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  2. Books with 116 Pages

Reviews of Books with 116 Pages

Here are all of the books we've reviewed that have 116 pages.

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Book Review

Masks in the Tapestry

by Kristine Morris

Jean Lorrain is the pen name of Paul Alexandre Martin Duval (1855-1906), a French writer and journalist who, though he was one of the leading figures of the Decadent Movement, is remembered today mainly for his duel with Marcel Proust... Read More

Book Review

Holy Hodgepodge!

by Philip J. Kowalski

With its brilliant simplicity, "Holy Hodgepodge!" serves as a guide to a life of piety and sincerity. "Holy Hodgepodge!" by Paul E. Sago works to break through the mess surrounding organized Western religion, arguing that most people... Read More

Book Review

Free to Fly

by Amanda Adams

With its successful and balanced approach to human connection and spirituality, "Free to Fly" is compelling. "Free to Fly" by Jean Bisbey is a thought-provoking exploration of the deep philosophical questions that all people face, as... Read More

Book Review

Misreading Judas

by Scott Neuffer

This energetic work serves as a beguiling introduction to gnosticism. If a Dan Brown novel were turned into a dizzying, real-life unraveling of a newly revealed gnostic text, it might read something like Robert Wahler’s "Misreading... Read More

Book Review

Mirage of Afro-Feminism

by Michelle Anne Schingler

This is a novel with a lot of heart, whose hope for Nigeria’s women shines through, even if pathways to equality resist definition. Ishaya Albert’s "Mirage of Afro-Feminism" is a novella that explores the intersection of women’s... Read More

Book Review

Shades of Light

by Claire Foster

This poetry collection is a wide, bright vein of life that cracks open the tender, violent, imaginative earth we stand on. The forty-two poems in Carl Hitchens’s newest collection, "Shades of Light", represent a shimmering spectrum of... Read More

Book Review

The Husbandman

by Margaret Cullison

Through thoughtful poetry and prose about the human condition, Rosenfeld advocates for greater individual freedom. Through both poetry and prose, David Rosenfeld laments the erosion of political and social responsibility in contemporary... Read More

Book Review

Tails of Joy

by Jeannine Chartier Hanscom

This heartwarming book celebrates the adoption stories of animals with special needs. Every animal lover’s heart breaks for homeless pets. Gretchen Dale offers a respite of sorts with her compilation of hopeful adoption stories in... Read More

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