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|  | The Royal Bee by Christopher Z. Zhang, Frances Park, Ginger Park Description not available.Songho, a Korean boy destined to a life of poverty, follows the sound of the school bell into the valley and, although initially turned away by the school master, earns a chance at an educationsomething only sons of wealthy families could get. Simultaneous. AUTHOR: Christopher Z. Zhang, Frances Park, Ginger Park PUBLISHER: Boyds Mills Press FORMAT: Paperback CATEGORY: Fiction 
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 | Junior College by Gary Soto A Chicano poet writes about his experiences at junior college in the 1970s, along with poems about--among other things--dog-ownership and learning Italian. AUTHOR: Gary Soto PUBLISHER: Chronicle Books LLC FORMAT: Paperback CATEGORY: Fiction 
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 | The Short Stories by Ernest Hemingway, Stacey Keach The definitive collection of the stories of Ernest Hemingway, with a preface by the author, originally published in 1938. Hemingway`s short stories are considered his best work because of their controlled economy, the simplicity of their language, and Hemingway`s constant struggle to get to the truth in a situation. AUTHOR: Ernest Hemingway, Stacey Keach PUBLISHER: Simon & Schuster Audio FORMAT: Audio CATEGORY: Fiction 
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 | Burning the Map by Laura Caldwell Description not available.Twenty-six-year-old Casey Evers, who has her life perfectly mapped out, joins her two best friends on an illuminating trip to Rome and Greece, where she unexpectedly embarks on a journey of self-discovery that causes her to question her life and her long-term relationship with her boyfriend John. Original. AUTHOR: Laura Caldwell PUBLISHER: Harlequin Enterprises, Limited FORMAT: Paperback CATEGORY: Fiction 
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 | An Ocean of Time Description not available.A guide describing the treatment and diagnosis of Alzeheimer's examines the latest findings regarding the disease, various therapeutic options, the diagnosis process, and promising research in the field. 15,000 first printing. CATEGORY: Fiction 
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 | The Harlem Renaissance in Black & White by George Hutchinson By restoring interracial dimensions left out of accounts of the Harlem Renaissance--or blamed for corrupting it--George Hutchinson transforms our understanding of black (and white) literary modernism, interracial literary relations, and twentieth-century cultural nationalism in the United States. A courageous work that exposes the oversimplifications and misrepresentations of popular readings of the Harlem Renaissance, this book reveals the truly composite nature of American literary culture. It concludes with the first full-scale interpretation of the landmark anthology The New Negro . AUTHOR: George Hutchinson PUBLISHER: Harvard University Press FORMAT: Hardcover CATEGORY: Fiction 
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