Average customer rating:
- Operation: CHAN!!!!!!!!!!!!
- Good introduction to Chan
- The ultimate Jackie Chan book
- Best Jackie Chan book ever written
- Buy this Book!!!!!
|
Jackie Chan: Inside the Dragon
Clyde Gentry
Manufacturer: Taylor Trade Publishing
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Actors & Actresses
| Arts & Literature
| Biographies & Memoirs
| Subjects
| Books
Entertainers
| Arts & Literature
| Biographies & Memoirs
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Biographies & Memoirs
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Movies
| Entertainment
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Arts & Photography
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Performing Arts
| Arts & Photography
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: 0878339701 |
Customer Reviews:
Operation: CHAN!!!!!!!!!!!!.......2001-06-07
To date this is the absolute best book devoted to the movies of Jackie Chan. The only negative is that the book is already out of date, a second revised edition is over due. "Inside The Dragon" was published just before "Mr. Nice Guy" was released. There is a mention of a few possible future projects which included "Rush Hour", which at this point was intended to team Chan with Martin Lawrence. A chapter devoted to Jackie Chan finally breaking through, in a big way with "Rush Hour", in America would have to be added. There are a few books devoted to Jackie Chan, however none of them are as satifying as this one. "Inside The Dragon" covers the vast majority of his films and is complimented by tons of stills from his movies as well as various movie posters. The author offers insight into most of Jackie Chan's major films. There are also sidebars devoted to a few of Jackie Chan's frequent costars such as Ken Lo and Dick Wei. Each chapter is devoted to different aspects of Jackie Chan's career, from his early Lo Wei "chop socky" films to his later collaborations with director Stanley Tong. Two great in depth chapters are devoted to Jackie Chan's ten best fight scenes and his seven "best" movies. I beleive that this book is essential to any fan of Jackie Chan. After four years I still refer to this book repeatedly.
Good introduction to Chan.......2001-02-15
Inside the Dragon serves as a great introduction to the world of Jackie Chan. He is an insipring actor and director and Gentry covers many of his important films, though the information is very outdated. This book was written when Chinese films were prevalent on laserdisc and VCD, but not on DVD. Gentry does make some claims that I feel to be unbeleivable at times. He states that Chan did not perform many of his movie stunts. Now, any real Chan fan knows by simple oberservation that Chan uses a stunt double quite often (if you don't believe me see Thunderbolt, Dragons Forever, the Protector, etc.) but that's besides the point. What I didn't find was sufficient evidence supporting some of Gentry's claims, though you can judge for yourself. I recommend the book because of its moderate price tag, otherwise read Chan's auto biography I am Jacie Chan: My Life in Action.
The ultimate Jackie Chan book.......1999-08-03
Wow! This book gives you real insights into Jackie Chan. I want a book like this on Bruce Lee, and I want it yesterday!
Best Jackie Chan book ever written.......1999-07-09
Of all the books on Jackie Chan, this one is so indepth. It covers everything! I don't think Jackie could have covered his own career any better than this. Gentry must be a fanatic to write this enthusiastically. Way to go Clyde!
Buy this Book!!!!!.......1999-01-08
I found this book to be entertaining and funny. Showing JAckie at his best and at what he does the most, Be funny. I hope you will like the book as much as i did!!!
Book Description
The Horse's Mouth, the third and most celebrated volume of Joyce Cary's First Trilogy, is perhaps the finest novel ever written about an artist. Its painter hero, the charming and larcenous Gulley Jimson, has an insatiable genius for creation and a no less remarkable appetite for destruction. Is he a great artist? a has-been? or an exhausted, drunken ne'er-do-well? He is without doubt a visionary, and as he criss-crosses London in search of money and inspiration the world as seen though his eyes appears with a newly outrageous and terrible beauty.
Customer Reviews:
My favorite book........2007-06-15
All readers have their favorite books, the ones you pull out every year or two to read again, or to pass along to a friend. This is mine. The Horse's Mouth is so many things. It's a visual novel -- the world filtered through the eyes of a sensual and hapless painter. It's a literary work that incorporates William Blake's visionary poetry to great effect. It's an occasionally comedic work that is also poignant. It's a story about an unreliable man who is probably not very nice to be around, is certainly not honest, is terribly self-centered, is capable of violence, and yet is thoroughly likable. One of my most common complaints against authors is when they fail to create characters the reader can care about, for good or ill. Gully is a thoroughly developed, and very flawed, character that you will root for. You might not want to come face to face with such a fellow, but he's worth reading about.
