Average customer rating:
- Worst Book ever
- not worth the money
- Great mystery!
- By-the-numbers romantic suspense
- you think you know someone, but you don't
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Dark Paradise
Tami Hoag
Manufacturer: Bantam
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Mass Market Paperback
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Cry Wolf
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Still Waters
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Dust to Dust
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Night Sins
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Guilty as Sin
ASIN: 0553561618
Release Date: 1994-03-01 |
Book Description
New Eden, Montana, is a piece of heaven on earth where one woman died in her own private hell. Now it's up to ex-court reporter Marilee Jennings to decipher the puzzle of her best friend's death. But someone has a stake in silencing her suspicion. Someone with secrets worth killing for—and the power to turn this beautiful haven into a...
Dark Paradise.
And as Mari digs deeper beneath New Eden's picture-perfect exterior, finding the truth is suddenly no longer a matter of justice.
It's her only hope of staying alive.
Download Description
In the place she feels safest, terror lies waiting...
New Eden, Montana, is a piece of heaven on earth where one woman died in her own private hell. Now it's up to ex-court reporter Marilee Jennings to decipher the puzzle of her best friend's death. But someone has a stake in silencing her suspicion. Someone with secrets worth killing for -- and the power to turn this beautiful haven into a dark paradise.
And as Mari digs deeper beneath New Eden's picture-perfect exterior, finding the truth is suddenly no longer a matter of justice.
It's her only hope of staying alive.
Customer Reviews:
Worst Book ever.......2007-06-02
This has to be the worst book that I have ever read. I can read a book in a day or 2, but with this one I spent 4 days on it, and then I was only half way through it. I finally skimmed the rest of the book because it was so boring.
I hated the character of J. D. Rafferty. If a man talked that bad to a woman in real life he would have a busted lip. Why in the world would Marilee Jennings want anything to do with his sort is beyond me.
I didn't even like the other charters of the book, they were boring and the story just seemed to go nowhere.
I have read all of Tami Hoag's books, this is the only one that was missing from my collection of her books. I am glad I got it at a yard sale for .50 cents. That is about all this book was worth.
Other people may like this book, but this is just my opinion.
not worth the money.......2007-01-06
This book would have been good had the author not inserted the raunchy sex. I would not recommend this book.
Great mystery!.......2006-09-10
This book was definitely worth the time. The pace was unerringly well-timed and the author should get an award for this piece!
By-the-numbers romantic suspense.......2006-08-05
Marilee Jennings quits her stifling job, disapproving family and cheating boyfriend in Sacramento and drives to the picturesque small town of New Eden, Montana to visit her old friend Lucy. Upon arriving she meets J.D Fletcher, an ornery rancher straight from central casting. Fletcher sneaks up on her from behind, gropes her and rudely informs her that Lucy's dead and has been for a week. Charming. Marilee proceeds to fall in love with him, which stretches the limits of credibility even allowing for her quirkiness. She goes sleuthing in an effort to discover more about Lucy's death and uncovers some nasty truths about her friend. Along the way Marilee meets up with a cast of stereotyped characters: the heart-of-gold waitress, the sleazy Hollywood mogul, the bumbling small-town sheriff, J.D's gambling, womanising brother and his emotionally fragile, long-suffering wife. To her credit, Hoag portrays Montana so exquisitely I wanted to pack my bags and move there. Despite Marilee's tolerance of J.D's sometimes appalling treatment of her, I found myself liking her nonetheless. It's not a bad novel, per se, it's just that Hoag can - and has - done so much better.
you think you know someone, but you don't.......2006-07-15
tami hoag has a gift of grabbing your attention from the first sentence. the theme of this book in my opinion is "you think you know someone but you don't".. who wouldn't be devastated when you came to surprise your bestfriend, you ended up finding her murdered, brutally. on top of that, you later found out that the person you called a bestfriend was not the person you had knew all along and had to deal with all the allegations while trying to find your true self...
there's a lot of emotions and anger in this book and hoag portrayed it very well that you just can't help but to feel for marilee eventhough she's just a character..
i enjoyed every minute of it
Average customer rating:
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Tami Hoag CD Collection 2: Still Waters, Cry Wolf, and Dark Paradise
Tami Hoag
Manufacturer: Brilliance Audio on CD
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Audio CD
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Tami Hoag CD Collection 1: Night Sins and Guilty as Sin
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Robert Crais CD Collection: The Last Detective, The Forgotten Man, Hostage (Elvis Cole Novels)
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Greg Iles CD Collection: The Quiet Game, Turning Angel, and Blood Memory
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Lee Child CD Collection: Killing Floor, Die Trying, Tripwire (Jack Reacher)
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Robert Crais CD Collection 2: The Monkey's Raincoat, Stalking the Angel, Lullaby Town (Elvis Cole)
ASIN: 142331588X
Release Date: 2006-09-29 |
Book Description
Still Waters:
When the body of a murdered man literally falls at Elizabeth Stuart's feet, she's able to wash away the blood - but not the terror. Unwelcome newcomers to Still Creek, Minnesota, she and her troubled teenage son are treated with suspicion by the locals, including the sheriff. Yet nothing will stop her from digging beneath the town's placid surface for the truth - except the killer.
