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A wonder and a joy!

US History At It's Best

Fabulously Funny!

Praise for The Contradictions of American Capital PunishmentStephen Bright
Director, Southern Center for Human Rights
"Frank Zimring's book will revolutionize how we understand the death penalty in the United States. Why, Zimring asks, does capital punishment persist in America, almost uniquely among established democracies, despite entrenched unfairness and the virtual inevitability of error? His original and provocative answer is America's vigilante tradition. Like vigilante action, the death penalty suffers from the biases of the dominant social group and the unwarranted assumption that the guilty have been correctly identified. Highlighting this uncomfortable comparison offers a promising new approach for those committed to ending this inhumane institution of American life."
Kenneth Roth, Executive Director, Human Rights Watch
"Frank Zimring's new book makes a major contribution to understanding the present situation of the death penalty in the United States and to predicting what lies ahead. Central to his analysis is his judgment that a "fundamental value conflict" lies at the root of the struggle: Will America's frontier "vigilante values" that support our death penalty practices survive their collision with our attachment to "due process" values? Written in his characteristically lively style, this provocative and completely original work has much to teach both defenders and opponents of capital punishment."
Hugo Adam Bedau, author of The Death Penalty in America


A classic work by pioneers in the field of cocaine addiction

Cards Too Hot to Handle

Great book, well written and reasearched.

This book can greatly help for dancers!

It was the best one ever!

WHO KILLED FRANCES RAYE?So begins the Deadly Percheron. After that it gets strange. First published in 1946 this unique murder mystery transcends the boundaries of the genre. It's noir, it's nightmarish, it's compulsive. John Franklin Bardin drags the reader into a world where the nature of identity is constantly questioned. Is our hero who he says he is? Can he be trusted? Is he, in fact, sane? Reality, as seen through his eyes, is a shifting kaleidoscope of memories.
As the murders mount up the fragments of his shattered psyche are slotted together. Slowly reality stabilises. At the end of the novel, but only then, it all makes sense. Who killed Frances Raye? Well, now, let's start at the beginning..."Jacob Blunt was my last patient. He came into my office wearing a scarlet hibiscus in his curly blond hair. He sat down in the easy chair across from my desk, and said, "Doctor, I think I'm losing my mind.""
My (12 volume 1904 Federal edition) set includes the private as well as the official and scientific correspondence of Benjamin Franklin. The breadth of his works, writings and interests in unparalleled even by other great ones like Jefferson. By himself, Franklin changed the world like very few others, mostly for the positive.
I have, as I read, found myself shaking my head in amazement or laughing out loud with pleasure at various times. B. Franklin was a true wonder. The collection is a joy to read, there are minimal "interpretive" footnotes, and those that are included are almost always useful.
A few particular favorites:
- An essay concerning virtue and pleasure
- An erudite and ground breaking treatise on economics
- Most fun, magical circles and squares (my kids were absolutely amazed by these).
The series drops in rating from a 5 to a 4.9978 when it moves exclusively into his private (especially scientific) letters, but only because we're only getting one side of the conversation.
The Preface (which my general practice is to ignore) contains an excellent review of a number of similar works and the branches that each editor followed from just after Franklin's death until this publication, including very interesting details about the ownership of Franklin's papers.