- Book Reviews
 
        - Books with 85 Pages
 
        
         
            Reviews of Books with 85 Pages
    
        Here are all of the books we've reviewed
        that have 85 pages.
    
    
        		                            The poems in "The Indignation Parade" are lyrical and rich, addressing the complexity of human emotions on both personal and political scales. F. R. Foksal’s extraordinary poetry collection "The Indignation Parade" explores timeless... Read More
 
                                    The poems in "Strange Life" are constructed with terrible and forthright beauty, both existential and hauntingly specific. From Eleanor Lerman (The Sensual World Re-Emerges, 2011), a National Book Award-nominated poet and Guggenheim... Read More
 
                                    In short, snappy chapters, Steve O’Hara’s Managing by Slogan: A Light-Hearted Look at How Managers Use Slogans to Lead Their Teams provides clever slogans and pithy advice for managers looking to improve their organizations. Working... Read More
 
                                    Neither a murder mystery nor a thriller, "Treachery in Bordeaux" is, as its name implies, about treachery. In this first of a planned series of mysteries set in the Bordeaux region of France, we meet Benjamin Cooker, a renowned vintner... Read More
 
                                    As a manager beleaguered with tasks who hasn’t thought that if the employees were only more industrious/dedicated/loyal that business would be better than usual? As an employee coming off an exhausting shift who hasn’t heard the... Read More
 
                                    The difficulty of humanness—the state of flawed consciousness in which human beings exist—is the key to this collection of poems inspired by memory and imagination. This poet seems to understand the necessary mistakes that people... Read More
 
                                    “Bear with me for singing their song / They are not here to sing / They did not want to sing.” So begins the effort—of speaking in different voices, of traversing landscapes and generations, of trying to give words to what others... Read More
 
                                    In this poetic memoir, the author seeks to find the source of her daughter’s mental illness through the vehicle of lineage. Writing through three generations of family history, she assumes the voice of her parents, her daughter, and... Read More