Cry Wolf:
Attorney Laurel Chandler did not come back to Bayou Breaux to seek justice. That once-burning obsession had destroyed her credibility, her career, her marriage - and nearly her sanity. But when a ruthless predator strikes too close to home, she's lured into a perverse game from which there may be no escape. Once before, Laurel's cries against a monstrous evil went unanswered. Who will listen now?
Dark Paradise:
New Eden, Montana, is a piece of heaven on earth where one woman died in her own private hell. Now it's up to ex-court reporter Marilee Jennings to decipher the puzzle of her best friend's death. But someone has a stake in silencing her suspicion. Someone with secrets worth killing for - and the power to turn this beautiful haven into a . . .Dark Paradise.
Book Description
"The Dark Side of Paradise is an effective attempt to put the politics back into Bali's twentieth-century history. With a sure mastery of both Indonesian and Dutch sources, Robinson analyzes the class tensions between aristocrats and commoners during the late colonial period."--Times Literary Supplement
"Robinson's work reaches beyond history, amply illustrating the possibilities of what might be termed a 'comparative historical sociology' approach."--Indonesia "Robinson's incisive, well-written work demolishes the fiction of the 'peaceful Balinese' that pervades academic and popular literature, and, for the first time, places modern political history directly into the middle of Balinese scholarship."--Choice
"This is a brilliant book that must be read by anybody interested in modern Indonesia."--Journal of the Royal Institute of Linguistics and Anthropology
Customer Reviews:
The Other Face of Bali.......2003-05-01
I first visited Indonesia in 1984 and fell in love with Bali. I have since returned each year to the "Island of the Gods" from where I have been exploring the rest of the Indonesian Archipelago, and since 1991, I share my time equally between Bali and Winchester, Massachusetts. Of course, I am always eager to know more about all aspects of Balinese life. Although there is a plethora of books about Bali dealing with its wonderful culture and its arts, it is not the case about its particular history. After a while, it became obvious to me that this important missing part of the puzzle was essential to further my understanding of the complex character of the Balinese. The history of Bali is clouded in the mist of time, and reliable informations on the subject tend to be scarce and are not easily available. Historical documents, written in old Balinese language are obviously not accessible to a non-specialist Westerner such I myself. Because of the special relationship between the Netherlands and Indonesia, there exist numerous documents written in Dutch, covering the last few centuries. However, as with most people, the Dutch language is not my forte.
Therefore, it was a "revelation" to come across Robinson's book, "The Dark Side of Bali". The book covers in details the historical and political events in Bali, from the end of 19th Century until the aftermath of the 1965 coup d'etat. It relates the Balinese experience under the Dutch colonial domination, during the National Revolution, 1945 - 1949, the Sukarno era, 1950 - 1965, and the military coup of 1965 and its aftermath. It reveals another face of Bali, the hidden face of Paradise. It is a scholarly book based on Dutch and Indonesian sources. It reads well, and contains an impressive number of references. Geoffrey Robinson, Assistant Professor of History at the University of California, Los Angeles, is obviously an expert on the subject, as demonstrated by this in-depth analysis of the social and economic roots of the deep divisions that have, since colonial times, penetrated and defined the Balinese society. Robinson shows how in the 1920's, the Dutch restored and in some cases created a "traditional" Bali to counter a perceived nationalistic threat. This was achieved by resurrecting and maintaining the old ruling royal families as guarantors of these traditions. The Japanese occupation during WWII, relying mostly on the sudras (lower cast) upset the exiting social order, and explained the social problems which existed until the Sukarto period, eventually leading to the horrific massacred of 1965 and the ascend of General Suharto to power. Robinson presents a picture of Bali quite unlike the idyllic, peaceful island promoted by the tourist industry, but a society influenced by the World's politics and driven by class and ideological conflicts. This book surely belongs in the library of anyone interested in Indonesia in general and Bali in particular.
