Nonfiction

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“. . . the perfect starter volume for those new to succulents.”

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“. . . an intellectual tapestry that is both a page-turner and an education.”

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Now that the United States and its NATO partners have shifted to the end game in Afghanistan, there is little doubt that in the years and decades to come a significant body of published work will c

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“. . . opens up the world of heroes to everyone . . .”

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This entertaining and well-structured book is an ethnography of the New Domesticity movement which the author sees as sweeping America.

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When Raymond Sokolov took on the daunting task of replacing the legendary food editor Craig Claiborne who retired from the New York Times in 1971, he was head of a four-person department t

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“Bravo, Dr. Farmer, for saying what most clinicians are loathe to admit.”

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“. . . the best literary biography to see print thus far this year. Period.”

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To cover 100 years of Irish history in one volume of photographs is a daunting undertaking.

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“The narrative becomes poetry as the author describes the simplest and the most complex parts of life in the salty desert.”

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“Do we really need another book about the Civil War? Mr. Fleming makes a solid, compelling case in the affirmative.”

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According to Samuel Taylor Coleridge, "The history of man for the nine months preceding his birth would, probably, be far more interesting and contain events of greater moment than all the three-sc

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Thousands of years ago, the sage Patanjali set forth the Yoga Sutras, a compilation of yogic principles for living outlined in an ashta-anga (eight-limbed) approach.

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