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Book Review

Queer Japan

by Michele McDonald

“The first time I ever fell in love with someone was in my first year of junior high. It was a girl in my class, and even after coming home from school I would think of her and long to touch her. But I kept my feelings hidden because I... Read More

Book Review

Running North A Yukon Adventure

by Nancy Tamburello

Running North, A Yukon Adventure is a modernized version of Jack London’s Call of the Wild, which coincidentally was part of the initial spark for Cook to author her true life story. While the Iditarod is more well known, the Yukon... Read More

Book Review

Dance Lessons

by Vicki Gervickas

All but the most starry-eyed among us would agree that forming a great partnership, whether in life or in business, requires dedication and hard work. According to Bell and Shea, this process is all too often left to chance (particularly... Read More

Book Review

Tales From The River Brahmaputra

by Michele McDonald

The River Brahamaputra runs from the Himalayas in Tibet, through India, and on through Bangladesh, winding its way through numerous languages, cultures, and three great religions: Buddhism, Hinduism and Islam. The armchair traveler will... Read More

Book Review

Riding the Wind

by Karen Wyckoff

With the title itself indicative of the philosophical and ecology-minded wellspring which feeds Riding the Wind, author Peter Marshall borrows ancient insights and introduces a modern, cautionary interpretation. With this latest effort,... Read More

Book Review

Ted Poston

by Erik Bledsoe

In 1936 when Ted Postern was hired at the New York Post he became the first African American to cross the color line onto a ?white? newspaper. By the time of his retirement in 1972, he was widely known as “the dean of Black... Read More

Book Review

The Unequal Hours

We cannot see the wind, but we can see its influence. … Wind transports the seeds of dandelions, milkweed, and thistles. It pollinates the wheat used in our bread. It sends spores and even some spiders on their way in the world. Hawks... Read More

Book Review

The Selected Poems of Wendell Berry

by Anne-Marie Oomen

Those among us who admire Berry are always pleased to see his poems come to print because he is a poet who does more than apply fine poetic craft to the page. He also lives the language and the lifestyle he creates for the page.... Read More

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