Book Description
In a newly enlarged edition of this eye-opening book, David T. Courtwright offers an original interpretation of a puzzling chapter in American social and medical history: the dramatic change in the pattern of opiate addiction--from respectable upper-class matrons to lower-class urban males, often with a criminal record. Challenging the prevailing view that the shift resulted from harsh new laws, Courtwright shows that the crucial role was played by the medical rather than the legal profession. Dark Paradise tells the story not only from the standpoint of legal and medical sources, but also from the perspective of addicts themselves. With the addition of a new introduction and two new chapters on heroin addiction and treatment since 1940, Courtwright has updated this compelling work of social history for the present crisis of the Drug War.
Average customer rating:
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Dark Skies Over Paradise
Alida Louisa Bogaardt
Manufacturer: Trafford Publishing
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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ASIN: 141202787X
Release Date: 2006-07-06 |
Average customer rating:
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Dark Paradise
Tami Hoag
Manufacturer: Bantam Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Mass Market Paperback
ASIN: B000GSB01Y |
Average customer rating:
- Trouble In Paradise
- A passonate look into the trials of eternal death.
- LIKE VC ANDREWS? ANNE RICE?
- Don't overlook this book!
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This Dark Paradise
Wendy Haley
Manufacturer: Diamond Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Contemporary
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ASIN: 078650000X |
Customer Reviews:
Trouble In Paradise.......2001-01-06
Alexander Danilov returns to his ancestral home in Georgia after 40+ years abroad to be spend time with his several-times-removed grandaughter before she dies of old age and to reclaim the family home. This was a wonderful vampire book with a touch of romance. The violence is graphic in some spots, but well worth reading. Cant' wait to read the next installment - These Fallen Angels.
A passonate look into the trials of eternal death........1999-10-08
Alexi Danilov, founder of the Danilov clan comes back to his domain only once in a generation. Like always the Danilovs are fighting each and themselves, but Alex wouldn't have it any other way. Unknown to him is the fact that he is being by a stalked an old enermy that is thought to be dead. This in fact is true. He like Alex is a vampire. This is to be his hardest challenge ever.
LIKE VC ANDREWS? ANNE RICE?.......1999-02-10
This is one of the best books i have ever read involving modern vampires, anne rice aside. This is a novel that goes for the thorat and doesn't let go. It is simialr to vc andrews with the step back art. Similar too, is the characters. I liked the bad girl where in this novel, you get two. It has a VERY good plot and story line. I look forward to the next one in the series. I think this author should replace the ghostwriter of vc andrews. she's that good.
Don't overlook this book!.......1998-06-23
I've read This Dark Paradise twice, and it gets better every time. The book was like actually being there, it was written so well. I enjoyed it because there were few slow patches, and it always offered a surprise around every turn. Another point in its favor is all of the feeling that seems to have gone into it. Not one dimensional like some books.
Average customer rating:
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Dark Paradise (Finnish Literature)
Rosa Liksom
Manufacturer: Dalkey Archive Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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ASIN: 1564784371 |
Product Description
A man murders a grocer over fifteen cents--but in the sharp, icy prose and detached tone that defines this collection, his crime seems neither sensational nor entirely reprehensible. Rosa Liksom populates a world of snow-covered landscapes, antiseptic apartments, fish factories, and lumber camps with the obsessive, the violent, and the unhinged. A woman refuses to leave prison until she has served her entire sentence. A man obsessively cleans his apartment as his life moves on around him. A woman kills her new husband over his neediness and inability to leave their bed. The stark lives and actions of these characters are infused with an emotional intimacy that draws the reader into uncomfortable empathy with the extremity of their deeds.
Product Description
multiple books ship as one item. save on shipping/handling charges.
Average customer rating:
- Not Free SF Reader
- I think even the villain was confused!
- Brust's excellent storytelling continues
- Enjoyable light read
- the best in the taltos series
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Yendi
Steven Brust
Manufacturer: Ace Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Brust, Steven | ( B ) | Authors, A-Z | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Subjects | Books
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The Book of Jhereg (Vlad Taltos)
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Phoenix
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Orca
ASIN: 0441944604 |
Customer Reviews:
Not Free SF Reader.......2007-09-03
Yendi delves into the backstory of Vlad Taltos, as he details how he came to be a player in the House of Jhereg, and bits and pieces about how he grew up and his life.
He gets involved with a conflict with another Jhereg, Laris, and even worse than that Vlad and his associates discover that there is a plot by Sethra the Younger and the Sorceress in Green to put a Dragon Emperor on the throne, thus elevanting their own position.
Vlad also falls had for Cawti, a human female thief with a dragonlord partner.
Luckily, Sethra Lavode and Morrolan, with Vlad, Cawti and Norathar's help have the power to overcome.
