Books tagged: longfellow

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Vintage Reading: From Plato to Bradbury: A Personal Tour of Some of the World's Best Books    by Robert Kanigel
Price: $7.99 USD. 59750 words. Published by Bancroft Press on July 19, 2010. .

Vintage Reading brings eighty of the world's most unforgettable books out from behind the high castle walls, lowers the drawbridge, and welcomes readers inside. With lively and concise commentary, award-winning author Robert Kanigel throws an arm around the reader and becomes the tour guide to classics, best-sellers, lesser-known greats, and everything in-between.
Spirit Test, A Breadcrumb Path for the Transcendentally Challenged    by Dave Mackey
Price: $4.00 USD. 40640 words. Published on February 25, 2011. .

Before I could allow my mind to latch on to ideas about life, love, death, fate, ghosts and God, I needed proof. With my "spirit testing" I put in to motion certain forces that brought with them inner peace, humorous ghostly encounters, elevated intuition, and mysterious synchronistic messages. I innocently reached out to spirit and was blown away when it reached back and changed my life forever.
The Quiet Radical - The Biography of Samuel Longfellow    by Joe Abdo
Price: $4.99 USD. 112070 words. Published on May 12, 2011. .

The Quiet Radical: The Biography of Samuel Longfellow grew out of my first book, On the Edge of History, about the Dabney family in the Azores for whom Samuel was the children’s tutor. Samuel is better known as the youngest brother of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, but he was an important personality during the 19th century and this book provides a glance at life in Boston during his lifetime.
My Father's America - Volume Two - The Colonies    by Walter Lorenz
Price: $4.99 USD. 175370 words. Published on November 7, 2011. .

England was ready. Of all the nations in Europe, 17th-century England was most peculiarly suited to succeed in peopling the North American continent. This was a strange turn of events. England had been the very last of the Western powers to show any kind of interest in the world beyond Europe. Yet once they got started, the English were destined to succeed in the most spectacular way.