Home Theatre Magazine

Home Theater Magazine June 2007 Projector Preview
|
|
Home Business Magazine (6 Issues/1 Year) $19 Home Business Magazine covers every angle of the growing and dynamic $425 billion home-based business market. Includes cutting edge editorial by well-known authorities on sales & marketing, business operations, raising business opportunities, network marketing, and mail order. Help your home business thrive! |
|
|
Stamford Magazine (6 Issues/1 Year) $19.95 Stamford Magazine is written for the residents of Stamford, Connecticut who are passionate about their home, and interested in staying in touch with their city’s happenings. Every issue delves into what the city’s upcoming events and attractions are, offering information for decorators, fashionistas, partiers, parents, and everyone alike. Stamford Magazine features developments in urban planning projects, and touches on its history as well. With comments from the city’s mayor embedded in the issues of this magazine, you will really feel at home in its pages. |
|
|
Intermezzo Magazine (6 Issues/1 Year) $23 Intermezzo Magazine is written for an audience of passionate chefs, entertainers, and travelers as it explores an abundance of quality life experiences in worldwide cuisine, wines and spirits, kitchen and home decor, and wellness and leisure. Intermezzo is an ideal publication for the reader with a certain zest for international fare, and who isn’t afraid to go out in search for wonderful and unique food experiences. This magazine is dedicated to transporting readers to some of the world’s finest destinations through its articles and columns. A sample article title is “Turin’s Grand Coffeehouses,” which delves into the wealth of possibilities that the city’s renowned cafes could offer the world’s supreme food-enthusiasts. As Intermezzo Magazine’s slogan states, this publication always offers “Fine Interludes in Food, Wine, Home, & Travel.” |
|
|
O: The Oprah Magazine (12 Issues/1 Year) $19.99 Oprah Winfrey’s new magazine will be the women’s personal growth guide for the new century..offering compelling stories, empowering ideas and articles on health and fitness, careers, realtionships, beauty, fashion, home design, books and food. |
|
|
O: The Oprah Magazine (24 Issues/2 Years) $29.99 Oprah Winfrey’s new magazine will be the women’s personal growth guide for the new century..offering compelling stories, empowering ideas and articles on health and fitness, careers, realtionships, beauty, fashion, home design, books and food. |
|
|
Jp Magazine (10 Issues/1 Year) $15 JP Magazine is America’s first publication dedicated to Jeep owners and enthusiasts. JP covers the entire world of Jeeps, from home-based technical how-to articles to backcountry adventures across the country and around the world. Whether you like your fully loaded Cherokee or your rugged, all terrain jeep, JP is right for you. |
|
|
Jp Magazine (20 Issues/2 Years) $30 JP Magazine is America’s first publication dedicated to Jeep owners and enthusiasts. JP covers the entire world of Jeeps, from home-based technical how-to articles to backcountry adventures across the country and around the world. Whether you like your fully loaded Cherokee or your rugged, all terrain jeep, JP is right for you. |
|
|
New York Magazine (126 Issues/3 Years) $69.97 Since 1968, New York magazine has been bringing its readers up close and personal with all that defines New York City. Each issue serves as a critical guide to what’s new in the city, featuring reviews of everything from restaurants and movies to theatre and art. Often formatted as an outline of events broken down by neighborhood, the Agenda section encourages readers to go where they’ve never gone before and explore all that New York City has to offer. Beyond local coverage, New York magazine provides you with timely insight on the trends and people shaping the U.S. and beyond. Thorough articles take on national and international issues with the unique journalistic perspective that has made New York magazine a standout publication. |
|
|
New York Magazine (42 Issues/1 Year) $29.97 Since 1968, New York magazine has been bringing its readers up close and personal with all that defines New York City. Each issue serves as a critical guide to what’s new in the city, featuring reviews of everything from restaurants and movies to theatre and art. Often formatted as an outline of events broken down by neighborhood, the Agenda section encourages readers to go where they’ve never gone before and explore all that New York City has to offer. Beyond local coverage, New York magazine provides you with timely insight on the trends and people shaping the U.S. and beyond. Thorough articles take on national and international issues with the unique journalistic perspective that has made New York magazine a standout publication. |
|
|
