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    “. . . an Internet company can improve life. . . . [raising] the purpose . . . to improving the human condition.”

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    With multinational corporations firmly ensconced as the evil raptors of our economy, small businesses have now become the red, white, and blue of a new commercial patriotism.

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    The best way to describe Fixing Fashion is to call it part resume, part life story, and part fashion history textbook that includes every facet of the business from concept to placement on

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    This is the kind of fashion tome that has a distinction all its own within the genre of fashion books.

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    Shoes is an amazing and extensively researched volume that speaks only to the subject of shoes.

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    “The Campbell family continue their successful quest to create a healthier and peaceful life for everyone.”

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    Do you remember plodding through Eliyahu Goldratt’s The Goal? It was a very good book, but seemed to take forever to get to its key points.

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    “. . . a great addition to any child’s personal library.”

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    One of the most significant pains of imprisonment is being cut off from the outside world. While this is very much a physical segregation, it is also a mental and informational one.

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    Let's face it, back in October 2003 The Walking Dead lit a fire under every writer that was a zombie fan.

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    Call it a men’s club, call it a cult, or simply call it an acquired taste, but whatever you call it, apparently this Savile Row tailor inspires slavish loyalty and devotion.

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    “Whether for a light read or deeper introspection, this book offers intriguing insights and opinions into the reasons why the creation of a 19th century teenaged author has become a referen

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    A half century ago, Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart famously declared in Jacobellis v.

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    In 2016, Duke University Divinity School Professor Kate Bowler burst onto the media scene with a New York Times op-ed column called “Death, the Prosperity Gospel and Me.”

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    At this time of year, the marketplace is rife with books filled with pretty photographs and no substance, but Mr.

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    "Perhaps Mr. Klein can get paid for this book in goods with an excellent reputation for traditional value . . . like goats."

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    At the start of a crime novel, the reader sometimes experiences an unsettling feeling as the gory details of fictitious assaults and slaughter are rolled out.

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    Andi Zeisler, cofounder and creative director of the non-profit organization Bitch Media, sets out her stall in her introduction, reminding us that the point of the magazine Bitch was “to

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    Alan Furst is the empathetic king of deeply researched historical fiction set in WWII Europe. His heroes are intelligent men attracted to complex women.

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