Book Description
A non-fiction account of the annihilation of the 29th Infantry Regiment dispatched from the occupation of Okinawa to the Korean War at the earliest stage of the conflict. Author Paul G. Petredis, one of 21 survivors out of 235, chronicles his first escape, details the ongoing bloody battles which culminated with the entry of the Chinese Communist Forces (CCF) opposing the United Nations Forces. Following capture and eluding death again by escaping from the enemy, he describes his ordeal in graphic detail of 14 days behind enemy lines, bringing the reader along vicariously on the same horrific journey.
Customer Reviews:
Escape from North Korea: a Nonfiction account of Savage Battles and Political Intrigues of the Forgotten War.......2007-06-10
Facinating true story.
Escape from North Korea.......2007-04-21
Escape From North Korea by Paul G Petredis
His book is superbly researched and a darn good read of the Forgotten War and the path which lead to it. His personal experience being a soldier in Korea and surviving the conflict gives great credit to him as a man, and his narrative about how he escaped from North Korea is almost beyond description, and should be a must read for anyone who enters the US Military Service. Hope to see future writings by Paul Petredis.
F.Petersen
INSIGHT INTO IRAQ & OUR SOLDIERS.......2007-04-08
WOW... war becomes real on these pages, almost too real, and from a soldier with his first-hand account. I found it to be a story of survival and determination, and a credit to the author and to our military. I suppose the most significant part of this story, is the insight into what our soldiers are facing everyday in the Middle East. It should be "must" reading for every person in our Armed Forces, as to what to expect, and how to overcome the impending obstacles, in battle and if captured. An excellent book and a credit to its author. Well done!
An Amazing Story.......2007-03-02
An amazing story of survival behond enemy lines. Well written. The book was hard to put down as you were living the experience yourself. If you like nonfiction accounts of Survival it is a must read!
Rick Wilson
of Rick Wilson Plumbing in Gig Harbor WA
WOW ! What a book !.......2006-12-18
To use an over worked expression, this book is a "page turner". I couldn't put it down. The way it is written, I felt the debilitating cold of a Korean winter all the way to my bones. It was as if I was right there beside the author, trying to load and fire my M-1 with frozen hands as wave after wave of charging foes tried to kill me. I was there as he reluctantly surrendered, and could feel the fear as I waited my turn to be shot down as a helpless POW. Then we are with him as he makes his way back to US lines, 14 days of terror filled escape and evasion, knowing that any mistake would be death. Part 2 of this book is a very informative history. The author tells us about the causes of the Forgotten War, and explores the mind set of the leaders of both sides that caused this war to rage on long after it should have ended. I am truly grateful to the author for his service to our country and for sharing his soul with us by writing his story. I also have renewed admiration and respect for all the GI's who suffered there, especially those whose bones still litter the battlefields of the first war our country lost. Lost by the politics of the homefront, but paid for with the blood of our troops.
Average customer rating:
- Fascinating life-or-death tales
|
Escape from Korea
John J. Fischer , and
James V. Lee
Manufacturer: Salado Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General
| Biographies & Memoirs
| Subjects
| Books
Military & Spies
| Professionals & Academics
| Biographies & Memoirs
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Military
| Leaders & Notable People
| Biographies & Memoirs
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Military
| History
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: 0966387066 |
Book Description
While the pilots of F15s, Stealths, and the high-tech Apaches fly their 21st century missions above Iraq, return to their bases, and down their MREs, seasoned aviator John J. Fischer can still taste the soggy cornflakes he ate 50-plus years ago aboard a lumbering carrier in the Yellow Sea. Served in pitching mess halls just off the coast of North Koreasuch meals were often the last for pilots catapulted from their flight decks into the reality of mid-20th century battle.
Fortunate Korean War pilots returned mission-accomplished, however many others perished in the dangerous waters of enemy rice paddies. A number survived capture, made daring escapes, and performed heroic acts of survival and rescue. Back on ship, these men were often met and debriefed by Major John J. Fischer.