New York Magazine (84 Issues/2 Years) $49.97 Since 1968, New York magazine has been bringing its readers up close and personal with all that defines New York City. Each issue serves as a critical guide to what’s new in the city, featuring reviews of everything from restaurants and movies to theatre and art. Often formatted as an outline of events broken down by neighborhood, the Agenda section encourages readers to go where they’ve never gone before and explore all that New York City has to offer. Beyond local coverage, New York magazine provides you with timely insight on the trends and people shaping the U.S. and beyond. Thorough articles take on national and international issues with the unique journalistic perspective that has made New York magazine a standout publication. |
|
|
National Geographic Magazine (12 Issues/1 Year) $15 Since 1888, the magazine of the National Geographic Society has brought the world home to millions of readers through brilliantly vivid photographs, illustrated maps and compelling stories that bring natural history, culture, science and the various regions of the globe to life. |
|
|
Old-House Interiors Magazine (12 Issues/2 Years) $48 Old-House Interiors is entirely devoted to period-inspired home design. Intelligently written and beautifully photographed, Old-House Interiors is the bimonthly magazine that offers interior designers and restorers expert advice on decorating and furnishing homes from the modest to the extravagant. Lavish color photographs bring you inside outstanding period interiors, both historic and contemporary. |
|
|
Old-House Interiors Magazine (6 Issues/1 Year) $24 Old-House Interiors is entirely devoted to period-inspired home design. Intelligently written and beautifully photographed, Old-House Interiors is the bimonthly magazine that offers interior designers and restorers expert advice on decorating and furnishing homes from the modest to the extravagant. Lavish color photographs bring you inside outstanding period interiors, both historic and contemporary. |
|
|
Log Home Living (18 Issues/2 Years) $29.95 Log Home Living offers the definitive guide to buying, designing, building and living in a log home. This magazine features profiles of people who favor log houses. |
|
|
Log Home Living (9 Issues/1 Year) $19.95 Log Home Living offers the definitive guide to buying, designing, building and living in a log home. This magazine features profiles of people who favor log houses. |
|
|
Home Theater (12 Issues/1 Year) $7.97 Do you know the difference between THX Ultra and select? If you don’t, then this magazine can help you find out. If you do, then you’ll enjoy the exclusive interviews and in-depth discussions this magazine has to offer. Home Theater keep consumers’ budgets in mind when previewing and testing the latest technologies. In the milieu of sales pitches and marketing promises, this magazine brings you the truth about electronic products. |
|
|
Home Theater (24 Issues/2 Years) $22.97 Do you know the difference between THX Ultra and select? If you don’t, then this magazine can help you find out. If you do, then you’ll enjoy the exclusive interviews and in-depth discussions this magazine has to offer. Home Theater keep consumers’ budgets in mind when previewing and testing the latest technologies. In the milieu of sales pitches and marketing promises, this magazine brings you the truth about electronic products. |
|
|
Traditional Home (16 Issues/2 Years) $48 Tasteful, timeless designs never go out of style, as this magazine celebrates. Traditional styles in home decorating, furnishings and gardens are displayed through beautiful photographs and descriptive reports. |
|
|
Traditional Home (24 Issues/3 Years) $72 Tasteful, timeless designs never go out of style, as this magazine celebrates. Traditional styles in home decorating, furnishings and gardens are displayed through beautiful photographs and descriptive reports. |
|
|
Traditional Home (8 Issues/1 Year) $24 Tasteful, timeless designs never go out of style, as this magazine celebrates. Traditional styles in home decorating, furnishings and gardens are displayed through beautiful photographs and descriptive reports. |
|
|
Timber Home Living (12 Issues/2 Years) $35.95 Timber Home Living Magazine is the comprehensive resource for anyone planning or building a timber frame or post-and-beam home. In addition to showcasing gorgeous homes of all sizes, the magazine offers practical advice on everything from design and construction to innovative floorplans to stunning décor, while always being upbeat and inspirational. |
|
|
Timber Home Living (6 Issues/1 Year) $19.95 Timber Home Living Magazine is the comprehensive resource for anyone planning or building a timber frame or post-and-beam home. In addition to showcasing gorgeous homes of all sizes, the magazine offers practical advice on everything from design and construction to innovative floorplans to stunning décor, while always being upbeat and inspirational. |
|
|
English Home, The (6 Issues/1 Year) $32.75 The English Home is a magazine that is dedicated to celebrating the essence of English style when it comes to home design, decorating and entertainment. This full-color, oversized publication serves as a book of inspiration for individuals who enjoy living elegantly in traditional English style. Highlighting both historical and contemporary styles, The English Home covers British architecture, decorating, property, furnishings and antiques. You’ll find must-read international shopping tips, mouth-watering recipes and English travel ideas, along with updated lists of the best U.S. sources for British designers and home furnishings. Every issue of this beautiful magazine invites you to tour some of the most beautiful homes and gardens throughout England. With photographs and articles showcasing decor that can be applied to any style of home, The English Home is sure to complement your elegant lifestyle. |
