A loving, lavishly illustrated 40th anniversary commemoration.
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Book Review: Blood Brothers – Among the Soldiers of Ward 57 by Michael Weisskopf
An intimate and compelling portrait of the medical, rehabilitative and personal trials, tribulations, and successes of American soldiers who suffered traumatic amputations in Iraq.
Read More »Book Review: Walking to Greenham: How the Peace-camp Began and the Cold War Ended by Ann Pettitt
This account shows that one person - in this case one very humble, self-deprecating woman - can really make a difference.
Read More »Book Review: All Roads Lead to Hockey by Bill Boyd
Join a Canadian reporter as he looks at hockey and hockey teams in towns and cities from northern Canada to the U.S.-Mexico border.
Read More »Book Review: The Prince of the Marshes by Rory Stewart
An insider's view from an outsider of the efforts to the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq and the prospects for democracy in the country.
Read More »Book Review: Batman And the Monster Men
Matt Wagner's new Batman graphic novel puts the Caped Crusader squarely in a 1940s Monogram B-movie.
Read More »Book Review: The Drifting Classroom – Volume One by Kazuo Umezu
Volume One of Kazuo Umezu’s violent and hyperactive horror manga series.
Read More »Book Review: Stardust by Neil Gaiman
Mr. Gaiman can genuinely create a world where wonder is an everyday occurrence.
Read More »Book Review: The Shark God by Charles Montgomery
One of the year's best non-fiction works, this insightful account of Melanesian life follows the author as he retraces his great-grandfather’s steps as a missionary.
Read More »Book Review: Coraline by Neil Gaiman, Illustrated by Dave McKean
... the main feeling that a child or adult reader will be left with is wonder. Which is how it should be whenever we finish a story.
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