
25 Memoirs to Read Before You Die
25 Global Books to Read Before You Die
25 Women to Read Before You Die
25 Books to Read Before You Die
Gifts
Gift Cards & eGift Cards
Powell's Souvenirs
Journals and Notebooks
socks
Games
Sell Books
Blog
Events
Find A Store
Don't Miss
A Sale By Any Other Name
Spring Sale
Scientifically Proven Sale
Powell's Author Events
Oregon Battle of the Books
Audio Books
Visit Our Stores
Powell's Staff:
New Literature in Translation: March 2023
(0 comment)
Spring may bring spring showers, but it also brings new spring books! We're happy to present to you our favorite new works in translation published this past month. On this list, you’ll find a tidy piece of perfection from an Argentinean master of the short novel; chronicle of wartime Kyiv from 2022...
Read More
»
Powell's Staff:
Powell's 2023 Book Preview: The Second Quarter
(0 comment)
Jinwoo Chong:
Clock In: Jinwoo Chong’s Playlist for 'Flux'
(0 comment)
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
##LOC[Cancel]##
Customer Comments
SeattleMom has commented on (5) products
Coding Freedom The Ethics & Aesthetics of Hacking
by
Gabriella Coleman
SeattleMom
, September 10, 2013
I am impressed! Gabriella is an excellent writer. This is a book for those who love anthropology, new cultures, not just those who love coding and tech. The cover was interesting enough that I checked it out of my local library. Enjoyed it so much I bought it! I hope Gabriella continues to explore and write!
Was this comment helpful? |
Yes
|
No
report this comment
Obsessive Genius The Inner World of Marie Curie
by
Barbara Goldsmith
SeattleMom
, January 23, 2012
This is an amazing book! Barbara Goldsmith not only recreates Professor Marie Curie's life but answers many questions I've been puzzled about WW II, French historical connection to Radium and Professor Curie's important impact to physics and chemistry. There is no getting past chapters before the book becomes too good to put down. This book captures the reader at the introduction.
Was this comment helpful? |
Yes
|
No
(1 of 2 readers found this comment helpful)
report this comment
Red Herring Without Mustard Flavia de Luce
by
Alan Bradley
SeattleMom
, January 02, 2012
2011 was a year of many challenges but also the year I discovered a new, talented, creative fiction author! The older I get the more challenging this is. Alan Bradley's main character is Flavia de Luce, the 11 year old enthusiast of chemistry, with a special interest in poisons. Flavia’s superior observational and questioning talents leads her into secret misdeeds in the hamlet of Bishop’s Lacey, a stolen toddler, and finally a dead body in her backyard. It is possible to be 11 again and be Flavia rescuing gypsies, making and losing BFFs (best friends forever), and eluding her two officious older sisters. This is no penny mystery when the murderer is obvious by the 3rd chapter. Pedaling Gladys, her bicycle once enjoyed by her dead mother, Flavia uncovers odd twists, tangled dark deeds and dangerous secrets.
Was this comment helpful? |
Yes
|
No
(2 of 2 readers found this comment helpful)
report this comment
Take a Seat One Man One Tandem & Twenty Thousand Miles of Possibilities
by
Dominic Gill
SeattleMom
, December 28, 2011
I can tell how good a read is by how many other books I read at the same time. One in my haversack for the bus. Another book by the computer for those passing long moments of updates/downloads/start... Another by the bed... I am not the type to try and remember where I last read a book to grab it as I run for the bus~~ Unless it is a really good read, and this one is! 'Take a Seat' was the only book I read from Dominic's journey from Alaska to Ushuaia. This is not your normal cycle story from point a to b book for Dominic is riding a tandem to pick up 'stokers' (anyone to take the empty back seat and join the adventure!). But what really captured my heart was the fact from Vancouver, BC to entering Mexico I have traveled/lived at many of his stops and he was spot on! in describing the people and cultures he experienced. With this I could trust what he wrote as he traveled further south. The best quote from the book - 'I was being forced, through experience, to conclude that the vast majority on this continent are positive and loving people. Every day I would pass a TV showing crashes, robbing, and abductions. Either, like a parting of the waves, I was riding through it protected, or the nastiness didn't exist in the volumes we are led to believe.'
Was this comment helpful? |
Yes
|
No
report this comment
Boneshaker Clockwork Century 1
by
Cherie Priest
SeattleMom
, January 12, 2011
I bought this book for the pleasure of reading about an alternative Seattle. I was rewarded with a fantastic read! I have not enjoyed a new book from a USA author in years. Cherie's characters quickly come alive in her 1860 Seattle. She created an adventure that travels (and in a few areas rearranges) popular 2009 neighborhoods still around from the 1800s. Most enjoyable are her characters that capture that odd, unique Seattle attitude. I would also like to compliment the cover artist Jon Foster and Cover designer Jamie Stafford-Hill. Yes a cover does not make the book good, but an excellent cover on a great book creates a complete package!
Was this comment helpful? |
Yes
|
No
(6 of 9 readers found this comment helpful)
report this comment