Friday 31 October 2014

#10: Rush Revere and the First Patriots: Time-Travel Adventures With Exceptional Americans

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Rush Revere and the First Patriots: Time-Travel Adventures With Exceptional Americans

Rush Limbaugh

Ranking has gone up in the past 24 hours 179 days in the top 100

4.9 out of 5 stars(1686)



Buy new: $19.99 $11.97

103 used & new from $6.19



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Waitress Is One of Many New Writers With Big Book Deals

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“Sweetbitter,” by the 30-year-old waitress Stephanie Danler, is but one in a crop of debut novels acquired by publishers in lucrative deals.

















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The Saturday Profile: A Writer Whose Pen Never Rests, Even Facing Death

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Clive James, 75, who has leukemia, continues to publish poetry and work on other projects in a career that has defied definition.





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Bookshelf: Looking Back at New York City Culture and Transit

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Three new books celebrate New York City history, culture and its subway and bus systems.

















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ArtsBeat: Book Review Podcast: Michel Faber’s ‘Book of Strange New Things’

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Marcel Theroux discusses Michel Faber’s “Book of Strange New Things.”

















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Inside the List

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Bryan Stevenson, whose “Just Mercy” is No. 10 on the hardcover nonfiction list, says that “if we’re really committed to justice, we’ve got to do better for the poor than we’re doing.”





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Editors’ Choice

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Recently reviewed books of particular interest.





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‘The Nazis Next Door,’ by Eric Lichtblau

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How did America become a postwar haven for Nazis?





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‘Death of a King,’ by Tavis Smiley with David Ritz

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A recounting of Martin Luther King Jr.’s difficult final year.





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‘The Lagoon: How Aristotle Invented Science,’ by Armand Marie Leroi

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Recovering Aristotle as a scientist who explored and cataloged the Mediterranean’s natural world.





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The Shortlist: Julie Schumacher's 'Dear Committee Members,' and More

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New books by Julie Schumacher, Cathie Pelletier, Stuart Rojstaczer and Jonathan Coe.





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Crime: Michael Connelly’s ‘Burning Room,’ and More

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In Michael Connelly’s “The Burning Room,” Harry Bosch tries to impart wisdom to his new partner.





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Paperback Row

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Paperback books of particular interest.





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‘Village of Secrets,’ by Caroline Moorehead

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Resistance in a provincial French town helped save thousands.





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Eliza Robertson’s ‘Wallflowers’

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The stories in “Wallflowers,” Eliza Robertson’s debut collection, portray people surviving loss and heartbreak in a world full of uncanny moments.





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Edward J. Larson’s ‘The Return of George Washington: 1783-1789’

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In 1787, George Washington again rode to the nation’s rescue.





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‘Florence Gordon,’ by Brian Morton

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Brian Morton’s heroine is a feisty aging feminist.





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Matt Bai’s ‘All the Truth Is Out,’ About Gary Hart

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Matt Bai sees the implosion of Gary Hart’s second presidential campaign as a watershed in American politics.





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Daniel Kehlmann’s ‘F’

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Deserted by their enigmatic father, three brothers struggle to find themselves in Daniel Kehlmann’s tragicomedy.





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‘Lincoln and the Power of the Press,’ by Harold Holzer

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Lincoln dealt shrewdly with the publishers and editors of politically powerful 19th-century newspapers.





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‘Gay Berlin,’ by Robert Beachy

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From the mid-19th century through the 1930s, gay people were at home in Berlin.





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Peter ­Schneider’s ‘Berlin Now’ and Rory MacLean’s ‘Berlin’

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Two books about Berlin, past and present, explore its dualities of sex and violence, freedom and fascism.





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Michel Faber’s ‘Book of Strange New Things’

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In Michel Faber’s novel, a pastor heads off to take up a new ministry on another planet.





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Open Book: Born to Read

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Bruce Springsteen has increasingly become the subject of popular and scholarly literature.





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#10: Blood Magick (Cousins O'Dwyer)

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Blood Magick (Cousins O'Dwyer)

Nora Roberts

4.6 out of 5 stars(48)

Release Date: October 28, 2014


Buy new: $17.00 $10.07

55 used & new from $9.55



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Thursday 30 October 2014

Former Navy SEAL Team Member Investigated for Bin Laden Disclosures

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A former Navy SEAL who wrote a best seller about the raid that killed Osama bin Laden is under criminal investigation for disclosing classified material.

















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Books of The Times: Emily St. John Mandel’s ‘Station Eleven,’ a Flu Apocalypse

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Emily St. John Mandel’s novel “Station Eleven” envisions a world in which a strain of flu wipes out most of civilization.

















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