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A year in the life of one mother and teenage son, told with pathos and humor.
"There is a particular conundrum about teaching one's national history abroad."
Stop and smell the petrichor: Reading the OED paints English as a fluid entity, shaped by the time and tides of those constantly speaking it.
An American writer. An English game. A questionable book.
Legendary Stand-Up Comics of the Seventies "Come Alive."
I'd make this book required reading at schools.
Atlanta writer tells tales of horrid childhood, gay men friends, and street bums who call her such memorable names she uses them for book titles.
Nargi's narrative combines her new hobby with a quirky, engaging survey of knitters at the beginning of the knitting craze.
When I finally closed the back cover I saw the 313 pages were a veritable land mine of dog-ears.
This rollicking memoir reveals a world of blatant favoritism, unending workdays, pitifully little sleep — and ravenous passengers.
BC Writer of the Week