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Reviews of Books with 394 Pages

Here are all of the books we've reviewed that have 394 pages.

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Book Review

An Army of Noses

by Rachel Jagareski

This charming mystery boasts an endearing dog who helps her human snuff out crime. "An Army of Noses" is the third Spunky Murder Mystery penned by Holly L. Lewitas. Spunky is an older terrier mix who lives with her owner, clinical... Read More

Book Review

Waiting for Today

by Rebecca Foster

Humor and religious allusions blend to create an inspiring story of loss and seizing the day. Steven Craig’s debut updates the Book of Job with a tale of a man facing the loss of everyone he loves. With references ranging from baseball... Read More

Book Review

Memories in the Bone

by Mark McLaughlin

Drawing on her Chinese heritage and her experiences living in many countries, Mee-mee Phipps has put together an engaging story of a young soldier driven to flee a lost cause to start life anew abroad. Set in nineteenth-century China,... Read More

Book Review

The Chronicles of Iona

by Mark McLaughlin

“Iona is not a place one visits on a whim,” says a burly Scottish warlord to the Irish abbot who plans to colonize the isle. “Beset by vile storms” and surrounded by even viler barbarian Picts, the rocky, windswept... Read More

Book Review

Startup

by Elizabeth Millard

Many business experts have noted that entrepreneurship tends to increase during a recession, as individuals begin to take more risks and make their own opportunities, rather than waiting for more traditional career tracks to appear. New... Read More

Book Review

Was I Betrayed by Man?

by Gary Presley

"Was I Betrayed by Man?" is an evangelical book with an Apocryphal theme in which the author moves beyond accepted Christian theology to reexamine end-time prophecy. Simply put, Cook believes that a majority of Christians are misreading... Read More

Book Review

Relativity in Curved Spacetime

“Every time we find a problem with general relativity, the reason why that problem exists turns out to be the same: it’s that things have to be that way in order to avoid creating conflicts with special relativity,” writes Eric... Read More

Book Review

Kennison's Gifts

by Liam Brennan

Author W. David Tibbs has crafted a beautifully layered depiction of one life’s journey from start to finish. Through emotional and well-written accounts Tibbs introduces readers to the character of Ken Kennison a man born to lowlife... Read More