I think even the villain was confused!.......2005-12-12
Steven Brust's Yendi is an even shorter novel than his first Vlad Taltos book, Jhereg, but that doesn't harm it in the least. Brust has a way of economizing words so that his plots seem a lot larger than they are. Brust also manages to give us even more backstory on the Dragaeran Empire and its political workings, the House of Dragon, and its relationship with the House of Jhereg. How he manages to pack all of this into a book, along with the plot itself, is a mystery to me, but he does it very well.
This is a prequel to Jhereg, showing us, among other things, how Vlad met his wife, Cawti. It seems that a rival Jhereg boss, named Laris, is trying to move in on Vlad's territory. This basically sets up a war between the two of them, and things escalate to the point that the Empress sends in some of the Phoenix Guard to keep order. After being almost saved from one assassination attempt by his Dragon friends, Aliera and Morrolan, Aliera revives him as well as the two assassins (that's something that can often be done by the sorcery in the Empire) and Vlad learns that things are a lot more complicated than he had expected. Somebody's using Laris to further their own political ends, a conspiracy that could reach to the top of the Empire. And even worse, Vlad has fallen in love with the woman who killed him!
I began reading this before realizing that Jhereg was written first, and while Yendi is certainly understandable without having read the first book, a lot of the background of the series is revealed in it. I quickly read the first one before coming back to this one, and I was much happier. That being said, it is a prequel, so we get to see how he met Cawti, which was quite surprising. Brust does a wonderful job with this relationship, making it so it doesn't really seem unusual. They find that they have a lot in common, and we get some personal detail on Vlad that tells us why he became an assassin. We knew that he hated Dragaerans but the reasons he became an assassin drive this point home. It was a nice touch, and I loved the scenes between them when he revealed himself to her.
It amazes me how tight this novel is, considering the fact that it shifts gears in the middle to reveal the deeper and darker plot. The first part is basically concerned with the war between Vlad and Laris, and with the various assassination attempts. But when Vlad realizes that something else is going on, it really takes off and Vlad's mind is working faster than ours to figure out what is really happening, and who's behind it all. It's a tribute to Brust's characterizations that we can believe it when Vlad suspects that his Dragon friends may be behind some of it, because we can believe that they might be, even as we know they are Vlad's friends. As much loyalty as they have to Vlad, they are loyal to the Dragon House first, and when the plot quickly gets political, it wouldn't be that surprising to see them up to something.
In fact, this showcases even more Vlad's isolation and how much he needs Cawti. Loiosh, his Jhereg familiar and friend, is the only sentient being that he feels he can totally trust, and their relationship is also brilliantly portrayed. The psionic bond between them (even though psionics are common with these people, and Vlad can pretty much communicate with anybody using them, his bond with Loiosh seems more special) makes for some interesting dialogues during scenes, such as when Vlad is wondering if Aliera could be behind the whole thing, and Loiosh tells him he's being too paranoid. Brust manages to make Loiosh very likable, loyal to Vlad but not afraid to talk back to him if he feels it's necessary. He's also Vlad's personal protector, which comes in handy a few times too.
The plot is intricate (which isn't surprising, considering the ultimate plotter is a Yendi, and that's not a spoiler, because we don't find out who the Yendi is until Vlad does), but it does hang together. It seems to be a lot more convoluted than it needs to be, but evidently that's a trait of the Yendi, so it's not surprising. I'm glad that Vlad didn't figure out everything all at once, as I really don't like those mystery plots where one little piece of information all of a sudden brings the whole thing to light. Brust avoids that one, unlike the problem with Jhereg that I had. My only gripe with Yendi is that the Laris war almost becomes an afterthought, dealt with in a few pages at the end.
After two books, I've become a big fan of Steven Brust, and I can't wait to read more of his stuff. Yendi is another winning addition in the Vlad Taltos saga, and it's small enough that it's also a quick read. Good for those of you with large "to-be-read" piles, that it won't take you very long. This one should be added to it.
David Roy
Brust's excellent storytelling continues.......2002-10-15
I was completely enthralled with "Jhereg," and eagerly began "Yendi" immediately upon finishing it, looking forward to once again being thoroughly immersed in the world Brust adeptly weaves around the reader. I was definitely not disappointed.
I was a bit confused for the first few paragraphs, until I realized that "Yendi" is actually a prequel to "Jhereg," taking place earlier in time. Vlad is just getting started in the organization, and naturally encounters some resistance in the process. While the formula is somewhat the same (mystery unravelled at the last second, after much intrigue set in fantasy world,) it works exceptionally well.