|
|
Detroit Home (4 Issues/1 Year) $7.95 Detroit Home Magazine is the premier source for high-end homebuilding in the metropolitan area of Michigan. From conception to the finished product, the magazine exquisitely displays how to design, build, furnish, and live in the home of your dreams. Detroit Home offers an abundance of feature articles on a wide variety of topics geared towards maximizing your life at home, such as the perfect brunch menu, ways to brighten a room, how to use prints, suggestions for a cheery music playlist, and so much more. Readers of Detroit Home will also enjoy the annual Design Awards, showcasing the city’s top picked homes to emulate and admire, including a Reader’s Choice. Photographs and informational how-to’s on lavish gardens and landscapes are also filling the pages of the aesthetically pleasing publication. Every issue is dedicated to the publication’s motto, “How We Live, Where We Live,� focusing first and foremost on stylish décor and entertainment. |
|
|
Charlotte Home & Garden (2 Issues/1 Year) $8 While Charlotte magazine is the definitive voice on entertainment, dining, real estate and shopping in the region, Charlotte Home & Garden is a publication that celebrates the best of home and garden in the city and beyond. Each dazzling issue brings you up-close and personal with some of the most beautiful homes and furniture throughout Charlotte as well as profiles of new design trends. Charlotte Home & Garden is the ultimate resource for everything related to design—from interior decorators to landscapers, home furnishing companies and more. If you live in or around Charlotte, or just appreciate stunning home and garden projects, look no further than to Charlotte Home & Garden magazine. |
|
|
Craft & Home Projects (4 Issues/1 Year) $23.97 Get caught up in a continuous stream of creative ideas with CRAFT & HOME PROJECTS Magazine. Each issue is filled with pages of cost-conscious, quick and easy, holiday/seasonal, home decor and gift idea projects that are accompanied with easy-to-follow instructions and patterns for all types of crafts. |
|
|
Phoenix Home & Garden (12 Issues/1 Year) $19.95 Aimed at residents of metropolitan Phoenix, this magazine is all about living the good life in the Southwest. Its coverage of home design, decoration, art, food, gardens, crafts, regional events, fashion, travel and cultural activities make Phoenix Home and Garden essential reading for the discerning Arizonan. |
|
|
Phoenix Home & Garden (24 Issues/2 Years) $28.95 Aimed at residents of metropolitan Phoenix, this magazine is all about living the good life in the Southwest. Its coverage of home design, decoration, art, food, gardens, crafts, regional events, fashion, travel and cultural activities make Phoenix Home and Garden essential reading for the discerning Arizonan. |
|
|
Craft & Home Projects (8 Issues/2 Years) $47.94 Get caught up in a continuous stream of creative ideas with CRAFT & HOME PROJECTS Magazine. Each issue is filled with pages of cost-conscious, quick and easy, holiday/seasonal, home decor and gift idea projects that are accompanied with easy-to-follow instructions and patterns for all types of crafts. |
|
|
Midwest Home (6 Issues/1 Year) $10 Midwest Home is dedicated to showcasing fine homes and gardens in the Twin Cities and around Minnesota. Six times each year, Midwest Home inspires its readers with design trends, entertaining ideas, tips from decorators and gardeners, and features on new homes and renovations. The magazine was recognized with five awards for its fine editorial content and beautiful design at the 2009 Minnesota Publishing Excellence Awards. |
|
|
At Home In Arkansas (11 Issues/1 Year) $15 At Home In Arkansas is a home and garden publication for proud Arkansas homeowners who love the state they live in and the greater lifestyle it offers. Each issue features the latest in home design, décor, and landscape, providing readers with a variety of styles and tastes. At Home In Arkansas also includes an abundance of articles on various other topics, such as fashion, travel, entertainment, and restaurants. The content of the magazine celebrates Arkansas’ past and present through articles on its state history, natural attractions, local events and activities, and featured families. At Home In Arkansas is a great source of information for longtime inhabitants, anticipated residents, and even passersby alike. The publication is also known for highlighting ways to integrate eco-friendly changes into your home and lifestyle through such articles as sustainable designed and built homes and harvesting your own fruits and vegetables. At Home In Arkansas is the premier source to inspire and enjoy your life in Arkansas! |
|
|