And if you like this book, go on to read Herself Surprised. Just as Cary was able to get into the mind of an artist for The Horse's Mouth, he manages to view the world as a woman in Herself Surprised. Few male authors have done this a well as he.
It's only the art that matters after all.......2006-09-16
This is my favorite book of all time. As an artist/author I can relate completely with the main character, the endearing, irascible but delightful Gully Jimson. It seems as though the Universe is against him trying to work and create his art! Like the great William Blake, Gully's painter poet hero, Gully is not respected and appreciated for his original artistic genius.
The prose is outstanding and rich, lyrical, poetic and beautiful, the characters unique, realistic and unforgettable. If you never read another book in your life you need to read this one first. I have read it again and again and when times get tough it always makes me laugh!
I only wish Joyce Carey had written much more as he was the best of the best.
Just read it........2004-09-05
I read Herself Surprised, and it is one of my all time favorites. I tried To Be a Pilgrim, but the main character was so pensive about everything that I couldn't take it. The Horse's Mouth is absolutely great. I'm not going into great detail about the books. You can read the other reviews. Read it if you love good literature that comments on people and the times in which it was written (in this case still rings true).
Totally Rad.......2004-01-21
Gulley Jimson is a totally rad main character! I've never seen a profile of an artist this imaginative and complete. Gulley lives and breathes and climbs off the page right into your reality. He is obsessed with painting--he sees things he wants to paint everywhere and he describes it all in beautiful detail. This would be annoying in any other book. But Gulley is such a charmer, and Cary so talented, that as Gulley scrapes through life in his odd way, you forgive him his many faults. He's an artist after all. He perpetrates plenty of injustices himself, of course, but you appreciate his personality and philosophy so much, that you want to cut him a break.
One of the many masterful touches Joyce Cary uses is to always have Gulley working on a significant painting. It gets you to root for Gulley to do something even bigger than his one famous painting, and it makes you sympathize with the real people who put up with artists. But Gulley can't win. He is painting The Fall and it gets used to patch the roof of his hovel. He's painting Lazarus at the Grave and he has to flee from a crash-pad turned sour. He's going to sell a sketch of The Bath and instead manages to murder his only love. He's painting The Creation and the city comes and knocks the wall down. It is beautiful. Cary frames the whole novel with various potential masterworks that Gulley is painting, and in each one you see how life gets in the way of art, and how random are the winds of fortune.
We read this book in my book club and we agreed that it was one of the best of the 20 or so we've so far read together. I'm curious about the other two in Cary's trilogy. This is very much a complete work in itself, but I understand from the introduction that as a series it's even more illuminating.
This NYRB edition is printed on quality paper that stays white for a long time (I got my copy used and it's still very nice). Which is great, because you'll probably want to keep this book.
One of the Best!.......2003-12-11
This is one of the funniest books I've read. Great characters and excellent dialogue.