Fischer draws from these individual and compelling tales of mission, capture, escape and survival to write a convincing narrative of the trials of war. It was once Fischer's job to assist those who endured to return, retrace, and relate those horrible, trying and heroic moments of battle. Escape from Korea does the same.
Customer Reviews:
Fascinating life-or-death tales.......2004-04-06
Escape From Korea is the personal story of John J. Fischer, a veteran marine aviator who served in the Korean War. John's military career began in 1942 and he flew combat missions in World War II, the Bay of Pigs, and on the beginning onset of what was to become the Vietnam War. Part of John's service involved debriefing those fellow aviators who were captured yet succeeded in escaping and braved terrible odds with the goal of rescue. From these true stories, Fischer presents a compelling military anthology of fascinating life-or-death tales. In this highly recommended selection of case stories and deadly challenges to human survival, the reader is provided a kind of "window" into what life as a combatant in the Korean "police action" was truly like.
Average customer rating:
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Escape from North Korea
Manufacturer: Open Doors Resources
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General
| Biographies & Memoirs
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: 0901644250 |
Average customer rating:
|
Biographical Dictionary of Psychology (Routledge World Reference)
Noel Sheehy
Manufacturer: Routledge
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General
| Biographies & Memoirs
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Psychology & Counseling
| Health, Mind & Body
| Subjects
| Books
Reference
| Psychology & Counseling
| Health, Mind & Body
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Mental Health
| Health, Mind & Body
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Dictionaries & Thesauruses
| Reference
| Subjects
| Books
Dictionaries & Terminology
| Reference
| Medicine
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Psychiatry
| Specialties
| Medicine
| Subjects
| Books
Dictionaries & Terminology
| Medical
| Reference
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| Subjects
| Books
Dictionaries & Terminology
| Reference
| Medicine
| Medical
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Psychiatry
| Internal Medicine
| Medicine
| Medical
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
All Titles
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
| Stores
| Books
ASIN: 0415285615 |
Book Description
The Biographical Dictionary of Psychology provides biographical information and critical analysis of the influences, interest and reception of over 500 people who have made a significant contribution to the field of psychology. The entries are alphabetically organized and identically structured, allowing the reader to access and compare information easily. Introductory biographical details cover main fields of interest, nationality, places and dates of birth and death, appointments and honors. This section is followed by full bibliographic details of principal publications, as well as secondary and critical literature that provide a useful route for further research. The main body of the entry gives a critical appraisal of the life, work and major achievements of each figure.
Average customer rating:
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Biographical Dictionary of Psychology
Leonard Zusne
Manufacturer: Greenwood Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
General
| Biographies & Memoirs
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Psychology & Counseling
| Health, Mind & Body
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| Books
Clinical
| Psychology
| Social Sciences
| New & Used Textbooks
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History
| Psychology
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| New & Used Textbooks
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| Psychology
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| New & Used Textbooks
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General
| Psychology
| Social Sciences
| New & Used Textbooks
| Stores
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ASIN: 0313240272 |
Book Description
"Recommended for collections strong in the area of biographical reference." Library Journal
Book Description
With entries ranging from Alzheimer's disease to the Zeignarik effect, this unique dictionary provides information about the researchers, scholars, and scientists whose names have become part of terms in common use among psychologists. Over 800 eponyms of current or historical interest are presented, together with full definitions and a short biography of the person whose name is appended to the term. In addition to terms originating in psychology itself, there are entries from statistics, physiology, psychiatry, neurology, linguistics, and artificial intelligence that have found their way into psychological parlance.
Book Description
Do sleek high-tech hospitals teach more about medicine and less about humanity? Do doctors ever lose their tolerance for suffering? With sensitive observation and graceful prose, this book explores some of the difficult and deeply personal questions a 23-year-old doctor confronts with her very first dying patient, and continues to struggle with as she strives to become a good doctor. In her travels, the doctor attends to terminal illness, AIDS, tuberculosis, and premature birth in small rural communities throughout the world. What Patients Taught Me is a compelling memoir of the emotional complexity of treating patients when their lives hang in the balance.