Taste Of Home (7 Issues/1 Year) $17.98 America’s #1 cooking magazine! Enjoy 100+ home-style recipes and tips, each a kitchen-tested family favorite made with everyday ingredients. Plus color photos of every recipe, cost-saving menus, healthy-choice dishes, casual entertaining ideas and more.Cover price is $24.94. Your 7-issue subscription will be delivered over 10-12 months; 14-issue subscription over 20-22 months, depending on your start date. Dec/Jan is a special issue, which counts as 2 in your subscription. |
|
|
Taste Of Home (14 Issues/2 Years) $35.96 America’s #1 cooking magazine! Enjoy 100+ home-style recipes and tips, each a kitchen-tested family favorite made with everyday ingredients. Plus color photos of every recipe, cost-saving menus, healthy-choice dishes, casual entertaining ideas and more.Cover price is $24.94. Your 7-issue subscription will be delivered over 10-12 months; 14-issue subscription over 20-22 months, depending on your start date. Dec/Jan is a special issue, which counts as 2 in your subscription. |
|
|
Taste Of Home (21 Issues/3 Years) $53.94 America’s #1 cooking magazine! Enjoy 100+ home-style recipes and tips, each a kitchen-tested family favorite made with everyday ingredients. Plus color photos of every recipe, cost-saving menus, healthy-choice dishes, casual entertaining ideas and more.Cover price is $24.94. Your 7-issue subscription will be delivered over 10-12 months; 14-issue subscription over 20-22 months, depending on your start date. Dec/Jan is a special issue, which counts as 2 in your subscription. |
|
|
1940s Television Series Endings: 1942 Television Series Endings, 1946 Television Series Endings, 1947 Television Series Endings $23 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: 1942 Television Series Endings, 1946 Television Series Endings, 1947 Television Series Endings, 1948 Television Series Endings, 1949 Television Series Endings, Telecrime, It Pays to Be Ignorant, Your Show Time, a Woman to Remember, Stop Me if You’ve Heard This One, the Growing Paynes, Americana, Cbs Television Quiz, Faraway Hill, Pinwright’s Progress, Cash and Carry, Hour Glass, the Adventures of Oky Doky, the Laytons, King Cole’s Birthday Party, Face to Face, Abc Barn Dance, the School House, Flight to Rhythm, Window on the World, Camera Headlines, Champagne and Orchids, Hayloft Hoedown, Charade Quiz, Uptown Jubilee, Geographically Speaking, Abc Television Players, These Are My Children, Starlight, Saturday Night Jamboree, Let’s Rhumba, Elder Michaux, I Love to Eat, Café de Paris, Serving Through Science, the Roar of the Rails, Let There Be Stars, I.n.s. Telenews, Tales of the Red Caboose, the Gay Nineties Revue, What’s It Worth, Key to the Missing, Missus Goes a Shopping, Fashions on Parade, the Swift Home Service Club, Operation Success, the World in Your Home, the Ted Steele Show, the Swift Show, Television Screen Magazine, Stained Glass Windows, Quizzing the News, See What You Know, Teenage Book Club, America Song, Musical Merry-Go-Round, Television Playhouse, in the Kelvinator Kitchen, Places Please. Excerpt: Telecrime was a British drama series that aired on the BBC Television Service from 1938 to 1939 and in 1946. One of the first multi-episode drama series ever made, it is also one of the first television dramas written especially for television not adapted from theatre or radio. Having first aired for 5 episodes from 1938 to 1939, Telecrime returned in 1946, following the resumption of television after World War II, and aired as T… More: |
|
|
A Spectacle of Suffering: Clara Morris on the American Stage $13.96 Once called “America’s greatest actress,” renowned for the passion and power of her performances, Clara Morris (1847-1925) has been largely forgotten. A Spectacle of Suffering: Clara Morris on the American Stage is the first full-length study of the actress’s importance as a feminist in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Detailing her daunting health problems and the changing tastes in entertainment that led to her retirement from the stage, Barbara Wallace Grossman explores Morris’s dramatic reinvention as an author. During a second robust career, she published hundreds of newspaper and magazine articles and nine books—six works of fiction and three memoirs.Grossman draws on the fifty-four-volume diary that Morris kept from 1868 until 1924, as well as on the manuscript fragments and notes of journalist George T. MacAdam, who died in 1929 before completing the actress’s biography. Grossman provides a dramatic account of Morris’s life and work from her troubled early years, through an unhappy marriage, morphine addiction, and invalidism, to the challenges of touring, the decline of her artistic reputation, and the demands of the writing career she pursued so tenaciously. A Spectacle of Suffering reveals how Morris, even after experiencing blindness and the loss of her home, livelihood, and family, did not succumb to despair and found comfort in the small pleasures of her circumscribed life.A Spectacle of Suffering recovers an important figure in American theatre and ensures that Morris will be remembered not simply as an actress but as a respected writer and beloved public figure, admired for her courage in dealing with adversity. The book, which is enhanced by twenty-four illustrations, is the only published biography of Clara Morris. It is as much a tribute to the power of the human spirit as it is an effective means of exploring American theatre and society in the Gilded Age. < |
