Author: Schneider, Carol E.
Published: 1989
Call Number: 641.64
Format: Books
Author: Goldstein, Joyce Esersky.
Published: 1989
Call Number: 641.592
Format: Books
Author: Philadelphia Museum of Art. Women's Committee.
Published: 1989
Call Number: 641.5
Format: Books
Author: Miller, William J.
Published: 1984
Call Number: 386.6
Format: Books
Author: Altshuler, David A. Dawidowicz, Lucy S. War against the Jews, 1933-1945.
Published: 1978
Call Number: 940.53
Format: Books
Summary: Discusses the growth of anti-Semitism in Germany from the sixteenth century until the Holocaust during the twentieth century. Includes topics for discussion.
Author: Nostradamus, 1503-1566. Cheetham, Erika, ed.
Published: 1973
Call Number: 133.32
Format: Books
Author: Cranmer, Horace Jerome, 1920-
Published: 1964
Call Number: HE213.N5 C7 1964
Format: Books
Call Number: 647.95
Format: Books
Suggested for ages 6 months to 4 years. Get out of the house and let your little ones burn off some steam. Enjoy a morning of free play, dancing, and other fun activities.
Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn talk about their new book, and Daniel Susskind discusses “A World Without Work.”
An excerpt from “Cleanness,” by Garth Greenwell
An excerpt from “Abigail,” by Magda Szabo
Here are a few possible directions “Little Women” might go next.
Michael Lind’s “The New Class War” sees class divisions at the heart of America’s current political divide.
Published in Hungary in 1970 and now translated into English for the first time, “Abigail” is a fable-like story set at a girls’ boarding school during wartime.
The lawlessness and corruption that characterize Vladimir Putin’s regime are examined by three authors from many angles, and from top to bottom.
The narrator of Jessica Andrews’s first novel, “Saltwater,” is a university graduate from the working class, trying to find her place in the wider world.
For the American hero of “Cleanness,” part of the allure of Bulgaria is that it is disintegrating around him.
Stephen Marche on why he collects rare books and why our culture undervalues them.
Suggested for ages 6 months to 4 years. Get out of the house and let your little ones burn off some steam. Enjoy a morning of free play, dancing, and other fun activities.
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