Customer Reviews:
Inspirational.......2006-10-16
After reading the author's accounts of rural medicine, I've begun to strongly consider applying for a rural-based residency upon completion of medical school.
Her tone isn't as pompous as some other similar books I've read. She's very down to earth, and doesn't try to make herself sound impressive by using jargon and fancy words. I've already recommended it for friends who are looking into going into medicine. A friend gave this book to me as a gift after reading it, and I plan on doing the same!
What Patients Taught Me : A Medical Student's Journey.......2006-03-03
It was very thoughtfully written.
It was a topic of great interest to me.
The evolution of her insight into her patients was craftfully presented.
My only negative comment concerns the less than excellent level of literary skill.
A medical student's narrative of lessons learned from patients in Alaska to Africa........2005-10-16
When one conceives of the typical American medical school student's training one usually envisions students learning core clinical sciences the first two years and then proceeding on to rotations in major, large intercity hospitals. Yet, a quick glance at the inside jacket of this personal narrative mentions places like Bethel, Alaska and South Africa - not typical locales where one would expect to see a budding young physician. The singular uniqueness of the experience initially captures one's attention and then the succinct, yet poignant prologue fully captivates one's curiosity. Audrey Young brings a clairvoyant quality to her writing and seems to realize her own experience's importance in the midst of the vastness of modern medicine. She has found one thing that unifies medicine - the patient's story - and simultaneously is cognizant of its decline. Young best describes what attracts readers to the book by saying, "Patients teach things that the wisest and most revered physicians cannot, and their lessons are in this book." (x) These lessons are the defining topics of Dr. Young's personal memoir, What Patients Taught Me.
Audrey Young describes her experiences as a developing physician enrolled at University of Washington Medical School. In preparation for medical school and the goal of becoming a practicing physician in the future, Young envisions herself as an urban doctor working in a clinic to provide much needed medical assistance to the indigent and underprivileged. After trudging through her first year of medical school, settling "into the idea that doctoring meant fixing bodies with science", and considering going to practice rural medicine, Young finally enrolls into a summer experience in the WWAMI (Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana, and Idaho) program. (10) The maturing medical student ventures first to Bethel, Alaska where she learns from the Yupik people the value of doctoring as caring for one's patients and living alongside one's patients as not only caretakers but neighbors as well. It is in Bethel that Young first realizes that "telling the story was the crucial first step in taking care of a patient" - a lesson that motivates all subsequent interactions and provides the framework for her memoir. (29) She concludes her experience in Bethel without knowing the outcome of a patient suspected to have either curable tuberculosis or malignant cancer - she never finds out.
Upon return returning to embark upon her second year of medical school, Young "gradually...began to function like a classroom student again and devolved into a primitive machine that ate textbooks and syllabi and spit out answers on multiple-choice exams." (39) Such harsh criticism of the traditional, rigid educational structure of lecture pervades Dr. Young's book, and instructs the reader of the dangers of making medicine simply an inhuman science without a personal component to the learning. In Spokane, she returns to a different type of classroom where her patients established the syllabi and constantly made additions and revisions. On her obstetrics rotations, Audrey Young witnesses difficult labors, complicated pregnancies, and tragic endings with one baby dying immediately after the mother held the baby born without a fully developed nervous system. Young learns to overcome her feelings of judgment of pregnant teenagers and renews her duty to care for those in need in spite of witnessing how not even the best doctors could always convince their patients to help themselves.
In the next chapter of Dr. Young's seemingly unending journey, she endeavors to Pocatello, Idaho where she completes her pediatrics rotation. In this segment of her training, Young finds herself persistently in doubt - of her motivations, her capabilities, and her desire to become a physician - but she is able to find consolation in the example set by one caring resident, Jon. Of him she writes, "I felt a surge of gratitude again for how much he'd contributed towards my clinical skills and for the glimpse he'd given me into a young physician's soul. We had been through a chapter together." (110-111) In Missoula, Montana on her next rotation these clinical skills would prove defenseless against "the capricious powers of the human body to act as it wished, regardless of what the mind hoped for." (125) Martha, a patient who had previously recovered well enough to be taken off a ventilator, quickly sinks into a coma after being resuscitated and then dies almost too quickly for any of her relatives to bid her farewell. John, another of Young's patients, decides to live a fuller life without chemotherapy, spending his time riding on top of horses instead of gurneys.
