1. Book Reviews
  2. Books with 319 Pages

Reviews of Books with 319 Pages

Here are all of the books we've reviewed that have 319 pages.

Return to Most Recent

Book Review

Spirit Stones

by Kristine Morris

Silent and somewhat forbidding, the stone structures erected by our megalithic ancestors continue to evoke awe and wonder. "Spirit Stones", ten years in the making, combines Dianne Ebertt Beeaff’s lifelong love of history and travel... Read More

Book Review

Habits of Change

by Kristine Morris

“Nuns defy stereotypes,” says Carole Garibaldi Rogers, whose compelling collection of interviews with ninety-six women religious highlights the dramatic changes that they have had to confront during the past fifty years. Habits of... Read More

Book Review

Bending the Boyne

by Shoilee Khan

It is 2200 BCE in ancient Ireland—the Eire—and Starwatchers, a quiet, self-sufficient people, look to the stars for guidance. While the stars help them cultivate an understanding of their history, they spend peaceful lives as... Read More

Book Review

Meet the Annas

“Look at her pictures…Anna in that slinky green dress, with her wild bangs, dangly blue earrings, with her cat’s eyes and pouty pink lips, radiating the absolute certainty that she can see just what you want—and show you how to... Read More

Book Review

A Strong-Minded Woman

by Aimee Sabo

Upon her death in 1905, Mary A. Livermore was hailed by the Boston Transcript as “America’s foremost woman.” It was a fitting epitaph. During the Civil War, Livermore worked tirelessly to ensure proper nutrition and medical care... Read More

Book Review

News Incorporated

by Rob Mitchell

The American public knew more about Wynona Ryder’s shoplifting trial than it did about the history of U.S. involvement in Iraq. Peter Phillips, director of Project Censored, faults corporate media. He observes that with only a handful... Read More

Book Review

A Secret Revealed

by Val Grimm

Bounders and Easterling warriors have begun to stalk the Northlands. Ranger cadet Camber Bloodstone his cousin Dane and Captain Dega Darkhawk discover the reason when the earth opens and spills them into a dwarf warren. Sentash the... Read More

Book Review

The Girl and the Cat

by Lisa Bower

Paul L. Shriver has been writing for a long time, and his poetry collection, "The Girl and the Cat", chronicles such topics as unrequited and found love, the passage of time, and such political issues as the tobacco industry and the... Read More

Load More