Average customer rating:
- Tripping the Light Ephemeral
|
A Ghost in Trieste
Joseph Cary
Manufacturer: University Of Chicago Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Europe
| History
| Subjects
| Books
| Albania
| Ancient
| Andorra
| Austria
| Belgium
| Bosnia and Herzegovina
| Bulgaria
| Central Europe
| Croatia
| Cyprus
| Czech Republic
| Denmark
| Eastern
| Eastern Europe
| England
| Estonia
| Finland
| Former Soviet Republics & Siberia
| France
| General
| Germany
| Greece
| Hungary
| Iceland
| Ireland
| Italy
| Latvia
| Liechtenstein
| Lithuania
| Luxembourg
| Macedonia
| Malta
| Moldova
| Monaco
| Netherlands
| Norway
| Poland
| Portugal
| Romania
| Russia
| San Marino
| Scandinavia
| Scotland
| Serbia
| Slovakia
| Slovenia
| Spain
| Sweden
| Switzerland
| Ukraine
| Vatican
| Wales
| Western
| Yugoslavia
General
| Criticism & Theory
| History & Criticism
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
Anthologies
| Poetry
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Poetry
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
Poetry
| Writing
| Reference
| Subjects
| Books
Travel
| Writing
| Reference
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Europe
| Travel
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Italy
| Europe
| Travel
| Subjects
| Books
Essays & Travelogues
| Reference & Tips
| Travel
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Travel
| Subjects
| Books
Look Inside Travel Books
| Trip
| Specialty Stores
| Books
All Titles
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
Similar Items:
-
Trieste and the Meaning of Nowhere
-
A Dead Man in Trieste
ASIN: 0226095282 |
Book Description
Gem of the Adriatic, Trieste sparkled and beckoned through the pages of poets and novelists. Drawn there in search of literary ghosts, of the poet Umberto Saba and the novelists Italo Svevo and James Joyce, Joseph Cary found instead a city with an imaginative life of its own, the one that rises, tantalizing from the pages of this book. The story of Cary's travels, A Ghost in Trieste, is also a tale of discovery and transformation, as the bustling world of port and airplane, baggage and trams and trains becomes the landscape of history and literature, language and art, psychoanalysis and the self.
Here is the crossroads of East and West. A port held in turn by the Romans, the Venetians, the Austrians, the Germans, the Slavs, and finally the Italians, Trieste is the capital of nowhere, fertile source of a unique literary florescence before the First World War. At times an exile home and an exiled city. "I cannot claim to have walked across it all,:" wrote Saba, the poet of Trieste in 1910 of the city Cary crosses and recrosses, seeking the poetry of the place that inspired its literary giants. Trieste's cultural and historical riches, its geographical splendor of hills and sea and mysterious presence unfold in a series of stories, monologues and literary juxtapositions that reveal the city's charms as well as its seductive hold on the writer's imagination. Throughout, literary and immediate impressions alike are elaborated in paintings and maps, and in handsome line drawings by Nicholas Read.
This "clownish and adolescent Parsifal," this Trieste of the "prickly grace," this place "impaled in my heart like a permanent point," this symbol of the Adriatic, this "city made of books" — here the book remakes the city. The Trieste of allusions magically becomes a city of palpable allure, of warmth and trying contradictions and gritty beauty. Part travel diary, part guide book, part literary history, A Ghost in Trieste is a brilliant introduction to an extraordinary time and place. In Joseph Cary, Trieste has found a new poet, and readers, a remarkably captivating companion and guide.
Customer Reviews:
Tripping the Light Ephemeral.......2007-07-24
You know celadon ? It's a special kind of Korean ceramic ranging in color from apple green to white, through all stages of pastel green and beige. Old pieces are rare and valuable, the target of certain collectors. Celadon pottery comes in various shapes--plates, jars, bottles, etc---and is always delicate. You could become a big collector, gather in a few dozen specimens, but, let me ask you, would you then be an expert on Korea ? No, you'd just have a nice collection of green pottery. Well, if you read Cary's book on Trieste, you'll page through his series of literary images and reminiscences about times he never knew, a place he spent a total of three weeks in, seemingly speaking to no one. You'll wind up with some delicate images, some lines of poetry, some interesting little biographies of various Trieste notables, and a bit of amateurish history. A celadon collection for sure. I admit the book is sensitively-written, sentimental, and "cultured" (whatever that may mean to you) but if you like books with a bit of focus, well, you might be disappointed here. Not a single living Triestine mars the pages full of pressed flowers. Nobody eats oysters or blows their nose. Some pale grappa once, on a single page.