It is here where she learns from her patients valuable lessons such as the difficulty involved in adhering to an extensive drug regimen, the suffering of being misdiagnosed and treated improperly, and the vulnerability of making such important decisions as a physician. Young learns from her own inadequacy on a standardized test that she herself may make many mistakes, and that someday others might not be able to prevent her mistakes from harming her patients.
Dr. Young's next journey leads her to practice medicine in Swaziland in South Africa in an impoverished community health clinic. Here in Africa Young witnesses the inadequacy of her clinic; this clinic is a healthcare facility that does not even have penicillin to treat simple infections. In spite of a close-call with an accidental needle-stick after taking abdominal fluid from an HIV-infected patient, Audrey Young still renews her devotion to medicine and carries on by taking care of patients and working through difficult circumstances. Young recalls, "I convinced myself that to feel and to act could be entirely unrelated things, but I decided that a doctor who sees suffering must act, rejecting the choice of not acting, even when futility and risk run high." (193) The time spent in Africa, while a vastly divergent setting, still provides Young and the reader with fundamental lessons about the devoted care that an exemplary physician must impart upon his or her patients.
After returning to the United States, she continues her commitment to rural medicine by pursuing a rural internal medicine residency. She finds her niche practicing in a Seattle clinic for the indigent and teaching medical students how to interact with patients. From her writings, one can learn numerous valuable lessons from her diverse experiences. Dr. Young promotes an awareness of a different type of medicine - the type of medicine that the reader witnesses in Young's travels is not the dramatic, exciting medicine that one might see on television. It is also not the technology-driven medicine that one might envision as the future of medicine. What the reader finds in Young's account is simple patient and physician interaction. Young conveys this important message by reiterating, "I admired many of my teaching physicians as brilliant scientists and intellectuals, and for a time fancied myself in that vein. But WWAMI had imprinted upon me that doctors take care of patients, and in the end, I could not imagine a lifetime of doctoring without patients at the center." (208, emphasis added)
Dr. Young weaves an elaborate tapestry out her patients' colorful stories - they are stories of nothing short of what it means to be human. The author does not veil the patients' suffering in medical terminology or vapid euphemisms; the reader instead discovers a potent, passionate account of what physicians might be missing by not listening to patients' stories beyond the clinical manifestations of disease. The first, primary lesson of this narrative informs the reader that "almost everything important comes from the patient's story." (212) The reader witnesses the consequences of failure to take note of the patient's story in the case of Carla, whose first doctor missed the diagnosis of Crohn's disease. From this encompassing lesson, the reader also learns that medicine and health should not simply concern itself with simple clinical symptoms and treatments, but should include consideration of the patient's and the family's more fundamental needs as emotional beings. John's decision to end chemotherapy to live out his last remaining days happily and the physician's respect of this decision eloquently demonstrates the importance of medicine extending beyond physiological considerations.
Moreover, one of the perhaps more important messages that the reader can derive from Dr. Young's What Patients Taught Me is that medicine is fallible and that physicians cannot completely conquer human suffering. It is this humanly flawed aspect of medicine that makes it such an emotional experience to be a physician - to have the power to make a positive impact many times, but to lack any power against disease and illness at other times. Young concludes this statement best when she writes, "Sometimes I enter a story and find I can bring a little light and relief to human suffering." (214)
Good.......2005-09-21
The book arrived in excellent condition. The only complaint is that I paid for 2-day shipping and I received it in 4 days.
Beyond HMOs and Malpractice Headlines.......2005-03-15
Audrey Young reminds us in this interesting and honest narrative how powerfully a good doctor yearns to help, trains for that purpose, and how hard it is not to be able to fix everything all the time. It is clear that she cares about her patients and that textbook procedures are sometimes not enough--which makes this an account of the best in medical practice. This is an encouraging book, for those who have developed medicophobia, and it's also a really good read.
