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Enter the wonderful world of kawaii with this super-cute coloring book, filled with Japanese-inspired designs to color and enjoy. Featuring adorable animals, charming little monsters and super-cute food and stationery, this book is guaranteed to give you kawaii fever. Pocket-sized and portable, it's great for coloring on the go. Part of the I Heart series with a pretty foiled cover, this coloring book is the perfect gift for kawaii-lovers everywhere.
Chattanooga, Tennessee today is not the same town it was in the nineteen forties through the mid-eighties. Protected by a corrupt and self-serving local government, her masters fattened themselves on illegal enterprise. In this one book you have biography, treachery, and underworld intrigue. You have murder, and attempts at murder. You have innocence accused, and guilt unpunished. You have luxury, power, and privilege with their hands on all the strings. You have white lightning and whiskey runners, colorful whores, one great barroom brawl, and gunfights with such playbills as Cowboy Bob and the Shootout at The Fuzzy Duck. You have all the stuff of fiction, without the burden of a lie, all the benefit of great theatre, without having to leave your favorite chair. The best part of it is, its all true. Down to the five oclock shadow on the policemen dressed like prostitutes.
Thomas Leahy investigates whether informers, Special Forces and other British intelligence operations forced the IRA into peace in the 1990s.
Mr. Thoreau Goes to Boston is an eclectic work of Literary Fiction reminiscent of Frankenstein by Mary Shelley. It is entertaining, reflective, inspiring, and hilariously funny. 19th Century philosopher, naturalist, and author Henry David Thoreau returns to life in the 21st Century through an anomaly of nature. Professor and Elizabeth Thornton, a group of friends, and medical and archaeology specialists attempt to solve the mystery of his rebirth. But when the news gets out, wealthy individuals, rogue governments, and terrorists pursue the secret with a vengeance. Mr. Thoreau Goes to Boston expounds on the philosophies, ideas, and opinions of Henry David Thoreau. Through it, Ken Wail holds up a mirror to our modern society. Discussions of 19th Century writers such as Nathaniel Hawthorne, historical sites in Boston and Concord, and today?s social issues provide a canvas upon which this literary fiction is painted.
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Reprint of the original, first published in 1875.
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