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Reviews of Books with 256 Pages

Here are all of the books we've reviewed that have 256 pages.

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Book Review

Our Beloved, Our Friend

by Melissa Wuske

"Our Beloved, Our Friend", by Judy Huitt, contains forty meditations designed to help readers get to know Jesus. Huitt uses scripture and analysis of its words to teach and encourage readers. Each meditation follows an alliterative,... Read More

Book Review

Surviving Curtis Hall

by Jill Allen

In Surviving Curtis Hall: The Lure of Blood, debut author L. A. Matthies artfully navigates the teen angst generated by changing schools, new love, and significant secrets. To escape the drugs and violence of their old school, poet and... Read More

Book Review

Smoke in the Wind

by Mark McLaughlin

Tony May writes in language as crude and dirty as the oil his characters pump. Though the prose and sentiments in his novel about oil workers in the last quarter of the twentieth century are anything but politically correct, May has... Read More

Book Review

Appalachian Child

by Diane Taylor

A straightforward account of an abusive childhood in the rural Appalachian Mountains of West Virginia, this unsentimental memoir succeeds more as a chronicle of a bygone way of life than it does as the story of a strong-willed survivor... Read More

Book Review

Black Tide

by Jill Allen

Given how much teens enjoy stories of heroic adolescents, they will quickly become engrossed in the adventures of young Toby Tennant as he sets off to rescue his father and sister against the backdrop of a wintry dystopian Scotland... Read More

Book Review

The Longest Race

by Andrew Kipp

Lifelong runner Ed Ayres uses the John F. Kennedy fifty-mile ultramarathon as a backdrop for his new book, The Longest Race: A Lifelong Runner, an Iconic Ultramarathon, and the Case for Human Endurance. Throughout it we run alongside the... Read More

Book Review

Lijiang Stories

by Karunesh Tuli

Years after the death of Chairman Mao Tse-tung, taxi drivers in China began displaying laminated pictures of the Great Helmsman in their vehicles. Believing that his image possessed magical powers that otherwise belonged to local... Read More

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