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  2. Books with 324 Pages

Reviews of Books with 324 Pages

Here are all of the books we've reviewed that have 324 pages.

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Book Review

The Not-So-Grim Folk Tales

by Sheila M. Trask

In the Enchanted Forest, everything is magical, the animals never eat each other, and a talking frog might really be a prince. Be forewarned, however, that magical does not mean perfect. Sometimes a leprechaun has a little trouble with... Read More

Book Review

Then Like the Blind Man

by Michelle Anne Schingler

At nine, Orbie seems to live his life along a precipice. He is burdened with an overabundance of difficult choices which would be beyond the capacities of most boys his age—but Orbie is about to discover that he’s no ordinary boy. In... Read More

Book Review

Feasting with Panthers

by J. G. Stinson

This debut novel from Lyle Blake Smythers is a quest fantasy featuring poet and warrior Catalan and his band of mercenaries. On their way back from an assassination, the group chances upon a barely breathing young man named Talin, to... Read More

Book Review

Never a Dull Day in Pompeii

by Margaret Cullison

Archeologists continue to study the remains of villas built during the Roman Empire to learn more about how the emperors and other people who inhabited them lived. In the past, far too many objects disappeared from these sites, taken... Read More

Book Review

Awakenings

by Lee Gooden

"Awakenings", a novel based on a role-playing game developed by the author, begins with a long prologue in which a fierce mêlée rages between a group of heroes and ferocious monsters controlled by a practitioner of dark magic. This... Read More

Book Review

The Bradbury Report

by Alan J. Couture

In 2071 AD, clones are grown for spare parts. They live like subhumans in harsh conditions in the Clearances, a vast area run by a nefarious and secretive government. Virtually no one thinks about his or her clone, or the ethical issues... Read More

Book Review

Insidious

“He held his breath, half expecting the power down wouldn’t work, and that the machines would stay alive, and start giving him orders,” the author writes. Bren Marcken’s fear illustrates one of the biggest threats lurking in... Read More

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