Vlad's voice flows easily, and the words just kind of glide through the reader's head - as the pages turned, pictures and scenes formed in my head without my really being aware of having read the sentences. This is the mark of a truly gifted yarn-spinner. The same wit, humor, and clever banter that was so successful in "Jhereg" is liberally sprinkled through "Yendi," as well, and the characters are highly-believable.
The world Brust has created is vivid, and he doesn't go to extreme lengths to try to justify everything and explain all of the rules, spoon-feeding the reader, holding our hands through this thought processes; rather, he drops hints, and uses context to convey items of import. Sometimes, he flat out tells us "it's none of your business," or "that is a story for another time," or "you really don't need to know all of it, but." It's great stuff, and I love his voice. He gives small nods to current culture icons such as Monty Python in places, and uses modern language instead of pained, stilted "Hie thee hence, lass!" "Evermore, milady" and other such stuffs, making it a much easier, more believable story and setting.
A conflict within the House of Jhereg has Vlad being tossed hither, thither and yon, caught right up in the heart of things - would you expect anything less? In the process, he meets two of the land's best assassins, is killed by one of them, falls wildly in love, and of course hatches a plot so clever you could put a tail on it and call it a weasel.
Loiosh has a bit more to say in this volume, but is still mostly confined to one-liners - I do wish Brust would give Vlad and his familiar a more substantial relationship. The co-stars in the story have depth, great lines, and play crucial parts in the Vlad's life and in the plot in general.
A very entertaining next step in what will hopefully prove to be a great series. I'm tackling "Teckla" immediately!
Enjoyable light read.......2001-11-15
If you can't get your hands on Taltos, Yendi is a great place to delve into this series. Much nicer writing and more background than provided in Jhereg, it packs in plenty of action and involves all the likeable characters you could want. Combines elements of mystery, mob, and fantasy in a delightful style. The only real negative is some huge inconsistencies with Jhereg and a couple internal conflicts -- Brust needs an external reader to point these thing out before he goes to print.
the best in the taltos series.......2000-11-13
This one was so good that I missed reading it and subsequently read it an additional time just to savor it. Yendi takes place in the earlier days of Taltos's life, and speaks of a major Jhereg war that he started. I liked the "palace intrigue"/behind the scenes power struggles that occurred throughout the book. I even had to sit down about halfway through just to catch up to what was going on, which i consider a good sign.
There's even an amusing Monty Python reference hidden in there. Brust's writing style was getting better around this time, there is an improvement in style between this one and Jhereg. He fixes some of the details of the Taltos universe (for example, there are ways you can never be resurrected without using a soul killing dagger) and gets into character development, telling more about how Vlad's past made him the Boss he is today. Too bad its Brust's least favorite.
So, if you liked the first one, and don't mind slightly-confusing tales of aristocratic power struggles, then definitely pick this one up.
Average customer rating:
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Find the Yendi
Thomas Hobson
Manufacturer: Dorrance Pub Co
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Teens | Subjects | Books | Authors, A-Z | Biographies & Memoirs | Health, Mind & Body | History & Historical Fiction | Horror | Literature & Fiction | Manga | Mysteries | Reference | Religion & Spirituality | School & Sports | Science & Technology | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Series | Social Issues
ASIN: 0805932089 |
Customer Reviews:
A Magical World.......2002-04-26
Written by Thomas Hobson, "Find the Yendi" is a book about another world, a world of magic, in which six children suddenly find themselves. Their job in this world is to find "Yendi", an all-powerful force who is supposed to have all answers. Suddenly, the children are separated, and each one must deal with this new world in his or her own way, with the friends and the enemies they find along their path. They learn that this is a world of thought, and not of speech, and they also find many friendly creatures, especially "Go-Go", who aid them. A true work of fantasy and suspense.
Average customer rating:
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The Great Red Frog (Illustrated Edition) (Dodo Press)
M. Yendis
Manufacturer: Dodo Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Literature | Children's Books | Subjects | Books | Action & Adventure | Children's Literature Guides | Classics by Age | Fairy Tales, Folk Tales & Myths | General | Humorous | Literary Criticism & Collections | Poetry | Popular Culture | Read-Aloud | Science Fiction, Fantasy, Mystery & Horror | Short Story Collections
ASIN: 1406542407 |
Book Description
The Great Red Frog is an illustrated children's book. Mosnar Yendis was the pseudonym used by Sidney Ransom, the author. It is his real name written backwards.
Average customer rating:
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Yendi
Steven Brust
Manufacturer: Ace Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Mass Market Paperback
ASIN: B000PBZHKM |
Average customer rating:
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Yendi Zabarimas
J. J. Holden
Manufacturer: see notes for publisher info
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
ASIN: B000NP743I |
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