|
|
Addicted to Love $51.35 New – Twice voted ‘Newsreader of the Year’, and also ‘Pye TV Personality’, Jan Leeming started her working life as a secretary before achieving her ambition to become an actress, not at home but in Australia. A personal tragedy drove her back to her native England, where, unable to earn a living in theatre, she turned to television. Jan worked for many years in regional TV, newsreading and fronting magazine programmes before hitting the big time. On temporary loan from BBC Radio to BBC Televisio |
|
|
Addicted to Love $74.95 New – Twice voted ‘Newsreader of the Year’, and also ‘Pye TV Personality’, Jan Leeming started her working life as a secretary before achieving her ambition to become an actress, not at home but in Australia. A personal tragedy drove her back to her native England, where, unable to earn a living in theatre, she turned to television. Jan worked for many years in regional TV, newsreading and fronting magazine programmes before hitting the big time. On temporary loan from BBC Radio to BBC Televisio |
|
|
Barbara’s Blue Kitchen $8.95 Comedy with Music Characters: 1 male, 1 or 2 female, flexible casting Interior Set Set in a small town just outside of Nashville, this slice-of-life comedic play with music is a genuine look into the hearts of everyday people. As the proprietor, Barbara Jean, tries to figure out “When is it courageous and when is it just plain crazy to hang on to love,” her customers come in and take a load off by sharing their funny, heartbreaking humanity. There’s Miss Morris a nurse who’s planning a Pyramid prayer-time, Miss Tessie, a senior citizen who’s gonna make you laugh and steal your heart, a Tupperware brandishing, plate-dropping waitress named Jeanette, Lombardo-a country-singing hairdresser, Tommy Lee, who is recovering from a dog-bite and Melissa a mixed-up Mother of three. Throughout it all, the wacky DJ from WATR, the local radio station, breaks in with local news, commercials about baldness and whole slew of quirky, unforgettable toe-tapping songs. “In fact, it’s a perfectly judged balance of flavors-exactly what you’d hope for in theatrical comfort food.” -Time Out New York “Winsome and winning…alive with homespun charm. In short, this countrified pocket musical is a little miracle of art and heart.” -TheatreMania “Funny stuff! Wonderful! You got to go see this show!” -WOR Radio “A slice of theatre as tasty and tangy as a piece of peach pie…Barbara’s Blue Kitchen: this is a place where people actually eat together in community, rather than in their own separate worlds.” -Show Business “Sometimes funny, sometimes heartbreaking, it’s a pleasure to spend time in Barbara’s Blue Kitchen.” -Traveler’s USA Notebook “It’s a tasty down-home dish…” -BACKSTAGE.com “The charismatic Lori Fischer serves up a sort of down-home Bridge and Tunnel with Barbara’s Blue Kitchen…” -HX Magazine “Like Greater Tuna and Steel Magnolias, Barbara’s Blue Kitchen, a play with music by and starring Lori Fischer, echoes the eccentric |
|
|
Buildings And Structures In Saint Paul $19.99 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Galtier Plaza, Science Museum of Minnesota, Skyline Tower, Clarence W. Wigington, First National Bank Building (Saint Paul, Minnesota), Midway, Lock and Dam No. 1, Mississippi River, Ordway Center for the Performing Arts, Mount Zion Temple, Dupre Hall, Regions Hospital, Steppingstone Theatre for Youth Development, Vision of Peace, List of Tallest Buildings in St. Paul, Cretin Hall, Island Station Power Plant, Artists’ Quarter, Crane Ordway, Turf Club. Excerpt: The Artists’ Quarter (a.k.a. the AQ) is a well known musician owned and operated jazz club in Twin Cities . The club opened in the early 1970s in South Minneapolis, Minnesota and moved to Saint Paul, Minnesota in 1995. The club is in the basement of the historic Hamm Building in downtown St. Paul.The club features both local and touring musicians. Many famous musicians have and continue to play at the AQ on tour, including Roy Haynes , Mose Allison , Joey DeFrancesco , Sweets Edison , Lew Tabackin , Eric Alexander , Jack McDuff , Dewey Redman , Curtis Fuller , Benny Golson and others. Roy Haynes , Bill Carrothers, Dean Granros, David Hazeltine and Lee Konitz have all recorded live Albums at the Artists’ Quarter. The club was voted one of the top 100 jazz clubs in the world in 2009 by Down Beat magazine, Additionally, the AQ hosts the Soapboxing Poetry Slam , home of the 2009 National Poetry Slam Championship Team.Notable performances Roy Haynes earned a Grammy nomination for his drum solo, “Hippidy Hop”, from the live album, Whereas recorded at the club over the weekend of January 20, 2006, (which Chris Coleman , mayor of Saint Paul, Minnesota , officially proclaimed as the “Roy Haynes Weekend”. )See also (online edition) References (URLs online) Websites (URLs online) A hyperlinked version of this chapter is at |
