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|  | Be a Clown by Turk Pipkin Aspects of clowning, including makeup, funny faces, costumes, and props. Also includes tricks, stunts, and other techniques. AUTHOR: Turk Pipkin PUBLISHER: Workman Publishing Company, Incorporated FORMAT: Paperback CATEGORY: Art & Architecture 
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 | How Artists See Families by Colleen Carroll Color reproductions of artwork by well-known artists, all of which feature families: mothers, fathers, sisters, and brothers. Biographies of the featured artists are also included. AUTHOR: Colleen Carroll PUBLISHER: Abbeville Press, Incorporated FORMAT: Hardcover CATEGORY: Art & Architecture 
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 | The Anthropology of Turquoise by Ellen Meloy Utah-based nature writer Ellen Meloy touches many subjects in her consideration of the western landscape, including the Navajo language, the urban scene in L.A., the local animal life, and the world of ants. AUTHOR: Ellen Meloy PUBLISHER: Knopf, Alfred A. Incorporated FORMAT: Hardcover CATEGORY: Art & Architecture 
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 | Andy Warhol by Wayne Koestenbaum Wayne Koestenbaum's illuminating life of Warhol links the painter's life with his art in novel ways. AUTHOR: Wayne Koestenbaum PUBLISHER: Viking Penguin FORMAT: Hardcover CATEGORY: Art & Architecture 
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 | Pygmalion by Bernard Shaw, Flo Gibson, Harry Shefter The story that became the basis for the hit musical My Fair Lady. AUTHOR: Bernard Shaw, Flo Gibson, Harry Shefter PUBLISHER: Dover Publications, Incorporated FORMAT: Paperback CATEGORY: Art & Architecture 
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 | Miserables by Charles E. Wilbour, James K. Robinson, Jim Reimann, Maurice Allem, Monica Kulling Hugo's wrenching story centers on Jean Valjean, an honest peasant sentenced to five years' hard labor for stealing a loaf of bread, then 19 more for trying to escape. Turned into a hardened and ruthless criminal by his experiences, he reforms, becomes mayor of a French town, but is tracked down by the pitiless detective Javert for another obscure crime, and incarcerated. Escaping again from the brutal French prison, he befriends a prostitute named Fantine and her daughter, Cosette. This 1862 novel is remarkable for its sympathetic portrayal of common people: prisoners, the poor, women of the streets--all the down-and-out victims of the gross inequities of class in 19th-century Europe. AUTHOR: Charles E. Wilbour, James K. Robinson, Jim Reimann, Maurice Allem, Monica Kulling PUBLISHER: Pocket Books FORMAT: Paperback CATEGORY: Art & Architecture 
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