Cary wanders the streets thinking about three literary figures that didn't really have that much to do with one another, but whom he hoped to draw together in some literary tour-de-force---the novelist Italo Svevo, the poet Umberto Saba, and James Joyce, who taught English in Trieste for many years. Cary curls around the city like a very thin vine, clinging, touching and re-touching the same theme and subjects, calling the world he thus creates "ghostly". Here we are in the park, here we take a tram ride, we buy some old books, talk about some long-lost cultural figures and a bit about the economic boom that brought Trieste to prosperity before WW I. Italy yearned to unite with its Austrian-occupied little brother. It did at last, at an enormous cost unmentioned by Cary. No doubt our work is most ephemeral, light, fleeting. He gives up finally, realizing that his project is not feasible. If the Japanese art of ukiyo-e refers to pictures of a "floating world", Cary's book is `ukiyo-lite". He himself concludes: "There was no actual literary Trieste. It was dead and gone. It was merely myself, poor ghost, who was literary." Pathetic admission. So maybe you'll like this if your taste runs to semi-literary meanderings (well-penned, I stress), accompanied by some twee line drawings and a few photos, but a more indefinite, vague, and ghostly book would be hard to imagine. If that was the author's intention, then he succeeded magnificently. I have not read any other books like this, and I can't say that I wish to do so in future.
Book Description
Herself Surprised, the first volume of Joyce Cary's remarkable First Trilogy, introduces Sara Monday, a woman at once dissolute and devout, passionate and sly. With no regrets, Sara reviews her changing fortunes, remembering the drudgery of domestic servitude, the pleasures of playing the great lady in a small provincial town, and the splendors and miseries of life as the model, muse, and mistress of the painter Gulley Jimson.
Customer Reviews:
Highly Enjoyable.......2005-07-11
I am giving this book 4 stars because it does not rank among the best books I have ever read, which would deserve a 5 star, but certainly better than a mediocre book which would merit only a 3 star. Amazon.com only gives us 5 stars, so I hand them out sparingly.
I enjoyed this old-fashioned read. I laughed at times, felt sympathy and frustration for Sara, and looked forward to where the story was taking her along with the reader. The story line reminds me of the book "Alias Grace" by Margaret Atwood. I am not about to run out and order the other two books in the Joyce Cary trilogy just yet; but some day when I am book dry I know they are there and I can go back to them.
This is truly a great book.......2003-11-24
My take on Sara Monday is very different from what I'm reading here. I believe that she loved life and indulged herself in its pleasures. At the same time she was a nurturing soul. Read it for yourself to decide about her character. Gulley Jimson is also a great character. The descriptions in this book are wonderful. She describes the sea as being like oven glass one day and the edges of knives another. It is so good that I didn't want it to end, and now I'm going to read the other two books in the trilogy.
One of the most enjoyable novels of its period.......2000-11-06
Cary's Sara Monday has often been compared--quite rightly--to Moll Flanders, another irresistible, irrepressible woman of highly suspect morals. Sara's odd adventures in marriage and love make for a highly entertaining read, but you should also pay close attention to her observations of her society; for a woman of little apparent reflection, there's very little that seems to escape her notice. All three books in the Gulley Jimson triptych are remarkable, but this one has a special poignancy.
Cary's triptych.......2000-03-12
I have just reread Cary's three novels, Herself Surprised, To Be a Pilgrim and The Horse's Mouth. It is amzing that books written during the second world war should be so secure in their tone about a vanishing England and its history. Cary uses his three entirely diffeent voices - tricky sensuous woman, nervy religious dirty old man, obsessed manipulative artist- better than anyone else i know uses the limitations of the first person to show what we do and don't know about each other. His descriptions of places and things are delicious. Also I shd like to say what beautiful books the New York Review paperbacks are to handle and read. Most people know The Horse's Mouth, and many know Herself Surprised . I'm not sure To Be A Pilgrim isn't the best and most surprising of the three- which is saying something.
Average customer rating:
- Arrogance and early war tourism in Yugoslavia.
- Early war tourism in the Balkans
|
Phoenix: Memoir of the Bobotes
Joyce Cary
Manufacturer: Phoenix Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Authors
| Arts & Literature
| Biographies & Memoirs
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Biographies & Memoirs
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Historical
| Biographies & Memoirs
| Subjects
| Books
Memoirs
| Biographies & Memoirs
| Subjects
| Books
Strategy
| Military
| History
| Subjects
| Books
World War I
| Military
| History
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Essays
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: 1842121022 |
Book Description
The renowned novelist and author of The Horse's Mouth was 23 at the start of the Balkan War (1912). A romantic idealist, he recorded and illustrated (pen and ink sketches) his experiences.
