1. Book Reviews
  2. Books Published March 15, 2006

March 15, 2006

Here are all of the books we've reviewed that were published March 15, 2006. You can also view all of the books we've reviewed that were published anytime in March 2006.

Book Review

Dating Rocks!

Dating Rocks is a 240-page dating manifesto that outlines everything a woman should do to find date and keep a man—from being aware of her physical appearance to honing her listening skills. The best part of this book is Nakamoto’s... Read More

Book Review

The Ghost on the Brooklyn Bridge

If I could start one heart from breaking If I could ease one life the aching Or cool one pain Or help one fainting robin Unto his nest again I shall not live in vain. Emily Dickinson’s life-affirming and eloquent reflective poem is the... Read More

Book Review

Gambit

The three musketeers and D’Artagnan are back but they’ve acquired a female sidekick in this improbable but fast-paced book. The second of a series "Gambit" tells of the efforts of the musketeers and Laurel marquise de Langeac to... Read More

Book Review

Shouts and Whispers

Flannery O’Connor once remarked, “it makes a great deal of difference to the look of a novel whether its author believes that the world came late into being and continues to come by a creative act of God.” Since 1990, writers have... Read More

Book Review

Bored Bill

by Anna Stewart

The concept of a bored dog is only the first thing to elicit giggles in this tale of wacky boredom. The star of the story is Bill, a floppy-eared dog who is really, really bored. Nothing—not reading, gardening, cooking, or Kung... Read More

Book Review

Imagining Ourselves

They’re the best educated, most professionally successful, internationally attuned generation of young women in history, and there are more than one billion of them living in 193 countries, speaking more than six thousand languages.... Read More

Book Review

Writing Brave and Free

by Anne-Marie Oomen

What a treasure to have a second how-to book of this caliber enter the world for developing writers. This new handbook is like its predecessor in its most important characteristics. Following the format of co-author Kooser’s first... Read More

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