More Pages: Douglas Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100


Classic poetry
A great find - It's both volumes
Beautiful Collection

Excellent Book!
The best Biblical book on child rearing I have ever read!I have recommended this book to everyone I know who has children, and I highly recommend it to Amozon.com readers
The Greatest Book Written on Raising Children

Join the marines
Fantastic SequelFeaturing strong, well-developed characters, an intriguing story line, well-written fights and realistic military hardware, Star Corps was difficult to put down from start to finish.
Highly recommend for fans of 'realistic' hard military science fiction, a genre in which Ian Douglas is fast becoming king in my opinion.
While not strictly necessary, I do recommend reading the Heritage trilogy before starting on Star Corps.
Graham
good extension of the Heritage TrilogyIn fact, the Legacy Trilogy reads and feels just like the Heritage books. If you liked those (Semper Mars, Luna Marine, and Europa Strike) then Star Corps will be another great chapter. However, since this is actually a fourth book in a series, please read the first ones before this.


Now THAT'S Funny!
Humor You Can UseFor those of us raised on Mad Magazine and Don Martin, we can only say "Huzzah! Satire lives!" And it's funnier than ever!
This book is too funny!

Photographic short stories
Americans RevisitedA side note: If you have the chance, you must see the exhibit at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. The hyperreal poster-size prints are a wonder to behold. And the cumulative effect of these images leaves one exaltant. (Oh yeah, there's also a pretty good Ansel Adams exhibit curated by John Szarkowski on the floor above.)
redefining "landscape" photography

Sweet Bedtime Story
Sweet Dreams Douglas
The perfect gift for the 3-7 year old child in your lifeIn the story, Douglas goes on a dreamquest adventure, asking a fantastic variety of animal friends what they dream. In an effort to find his own dreaming ability, Douglas tries "on' all their dreams and finds that nothing quite fits him. Finally one of his dream companions tells him his answer - "Just dream, little one." Then he really begins to explore some dreams of his own. When Douglas wakes up, he is proud of his dreaming accomplishment, and coincidentally all the animal characters in his dream are found in toys and pets and pictures in his room around him.
The subtle soft pastel charcoal and muted greens, flesh, mustard and salmon palette are colors that encourage drowsiness, an invitation to deep creative dreaming. Sweet Dreams Douglas is deep and delightful, quiet and wise, refreshing and healing, like deep sleep.
Sweet Dreams Douglas is a reassuring, imaginative bedtime story book, bound to be beloved by children of many origins. The multitude of models in the dreamquest gives a positive message to the affirmation of cultural/racial and other differences. Sweet Dreams Douglas is the perfect gift for the 3-7 year old child in your life, especially if they are not fond of bedtime.


Blending the Physical and the Myth
a must-read for anyone interested in American culture
A narrative of a journey of journeys

Slatter best surgery book
very expensive
Best S.A. surgery book in the marketHow many books you buy and never read?, this is one of the very few books that YOU read at least once a week. It's just EXCELLENT.


Grand tour of demonology
The best and hardest adventure i have ever played!Azrial
One of the best ADD adventures.

superb guide with fascinating rankings
superb guide to the leading consulting firms
Highly recommended
Titleless, identified only by numbers, these poems have vivid metaphors and imagery ("let not winter's ragged hand deface," "gold candles fix'd in heaven's air"). The tone of the poetry varies from one sonnet to the next; sometimes it focuses on old age, to love that "looks upon tempests and is not shaken," and simple expressions that can't really be interpreted any other way. Some of it is pretty well-known ("Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?/Thou art more lovely and more temperate") but most of them you won't have seen before.
Even if you're not normally a fan of poetry, the delicate touch of Shakespeare's words is worth checking into. Fantastic.