Customer Reviews:
Arrogance and early war tourism in Yugoslavia........2005-06-13
I have to agree with the previous reviewer. The two Balkan Wars of the 1912-1913 were bloody affairs, and it is a shock to see a writer of the British aristocracy treat them with contempt. Joyce seems to more concerned with what he is eating, and his fellow countrymen's particular personalities than with reporting the bloody conflict. Only in the later part of the book do we get a view of some of the conflict's results. Perhaps this was strictly a personal journal of the writer's own feelings and was not meant for publication. If that is so, it shows the disdain this author had for the victims of the Balkan Wars.
There is not much info in this book. If one likes his novels, then this may be a book to read. For the historian, forget this book.
Early war tourism in the Balkans.......2000-11-16
Since I haven't read any of Joyce Cary's other works, I really can't comment on the literary value of this book as one of his first forays into writing. But as a first-hand account of the first Balkan War in 1912/13 on the Montenegrin front, it hardly functions at all. Cary makes very clear early in this memoir that the sole reason he volunteered to do Red Cross work was in search of "adventure" - as only a pampered upper middle class turn-of-the-century British youth could. There is never any recognition of the fact that his "adventure" is for other people a matter of life and death, nor of all the misery that wars bring. And this sets the tone for the entire book: Cary writes about his Red Cross colleagues and their mundane day-to-day activities, and occasionally about some of the "colorful locals" they have to deal with. The war that forms of the backdrop and raison d'etre for Cary's entire "adventure" almost fades away. He only writes about actual battles he witnessed a few times, and here his primary interest is the tactics used by the various armies to take a few yards of territory; he hardly takes note of the casualties falling left and right, which is nothing short of astonishing from a Red Cross worker who had to help in their treatment. After reading this, I felt that Cary was either in massive denial or he was just incredibly insensitive and self-centered. Cary also devotes much of the narrative to food and the preparation of meals (he also served as cook) and basically his only justification for this is that, in essence, there was nothing more exciting to write about. Somehow I just couldn't sympathize with the fact that the Balkan wars failed to thrill him sufficiently. Generally then, this book fails both as a testament to the Balkan wars, since the author was almost completely uninterested in their course or their wider social and political implications, and even as literature: the narrative is often simply tiresome. Perhaps the only value of this text is that it is an early documentation of war tourism in the Balkans, something that would really take off during the 1990s when the wars in Croatia and Bosnia started.
Book Description
People lie to themselves and lie to each other, and the lies they tell become their lives. Tom Wilcher, the hero of the second volume of Joyce Cary's First Trilogy, has been at various times a political activist, a closefisted lawyer, a self-sacrificing brother, and a dirty old man. But as he faces death his unfulfilled spiritual yearnings are uppermost in his mind.
Customer Reviews:
An overlooked masterpiece in a famous trilogy.......1998-11-04
To Be A Pilgrim is the second book in Joyce Cary's first trilogy, and should ideally be read in its proper place with the others (Herself Surprised and The Horse's Mouth). Cary once said that people liked The Horse's Mouth because it was funny. To Be A Pilgrim has less of that uproarious humor, which may be why it is less popular than its two companions. But this middle volume is the most ambitious of the three. It is the story of Tom Wilcher, lawyer and member of the love triangle between housekeeper Sara Monday and modern artist Gully Jimson. Now an old man who is being treated as an incompetent by his young relatives (who are locked in a triangle of their own), Tom tells us his life story, starting from childhood. Filled with the Cary's brilliant characters, this book asks hard questions, especially about sex.
Don't miss it!
Average customer rating:
- Art and Reality create the Truth.
|
Art and reality: Ways of the creative process (World perspectives)
Joyce Cary
Manufacturer: Harper
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Unknown Binding
General
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
| Classics
| Comic
| Contemporary
| Literary
General
| Criticism & Theory
| History & Criticism
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Foreign Languages
| Reference
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Arts & Photography
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: B0007DL5UY |
Customer Reviews:
Art and Reality create the Truth........2001-02-06
Art and Reality, the ways of the creative process by Joyce Cary who wrote some great fiction, including THE HORSES MOUTH, starts with 'intuition', a right brain function in today's lexicon which is what we can learn from dogs and cats and other visionaries. Discovery of some truth through intuition unleashes the creative force, and Cary knew this through his own writing. He uses examples of all the great writers, Melville, Austen et al....and the great painters...Monet who found expression in mere objects, and Picasso who could break down objects and insights into abstractions. Great book, hard to get, but worth it if you can find it.