|
|
Eclipse 57 TV Stand With Support Panel in Espresso $434.67 QB1559: The Eclipse TV Stand With Support Panel in Espresso will make for a superb choice for your home. The contemporary rich dark Espresso finish will surely provide a refreshing look to the living room or entertainment room in your home. It has plenty of open and closed storage for all your home theatre components. This impressive piece also boast adjustable metal legs for optimal leveling and accomodates most 60 TVs. Features: -Espresso finish. -Constructed of engineered wood. -Accommodates 60 Plasma and LCD TV. -Wire management grommets. -Three drawers for CD/DVD or magazine storage. -Can accept up to 3 peripheral electronic components. -Stylish European metal handles and legs. -Adjustable metal legs for optimal leveling. -European cam lock quick assembly system. -Support panel. -Assembly required. -Overall TV Stand Dimensions: 20.5 H x 56.13 W x 19.75 D -Overall Support Panel Dimensions: 39.75 H x 56.5 W x 4.75 D . |
|
|
Entertainment Magazine Introduction: Tiger Beat, Vea, Games 100, Film Threat, Tribute, Venus Zine, Who, Filmfare, Star, Giant Robot, the Slant $10.81 Used – Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 30. Chapters: Tiger Beat, Vea, Games 100, Film Threat, Tribute, Venus Zine, Who, Filmfare, Star, Giant Robot, The Slant, Australasian Post, Sense magazine, Prantik, 8 Days, Femme Fatales, Videomaker Magazine, Brentwood Magazine, Show Business, Encore Theatre Magazine, Popstar! Magazine, Home Media Magazine, Gossip magazine, Kewl Magazine, In Touch Weekly, |
|
|
Entertainment Magazine Introduction: Tiger Beat, Vea, Games 100, Film Threat, Tribute, Venus Zine, Who, Filmfare, Star, Giant Robot, the Slant $16.97 Used – Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 30. Chapters: Tiger Beat, Vea, Games 100, Film Threat, Tribute, Venus Zine, Who, Filmfare, Star, Giant Robot, The Slant, Australasian Post, Sense magazine, Prantik, 8 Days, Femme Fatales, Videomaker Magazine, Brentwood Magazine, Show Business, Encore Theatre Magazine, Popstar! Magazine, Home Media Magazine, Gossip magazine, Kewl Magazine, In Touch Weekly, |
|
|
Entertainment Magazine Introduction: Tiger Beat, Vea, Games 100, Film Threat, Tribute, Venus Zine, Who, Filmfare, Star, Giant Robot, the Slant $10.77 Used – Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 30. Chapters: Tiger Beat, Vea, Games 100, Film Threat, Tribute, Venus Zine, Who, Filmfare, Star, Giant Robot, The Slant, Australasian Post, Sense magazine, Prantik, 8 Days, Femme Fatales, Videomaker Magazine, Brentwood Magazine, Show Business, Encore Theatre Magazine, Popstar! Magazine, Home Media Magazine, Gossip magazine, Kewl Magazine, In Touch Weekly, |
|
|
Entertainment Magazine Introduction: Tiger Beat, Vea, Games 100, Film Threat, Tribute, Venus Zine, Who, Filmfare, Star, Giant Robot, the Slant $10.78 Used – Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 30. Chapters: Tiger Beat, Vea, Games 100, Film Threat, Tribute, Venus Zine, Who, Filmfare, Star, Giant Robot, The Slant, Australasian Post, Sense magazine, Prantik, 8 Days, Femme Fatales, Videomaker Magazine, Brentwood Magazine, Show Business, Encore Theatre Magazine, Popstar! Magazine, Home Media Magazine, Gossip magazine, Kewl Magazine, In Touch Weekly, |
|
|
Entertainment Magazine Introduction: Tiger Beat, Vea, Games 100, Film Threat, Tribute, Venus Zine, Who, Filmfare, Star, Giant Robot, the Slant $16.97 Used – Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 30. Chapters: Tiger Beat, Vea, Games 100, Film Threat, Tribute, Venus Zine, Who, Filmfare, Star, Giant Robot, The Slant, Australasian Post, Sense magazine, Prantik, 8 Days, Femme Fatales, Videomaker Magazine, Brentwood Magazine, Show Business, Encore Theatre Magazine, Popstar! Magazine, Home Media Magazine, Gossip magazine, Kewl Magazine, In Touch Weekly, |
|
|
Entertainment Magazine Introduction: Tiger Beat, Vea, Games 100, Film Threat, Tribute, Venus Zine, Who, Filmfare, Star, Giant Robot, the Slant $16.97 Used – Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 30. Chapters: Tiger Beat, Vea, Games 100, Film Threat, Tribute, Venus Zine, Who, Filmfare, Star, Giant Robot, The Slant, Australasian Post, Sense magazine, Prantik, 8 Days, Femme Fatales, Videomaker Magazine, Brentwood Magazine, Show Business, Encore Theatre Magazine, Popstar! Magazine, Home Media Magazine, Gossip magazine, Kewl Magazine, In Touch Weekly, |
|
|
