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Reviews of Books with 56 Pages

Here are all of the books we've reviewed that have 56 pages.

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Book Review

Unintelligent Humans

by John Michael Senger

Unintelligent Humans: Questions to Stimulate Your Soul, by Richard Singer, Jr., a psychotherapist, is a small book containing barely fifty-six pages, the first twenty-one of which collect short questions and drawings designed to... Read More

Book Review

The Well-Tempered Poet

by Margaret Cullison

Poets as disparate as Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Charles Baudelaire, and Thomas Moore have put pen to paper to write about music. Music is accepted as a universal language to which we all respond, and poetry’s oral tradition speaks to... Read More

Book Review

Horse Song

Let’s take a trip to a place where “the people are warm and friendly [and] the landscape ranges from snow-capped mountains and dense forests to the wide-open steppe and the sandy soils of the Gobi,” noted author/illustrators Ted... Read More

Book Review

Fairy Houses &133; Everywhere!

“I believe in everything until it’s disproved,” said John Lennon. “So I believe in fairies, the myths, dragons. It all exists, even if it’s in your mind.” Whether or not fairies exist only in one’s mind, this photographic... Read More

Book Review

Artie and Julie

by Jada Bradley

Artie the lion and Julie the rabbit’s dutiful parents teach their offspring how to be good members of their species. Artie is expected to catch a rabbit, while Julie is expected to cleverly evade a lion’s jaws. However, the book’s... Read More

Book Review

Day Dreams and Reality

by Kristine Morris

Safiyyah Ar-Raheem Hines expresses the turbulent emotions created when one’s daydreams and fantasies about life and relationships hit the hard wall of reality. Hines admits that the pain of having made life choices without having first... Read More

Book Review

Gentle Yoga for 50 Plus

by Kristine Morris

Those who have associated the term “yoga” with words like “difficult” “time-consuming” “boring” or “painful” will find Gentle Yoga for 50 Plus* a lighthearted encouraging and easy-to-follow introduction to a practice... Read More

Book Review

The Line

by Jeff Gundy

The mostly brief prose poems that make up Jennifer Moxley’s fourth book of poetry locate themselves immediately in what must now, oddly, be described as the experimental tradition. The epigraph (untranslated) is from Rimbaud’s... Read More

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