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All books
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- Your Memory (1)
- How It Works and How to Improve It
- By Kenneth L. Higbee
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- Oracle Night (8)
- A Novel
- By Paul Auster
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- The New Annotated Sherlock Holmes (3)
- the Complete Short Stories (2 Vol. Set)
- By Arthur Conan Doyle
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- Locas II
- Maggie, Hopey, & Ray
- By Jaime Hernandez
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- The Smiths' Meat Is Murder (1)
- (Thirty Three and a Third series)
- By Joe Pernice
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Nice, short read, although forced -
This book was quite dense in the way that it felt to me as if Joe Pernice really tried to squeeze every last odd word from the dictionary and make every character very eccentric. E.g. "Paul's cough sounded much more productive and serious than my own because it was."
A good thing about the boo ... (continue)
- — Oct 2, 2009 | Add your feedback
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- Mozipedia
- The Encyclopaedia of "Morrissey" and the "Smiths"
- By Simon Goddard
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interesting for fans -
This is quite what the title implies: an encyclopaedia on Morrissey and his world, by journalist Simon Goddard. While the his subjective takes on what the songs are about are mostly worthless, as are his way of trying to be funny and witty - just read the end of his bit about Johnny Rogan's "The Sev ... (continue)
- — Aug 31, 2009 | Add your feedback
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- Buddy Does Jersey
- The Complete Buddy Bradley Stories from "Hate" Comics, Vol. II (1994-1998)
- By Peter Bagge
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Human and funny, dirty and real -
This is the second volume of what happens to the main character, Buddy Bradley, after he during the mid 1990s leaves American Seattle for New Jersey together with his girlfriend, Lisa, to go live in his parents' house. His decrepit old dad is mean and his younger brother, dishonourably discharged fr ... (continue)
- — Jul 31, 2009 | Add your feedback
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- Auschwitz
- By Laurence Rees
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2 people find this helpful



Excellent read on The Final Solution -
Excellent tome on The Final Solution, focusing (of course) on Auschwitz, the foremost concentration camp in The Third Reich, if one counts by the number of dead. Rees has researched the subject for many years, and even facts from the 21st century are included here. Apart from the sheer chronological ... (continue)
- — Jul 20, 2009 | Add your feedback
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- I Am America (34)
- (and So Can You!)
- By Stephen Colbert
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Very funny and "right-wing" -
Colbert, previously of The Daily Show, today resides over The Colbert Report, a near-daily TV extravaganza in which he plays an American right-wing TV pundit, thrashing everything liberal in his path. While the show deals with reality, its contents are rarely as such. For a lot of outsiders - i.e. n ... (continue)
- — May 12, 2009 | Add your feedback
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- I Hate You, Don't Leave Me (2)
- Understanding the Borderline Personality
- By Hal Straus, Jerold J. Kreisman
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Very well-written, great pop-psychology -
This is a very well-written pop-psychological look on the borderline personality disorder. The book is quite dated: it’s built on the diagnosis criteria from DSM-III and as such omits mentalisation-based treatment as the method is just too new. But otherwise, to me (a complete layman), this is very ... (continue)
- — Apr 29, 2009 | Add your feedback
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- God is not Great (1)
- How Religion Poisons Everything
- By Christohper Hitchens
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If I overlook how abject Hitchens' arrogance at times threatens to overlook the importance of this book, it is very valid in this time. This book delves into how religion, indeed, poisons everything it touches, and responds to ideas such as "faith brings happiness" and "what would the world be like ... (continue)
- — Mar 1, 2009 | Add your feedback
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- Cries Unheard
- Story of Mary Bell
- By Gitta Sereny
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A documentary on Mary Bell, a girl who in 1968, aged 10, killed the first of two younger boys. Sereny has done startling work with hundreds of hours of interviews with Bell about her childhood, her extremely damaged mother, what happened to her during and after the trial, and what has become of her ... (continue)
- — Feb 23, 2009 | Add your feedback
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Locas II
Not as good as the first volume in the series about Huerta, i.e. Hopey, Maggie and their friends and enemies. This tome is centered around Maggie, Hopey and Ray (as the title implies) who are getting older, jobs and somehow finding out that they don't change as persons despite getting older.
W ... (continue)
Not as good as the first volume in the series about Huerta, i.e. Hopey, Maggie and their friends and enemies. This tome is centered around Maggie, Hopey and Ray (as the title implies) who are getting older, jobs and somehow finding out that they don't change as persons despite getting older.
While there are some changes in plot that slow down the tempo in here, I found some of the dada-drawn passages quite irritating, but still it's a sign of Hernandez' ability to incorporate the serious with the laughable and mash it together.
The characters evolve, and even though not at the same pace as before that would have been strange. This is a quite nice assortment of little stories, and despite my missing the tempo of yore, it's nice to see the happy days and demons up close and in detail, quite poetic through the motions. Especially the dogs.
All in all: not at all as good as "Locas I" (which I give 5/5 without hesitation, but still interesting, vibrant and at times beautifully written. I'll buy the third volume as soon as it hits the streets.
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