Average customer rating:
- Interesting
- A Great Resource Book
- collection of magazine articles
- This book is a wonderful resource.
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Vegan Handbook: Over 200 Delicious Recipes, Meal Plans, and Vegetarian Resources for All Ages (Vegetarian Journal Reports Series, 2nd Bk.)
Manufacturer: Vegetarian Resource Group
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General
| Baking
| Cooking, Food & Wine
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Cooking, Food & Wine
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Vegetables & Vegetarian
| Cooking, Food & Wine
| Subjects
| Books
Natural Foods
| Cooking, Food & Wine
| Subjects
| Books
Vegan
| Diets
| Diets & Weight Loss
| Health, Mind & Body
| Subjects
| Books
Similar Items:
-
Simply Vegan: Quick Vegetarian Meals
-
Conveniently Vegan: Turn Packaged Foods into Delicious Vegetarian Dishes
-
Meatless Meals For Working People: Quick And Easy Vegetarian Recipes (Meatless Meals for Working People)
-
Becoming Vegan: The Complete Guide to Adopting a Healthy Plant-Based Diet
-
Vegan with a Vengeance : Over 150 Delicious, Cheap, Animal-Free Recipes That Rock
Accessories:
-
Tanita BC533 Glass Innerscan Body Composition Monitor
ASIN: 0931411173 |
Customer Reviews:
Interesting.......2007-09-17
Very good articles, poems, and recipes...truly a handbook. Interesting information for parents and creating vegan recipes for children and babies.
A Great Resource Book.......2001-01-05
I find this book to be invaluable for checking nutrition information, health concerns, and other vegan-related issues. It is always a good idea to have several sources for these particular questions, and I think this handbook is an honest resource for this information. The authors do a thorough job of researching, and they stay away from fantastic claims.
I also appreciate the stories and the historical and cultural articles. It is interesting to read about vegetarianism from these perspectives, and it gives a person a good basic background on the topic.
I am not quite as enthusiastic about the recipes, but that could be because I do a lot of my own creations when cooking. I am also not a fan of many of the "traditional" vegetarian foods, like bean-centered dishes, so I tend to steer clear of them. I will say that this book has a wide variety of dishes, and someone who is not as creative on his/her own with cooking should enjoy them.
collection of magazine articles.......2000-04-04
This book is simply a collection of articles from the "Vegetarian Journal". I'm not saying that's a terrible thing, but just know that before you buy it. It was interesting to look through the first time, but I didn't really care for any of the recipes and I haven't opened it back up since the first time I read it.
This book is a wonderful resource........1999-04-25
I really like this cookbook. It is very useful, especially for young vegans like me who need to cook for themselves. The recipes are easy follow, but sometimes complicated to prepare, and not always quick. I really like the poetry and biographies in it, but some of the information isn't completely true, for example, they talk about Ben Franklin being a vegetarian, but they don't add that he decided that vegetarianism wasn't for him after smelling fish.
Customer Reviews:
School Days Scrapbooks.......2007-03-20
I used the book when I went cropping 2 weeks ago and it was very helpful. I am a beginner and not very creative and it helped a lot. I will definitely get another book.
A must Have for moms of school age children!.......2003-06-04
I really enjoyed this book. I checked it out at my local library. I will be sure to use it again, again. Hope you enjoy it as well.
Book Description
Fascinating, authoritative, easy-to-follow guide to flower form and function, orchids, Eastern and Western wildflowers, older cultivated varieties, today’s perennials, annuals and biennials; flowering trees and shrubs, and tropical and subtropical flowers. Includes botanical and common names, places of origin, outstanding characteristics, and practical advice on planting and cultivation.