Customer Reviews:
Mister Johnson.......2006-04-02
MISTER JOHNSON, perhaps the best of Joyce Cary's African novels, is about a man who fails to heed the reality all about him in favor of an illusory world of his own creation. Johnson is a Nigerian native; he comes to view the British colonial system, especially as represented by the incompetent road builder Rudbeck, through the prism of his African roots and experiences. Johnson tends not to filter things through the process of logical reasoning, but empirically through all his senses. The potential for disaster is great and is finally realized with the robbery and the subsequent murder he commits.
Cary narrates the story in the present tense, which gives it a strong feel of immediacy. Johnson's delusions, from his total lack of understanding of his bride Bamu, who doesn't like him at all, though he doesn't realize it; his near worship of Rudbeck; and his even thinking he is above the law because "I king of all dem country" - a laughable self-deception if it didn't carry such frightening consequences, is sad and poignant. Despite being his own worst enemy, the reader can't help but sympathize with the ever singing, joyful, optimistic, Johnson.
A colonial tragi-comedy.......2001-03-05
"Mister Johnson", by Joyce Cary, is a tale of an intriguing, quixotic native character, set in colonial Nigeria. Cary draws on his own experiences as a colonial official in Nigeria, drawing a rich, topical, authentic picture of the country during the early thirties. The eponymous anti-hero, referred to only as "Johnson", is a pathetic creation who sees himself as an enthusiast for Empire, a champion of progress and civilisation, with the King of England numbering among his friends. In reality, he is despised by his European boss, Rudbeck, as a member of an inferior race. Johnson's life, his attempt to to become more English than the English, is set precariously between these two extremes -- the urgings of superiority and the reality of degradation, eventually leading him to the gallows. The story's culmination, involving larceny, treachery and murder, sees Johnson emerging as a pathetic but genuinely human creation, whose plight is an illustration of a genuine human dilemma.
Average customer rating:
|
Joyce Cary: A Reappraisal
Dennis Hall
Manufacturer: Palgrave Macmillan
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
20th Century
| British
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
British
| Short Stories
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: 0312445164 |
Average customer rating:
|
Joyce Cary Remembered
Barbara Fisher
Manufacturer: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Irish
| Ethnic & National
| Biographies & Memoirs
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Biographies & Memoirs
| Subjects
| Books
20th Century
| British
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
| Classics
| Comic
| Contemporary
| Literary
History & Criticism
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
| African
| Asian
| Canadian
| Caribbean & Latin American
| Criticism & Theory
| European
| General
| Movements & Periods
| United States
British
| Short Stories
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
Troubles
| Ireland
| Europe
| History
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: 0389208124 |
Books:
- Jane Cowl: Her Precious and Momentary Glory
- Journal of a Residence on a Georgian Plantation in 1838-1839 (Brown Thrasher Books)
- Love, Sex, Death, and the Meaning of Life: The Films of Woody Allen
- Lucifer: The Divine Comedy - Volume 4 (Lucifer (Graphic Novels))
- LUCKY MAN: A MEMOIR
- Lust for Life
- Mapplethorpe: A Biography
- Marco Breuer: Tremors, Ephemera
- Marlene Dietrich: Life and Legend
- Mas Vida y Gloria del Teatro Colon
Books Index
Books Home
Recommended Books
- Tough Choices or Tough Times: The Report of the New Commission on the Skills of the American Workfor
- Social Psychology
- INXS: Story to Story: The Official Autobiography
- Government's Money Monopoly
- Marketing Management
- Sue Grafton: Three Complete Novels; A, B & C: A is for Alibi; B is for Burglar; C is for Corpse
- Mountains Beyond Mountains: The Quest of Dr. Paul Farmer, a Man Who Would Cure the World
- International Financial Reporting Standards
- Government And Business: American Political Economy in Comparative Perspective
- A Larger Sense of Harvey