Gwen $1.99 No matter what the world throws at her, Gwen Peters rises to the challenge. Feisty, curious, with a flare for the dramatic, she dreams of a life on the stage like her idol E. Pauline Johnson, a Mohawk poet and performer who dazzled Gwen during a stunning performance in a London theatre. When Gwen is orphaned, she seizes the opportunity to become a Home Child and is trained for placement as a maid for a family in Canada. So begins her long journey away from her friends on the streets of turn-of-the-century London to service in a wealthy household in Toronto.But when trouble strikes in Toronto, Gwen escapes into the night. Angry and alone, she undertakes a long dangerous trek, following the train tracks back to the only safe haven she knows: Cedarbrae, the Home in Peterborough. Her adventures include an encounter with a bear and flight from a raging forest fire. Gwen’s courage brings her to a welcoming family in Brantford and new friends from the Six Nations Reserve near Pauline Johnson’s childhood home. Carolyn Pogue draws imaginatively on the story of her own grandmother’s experiences as a Barnardo Home Child to bring a little-known piece of Canadian history to light in this exuberant story of bravery and resourcefulness. With the young, vibrant Gwen, Pogue gives readers of all ages a character to cheer on with every step of a journey that comes alive in a manner both familiar and wonderfully strange.Carolyn Pogue is the author of fourteen books of fiction and non-fiction and also writes poetry and drama. Her writing appears in periodicals such as Canadian Living, Synchronicity, The United Church Observer and Peace Magazine. She is a freelance writer and lives in Calgary, Alberta. |
|
|
History Of Birmingham, Alabama $14.14 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Birmingham Campaign, Bobby Frank Cherry, Letter From Birmingham Jail, 4 Little Girls, Charles Linn, Birmingham Civil Rights Institute, Birmingham Civil Rights District, Children’s Crusade, Thomas Edwin Blanton, Jr.. Excerpt: 4 Little Girls is a 1997 American historical documentary film about the 1963 16th Street Baptist Church bombing in Birmingham, Alabama , USA. It was directed by Spike Lee and nominated for an Academy Award for “Best Documentary “. The incident is the subject of the 1964 song “Birmingham Sunday ” by Richard and Mimi Fariña . The song was used in the opening sequence of the film, performed by Mimi’s sister, Joan Baez .4 Little Girls premiered Wednesday, June 25, 1997 at the Guild 50th Street Theatre in New York City. It was produced by 40 Acres and a Mule Filmworks, Lees production company, and Home Box Office (HBO). Lee first became interested in making a film about the Birmingham bombing as a student at New York University in 1983. He read a New York Times Magazine article about the incident and was so moved, he wrote to Chris McNair, the father of victim Denise, asking for permission to tell her story on film. McNair politely turned down the young, aspiring filmmakers offer. “I was entering my first semester at N.Y.U. So my skills as a filmmaker were nonexistent, and at that time, Chris McNair was still hesitant to talk about it,” Lee said in a 1997 interview with Industry Centrals The Directors Chair. “I believe timing is everything. So it took ten years of Chris thinking about this and ten years of myself making movies for this to come together.”According to McNair, one reason he changed his mind about supporting Lees film idea ten years later was the depth and precision of Lees research, saying on the eve of the films release that ” ts very |
|
|
MAIL CALL a soldier’s worst nightmare & RECALL the rest of my story: A Memoir $9.99 I am a left-handed Scorpio, born in 1930 when my parents were 44 years old. I grew up in the New York City borough of the Bronx, in a neighborhoof known as Belmont “Little Italy.” Our neighborhood included the Bronx Zoo, Arthur Avenue and Fordham University. My home away-from-home was Jerry’s candy store on 183rd street between Beaumont and Cambrelling Avenue. I went to St. Martin of Tours parochial grammar school and Fordham Prep and De Witt Clinton High Schools.My story includes anecdotes about Nuns, the Paramount Theatre in New York. the northeast blackout of 1965, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, the Eucharistic Miracle in Lanciano, Italy and the secret history of Italian evacuation and internment in World War II.It is a tour down Memory Lane over the past 80 years covering my life as a child, a teenager and a young man preparing for lifes trials. It starts with my being drafted into the Army in 1951 and relates my experiences at Camp Kilmer, New Jersey, Camp Chaffee, Arkansas and Korea where I experienced “my worst nightmare.”It reflects on my life including separate business careers, 30 years in the magazine business at McCall’s, the Curtis Publishing Company and Esquire Magazine; and 10 years in the printing industry. It speaks about the benefits I derived from taking and teaching the Dale Carnegie Course.My memoir highlights family tradition and relationships and offers readers an opportunity to travel with us abroad and on our road trips across the United States which have covered more than 400,000 miles. Since I retired at 62, I am blessed to have enjoyed the leisure lifestyle for more than 17 years.The journey in this book will make the reader feel like a good friend or a relative. Maybe you are? |
|
|
My Home in the Field of Honor $183.95 New – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable p |
|
|
My Home in the Field of Honor $9.65 New – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable p |
|
|
My Home in the Field of Honor $42.58 New – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable p |
|
|
My Home in the Field of Honor $49.95 New – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable p |
