Schmutterer, Martin
Focus on services may mean Britain does not face ire of incoming US president, business secretary tells FT summit Save ReviewFiction Eurotrash — unearthing a family’s collaboration and complacency A mother-and-son road trip is propelled by guilt and unease in Christian Kracht’s hilariously ...
1,179 Books Reviewed on AALBC.com Have Your Book Reviewed by AALBC.com (share)Recently Reviewed BooksLearn how to have your book reviewed by AALBC.com.Veracity and Verse: A Preacher’s Reflections and Poems on Faith and Truth by James A. Forbes (Broadleaf Books, Apr 29, 2025) Dearly ...
About this book Five times our world has stood on the brink of Armageddon. It's been scorched, frozen, poison-gassed, smothered and pelted by asteroids. We are very lucky to be alive…Over the past decade has come a revolution in our understanding of global apocalypses. Armed with new ...
A world where cliches fit like a gown by Edith Head —Tom Nolan, New York Times Book Review, November 9, 1986 The comparison to a Hollywood designer’s gowns was most appropriate as the book being reviewed had a Hollywood background. Similes Dictionary, 1st Edition. © 1988 The Gale ...
G. Wells, the author paints a dystopian picture of the future where nuclear technology has unraveled humanity's existence. Through the lens of science fiction, Wells delves into the consequences of mankind's reckless pursuit of power, showcasing a world on the brink of destruction. The novel ...
Europe, is set to premiere in the U.K. Animated by TMO-Loonland's Peter Volkle at his Hungarian studio, the first of the 26 completed episodes will air on February 28, 2000. The series is based off of Scott Musgrove's cult comic book. Fat Dog and his boy Little Costumed Buddy liv...
November 26, 2024 By Ann Morgan in Africa, Book of the month Tags: Angèle Rawiri, book review, books, culture, feminism, Gabon, infertility, novel, politics, translation 2 Comments This was a recommendation from Suroor Alikhan, who kindly invited me to be part of the Hyderabad Literature...
Why did I read this book:An older take on a dystopian (or is it utopian?) future, filtered through the lens of speculative fiction…whatdoesn’tsay “Thea” all over that? Review: The sun rises on Urbmon 116 (god bless! god bless!), and the vertical world of some 80,000 men, wo...
Disclaimer: Like One Day, this book will make you cry. But it will crack you up too, because of its depictions of love; Rabbit has a big, loving, rowdy, potty-mouthed family, the kind that produces a woman who still thinks she’s one of the lucky ones, even on her last day on...