1. Book Reviews
  2. Books Published November 15, 2009

November 15, 2009

Here are all of the books we've reviewed that were published November 15, 2009. You can also view all of the books we've reviewed that were published anytime in November 2009.

Book Review

Welcome to Canada

by Monica Carter

Understated and poignant, David Carpenter’s Welcome to Canada: Stories collects a number of flawed and beautiful characters who illuminate the fragility of human nature. The isolation, unpredictability, and grace of the Canadian... Read More

Book Review

Spirit of the Badge

by Jill Allen

The men and women in blue rely on more than the letter of the law and the facts of the case when they protect and serve. They receive aid from God, dreams, signs, and symbols. But like the rest of us, officers can also experience... Read More

Book Review

Making It Right

by Elizabeth Breau

Imagining the auto paint business as a pizza chain that guarantees one hundred mini-slices of pepperoni per pizza but provides diners with as few as sixty-five, these two volumes—Technical Guide for auto industry professionals and a... Read More

Book Review

I Do Not Apologize for the Length of This Letter

This collection of Mari Sandoz’s correspondence, introduced and edited by Kimberli A. Lee, is the closest most will come to sitting with the writer and historian, listening to her talk about that which mattered most to her: historical... Read More

Book Review

The Great Pyramid Secret

by Julia Ann Charpentier

Regardless of the countless scholars worldwide who have proposed theories on how the ancient Egyptian pyramids were constructed, doubt remains the overriding force in this fascinating field of archaeological architecture. Though experts... Read More

Book Review

The Essential James Reaney

Few would disagree, if pressed, that the word “essential” is overused. That’s not the case with this book. The essence of James Reaney’s poetic works has been more than adequately distilled in this slim volume. Both the preface... Read More

Book Review

The Manly Art of Seduction

Despite the more salacious connotations of the word, seduction can be an art form, believes author Perry Brass. Just as an artist lays out the colors on a palette before he can begin painting, “…a good seducer knows that only by... Read More

Book Review

Short White Coat

After two years of “hitting the books,” James Feinstein enters the clinical or hands-on portion of his medical training and comes face to face with patients. His memoir, Short White Coat, named after the third-year medical student... Read More

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