|
|
My Home in the Field of Honor $60.95 New – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable p |
|
|
My Home in the Field of Honor $43.83 New – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable p |
|
|
My Home in the Field of Honor $36.76 Used – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable |
|
|
My Home in the Field of Honor $20.2 Used – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable |
|
|
My Home in the Field of Honor $18.97 New – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable p |
|
|
My Home in the Field of Honor $25.48 New – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable p |
|
|
My Home in the Field of Honor $62.95 New – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable p |
|
|
My Home in the Field of Honor $35.61 New – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable p |
|
|
My Home in the Field of Honor $6.36 Used – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable |
|
|
My Home in the Field of Honor $119.7 New – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable p |
|
|
My Home in the Field of Honor $22.95 New – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable p |
|
|
My Home in the Field of Honor $28.62 Used – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable |
|
|
My home in the field of honor $26.59 Used – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable |
|
|
My home in the field of honor $21.58 New – Nothing, I think, could have been farther from thoughts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable point of view, and their conversations were only interrupted by serious attempts to prove their national superiority at bridge, and long delightful walks in the park. |
|
|
My home in the field of honor $16.63 Used – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable |
|
|
My home in the field of honor $37.19 Used – Nothing, I think, could have been farther from thoughts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable point of view, and their conversations were only interrupted by serious attempts to prove their national superiority at bridge, and long delightful walks in the park. |
|
|
My home in the field of honor $37.19 New – Nothing, I think, could have been farther from thoughts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable point of view, and their conversations were only interrupted by serious attempts to prove their national superiority at bridge, and long delightful walks in the park. |
|
|
My home in the field of honor $15 Used – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable |
|
|
My home in the field of honor $32.39 New – Nothing, I think, could have been farther from thoughts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable point of view, and their conversations were only interrupted by serious attempts to prove their national superiority at bridge, and long delightful walks in the park. |
|
|
My home in the field of honor $32.39 Used – Nothing, I think, could have been farther from thoughts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable point of view, and their conversations were only interrupted by serious attempts to prove their national superiority at bridge, and long delightful walks in the park. |
|
|
My home in the field of honor $26.5 Used – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable |
|
|
My home in the field of honor $8.59 Used – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable |
|
|
My home in the field of honor $26.59 New – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable p |
|
|
My home in the field of honor $19.52 New – Nothing, I think, could have been farther from thoughts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable point of view, and their conversations were only interrupted by serious attempts to prove their national superiority at bridge, and long delightful walks in the park. |
|
|
My home in the field of honor $42.5 Used – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable |
|
|
My home in the field of honor $15 New – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable p |
|
|
My home in the field of honor $28.63 Used – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable |
|
|
My home in the field of honor $26.48 New – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable p |
|
|
My home in the field of honor $39.59 New – Frances Wilson Huard (1874 – 1965) was an American living in France with her French husband when war broke out. She tells of the German invasion in this personal narrative. An excerpt reads, “Nothing, I think, could have been farther from houghts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable p |
|
|
My home in the field of honor $21.58 Used – Nothing, I think, could have been farther from thoughts than the idea of war. Our May Wilson Preston, the artist; Mrs. Chase, the editor of a well-known woman’s magazine; Hugues Delorme, the French artist; and numerous other guests, discussed the theatre and the “Caillaux case” from every conceivable point of view, and their conversations were only interrupted by serious attempts to prove their national superiority at bridge, and long delightful walks in the park. |