
|
|
Retail Price
$
26.00  |
|
The same vulnerable but invincible spirit that captured our hearts in the Pulitzer Prize-winning memoir Angela's Ashes comes of age in 'Tis. Listen as Frank tells in his own inimitable... |
|

|
|
Retail Price
$
50.89  |
|
Angela's Ashes was a publishing phenomenon. Frank McCourt's critically-acclaimed, lyrical memoir of his Irish-American childhood won the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Critics' Circle... |
|

|
|
Retail Price
$
49.95  |
|
The same vulnerable but invincible spirit that captured our hearts in the Pulitzer Prize-winning memoir Angela's Ashes comes of age in 'Tis. Listen as Frank tells in his own inimitable... |
|

|
|
Retail Price
$
49.95  |
|
This accessible and inspirational audiobook examines a diverse collection of business people and how they make their enterprises work. From risk-loving entrepreneurs such as Richard Branson, through... |
|

|
|
Retail Price
$
32.95  |
|
Shant Kendarian's visit to Baghdad in 1980 at age 17 was supposed to be short, just long enough to make peace with his estranged father before returning home to the United States. But Saddam Hussein... |
|

|
|
Retail Price
$
27.95  |
|
On December 3, 1999, the call crackled in to the men of the Worchester, Massachusetts, Fire Department: a three-alarm warehouse blaze in a six-story windowless colossus of brick and... |
|

|
|
Retail Price
$
18.95  |
|
In what internal organ does true love reside? Barbara Silkstone began to feel the need to dissect and compare the guts of men to see what makes the rotten ones so awful and the good ones so hard to... |
|

|
|
Retail Price
$
7.25  |
|
Chris McManus uncovers the secrets of a collection of 6000 dusty old postcards that turned up in a forgotten cupboard in the Psychology Department of University College London. It started with two... |
|

|
|
Retail Price
$
27.25  |
|
Told in a series of letters, this true story of the correspondence between a New York writer and a London bookseller has touched the hearts of thousands. |
|

|
|
Retail Price
$
26.00  |
|
How could you, a mathematician, believe that extraterrestrials were sending you messages? the visitor from Harvard asked the West Virginian with the movie-star looks and Olympian manner. Because... |
|