Average customer rating:
- An excellent book for parents, teachers and childcare worker
|
Worried All the Time: Rediscovering the Joy in Parenthood in an Age of Anxiety
David Anderegg
Manufacturer: Free Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Relationships
| Health, Mind & Body
| Subjects
| Books
| Codependency
| Conflict Management
| Dating
| Divorce
| Friendship
| General
| Interpersonal Relations
| Love & Loss
| Love & Romance
| Marriage
| Mate Seeking
| Nonmonogamy
Development
| Child Psychology
| Psychology & Counseling
| Health, Mind & Body
| Subjects
| Books
Family Health
| Parenting & Families
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Parenting
| Parenting & Families
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Parenting & Families
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: 0743255879 |
Customer Reviews:
An excellent book for parents, teachers and childcare worker.......2004-10-04
David Anderegg offers down to earth advice for parents of infants to teenagers that encourages both a joyful parenting and childhood experience. At the same time the book is entertaining and humorous. It feels as if you are sitting down, having a great conversation with David Anderegg. I especially love the Try This at Home ideas he provides at the end of each chapter. I also really benefited from his discussion of TV and media.
I am the mother of an infant (and hope to have more children someday), so I have many years ahead of me as a parent and I'm glad to have read this book now. Even if I didn't have children I would still have enjoyed this book because it is an interesting look at our culture from my parent's generation, to my own, to my daughter's. And I also would have loved this book before my daughter's birth when I worked in baby/childcare.
I really agree with David Anderegg when he explains how a parent's worries stems from his or her own life being reflected onto the child. Before I had my daughter I had many worries rooting back to my own experiences growing up that I had to work on before having children. Now as a mother I understand that my daughter is her own person with her own life. I see my daughter's unique personality already in her calm, joyful, curious ways. I'm having too much fun watching her grow and explore to worry. I see her security and contentment. And yet I probably have not entered a deep state of sleep since her birth (as David Anderegg describes in his book).
This book will ease unnecessary worries, help you examine yourself, help you relax and enjoy parenthood, and give you information to help you direct your worries to where they really belong. As a new parent it never hurts to get a little wisdom and guidance. If only all parents and teachers could read this book.
Average customer rating:
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Fetiche - Obras Maestras de La Fotografia Erotica
Tony Mitchell
Manufacturer: Libsa, Editorial S.A.
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Artists, Architects & Photographers
| Arts & Literature
| Biographies & Memoirs
| Subjects
| Books
Spanish
| Foreign Language Nonfiction
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
Arte, arquitectura y fotografía
| Libros en español
| Formats
| Books
| Arquitectura
| Arte
| Artes de Actuación
| Artistas, A-Z
| Diseño Gráfico
| Fotografía
| La Moda
Artistas, Arquitectos y Fotógrafos
| Artes y Literatura
| Biografías y memorias
| Libros en español
| Formats
| Books
No-Ficción
| Libros en español
| Formats
| Books
| Automotriz
| Ciencias Sociales
| Crimen y Criminales
| Educación
| Estudios de la Mujer
| Feriados
| Filosofía
| Gobierno
| Hechos Verídicos
| Planeamiento Urbano y Desarrollo
| Política
| Sucesos de Actualidad
| Transportación
ASIN: 8466201858 |
Average customer rating:
|
Congregation: Contemporary Writers Read the Jewish Bible
Manufacturer: Harcourt
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General
| Religion & Spirituality
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Judaism
| Religion & Spirituality
| Subjects
| Books
Jewish
| Ethnic & National
| Biographies & Memoirs
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: 0156220407 |
Books:
- Exile in Richmond: The Confederate Journal of Henri Garidel (A Nation Divided: New Studies in Civil War History)
- FATEFUL BATTLE LINE: The Great War Journals and Sketches of Captain Henry Ogle MC
- Finding My Father's War
- Flying for the Air Service: The Hughes Brothers in World War I
- Flying into Combat With Heroes
- For the Love of My Country: Desert Storm
- Forgotten Valor: The Memoirs, Journals, & Civil War Letters of Orlando B. Willcox (History Book Club Selection)
- Frenchship 1963
- From First to Last: The Life of William B. Franklin (The North's Civil War, 19)
- From Habsburg Agent to Victorian Scholar
Books Index
Books Home
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- The Omnivore's Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals
- Virtuoso Pianist in 60 Exercises - Complete: Piano Technique
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- Marketing Research and SPSS 11.0, Fourth Edition
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