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Reviews of Books with 192 Pages

Here are all of the books we've reviewed that have 192 pages.

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Book Review

Where the Long Grass Bends

by Olivia Boler

This debut short story collection brings to life a sometimes fantastical group of characters whose experiences, countries, ethnicities, genders, and time frames widely range. From a Garwali-British orphan to a woman possessed by a spirit... Read More

Book Review

America As Empire

by Kevin Canfield

In a culture ruled by celebrity gossip and bad TV, a book that shines a light on under-reported facts about the day’s pressing issues merits attention. This volume offers readers a new way of looking at globalism, militarism, and our... Read More

Book Review

Being Human

“I am ready to fight the jihad within,” writes one of the authors, “to overcome the petty thief within me that usurps my self and allows ego, will, and emotions to wreak havoc with my life. Like Ala’din, I must learn to polish my... Read More

Book Review

Fuel for Young Athletes

by Karl Kunkel

This book probably could not have come out at a better time. According to a growing number of studies, today’s teens are becoming grossly overweight, eating too much, exercising too little, and flirting with diabetes and other ailments... Read More

Book Review

From Blackjacks to Briefcases

“Any company that gets a union deserves it, and you deserve the one you get.” That statement, made by labor expert Charles Hughes in 1977, typified the anti-union sentiment that has prevailed in America since the mid 1800s. The... Read More

Book Review

Gullah Home Cooking the Daufuskie Way

“It’s not as if the world never knew Daufuskie … But when I was coming up, the world was dancing, for the most part, without us.” The author, a native of Daufuskie, one of South Carolina’s sea islands and home of the Gullah... Read More

Book Review

Praise to the Moon

by Jennifer Griffin

To witches and pagans the moon represents the many facets of life and the human spirit. The author takes the reader back through time to visit the Gods and Goddesses of the past as they flow into the present. She explains the moon as a... Read More

Book Review

Aspects of the Novel

by Karen Holt

Reading this book is like taking a long car ride with a literate, funny, insightful, and clinically depressed companion—who just won’t stop talking. Not that he should stop talking, but, whether the book passes as a joy ride or an... Read More

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