Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Midwest Book Review was established in 1976. [1] The editor-in-chief of the organization is James A. Cox. [2] [3] The review puts out nine publications on a monthly basis, with a focus on community and academic library organizations, booksellers, and the general reading public. [4]
Robert Miskimon (1943-2022) is an author, journalist and poet whose fiction has received favorable reviews in The Midwest Book Review, the Monterey Peninsula Herald and the San Francisco Review of Books. His published fiction includes A Wind Is Rising, Plastic Jesus, What Death Can Touch, Skagit, Shenandoah and La Posada, Other Stories and ...
Mark Lardas of the Galveston Daily News gave a positive review. [4] One reviewer for the Midwest Book Review called the book "an enjoyable thriller that provides readers with plenty of operational military maneuvers at sea and in Trinidad, and understanding of strategic concerns though the latter sometimes turns boring due TMI detail" [5] while ...
ReputationDefender® is a comprehensive online reputation and privacy management company. Its search-and-destroy dashboard can help you manage the dramatic increase in availability of your personal information on the internet, ReputationDefender® searches for all of your personal information online, destroying what you don’t want the world ...
The New York Review of Books (3 C, 12 P) Pages in category "Book review magazines published in the United States" The following 34 pages are in this category, out of 34 total.
Billing will begin automatically at the end of your trial period. To view billing information/history: For help locating your billing info, review our Account Management help article. If you have questions about your billing information, call us at 1-866-485-9217 Monday through Friday between 8AM to 1AM ET, and Saturday between 8AM and 10PM ET.
Book review: "Tinkertown: A Wheatfield, an Airbase, and Us: The Story of Midwest City & Tinker AFB" by Jim Willis (ArtStrings, LLC, in stores)
The book received positive reviews from Library Journal, [14] Midwest Book Review, [15] and The Honolulu Advertiser. [16] It won a 2005 IPPY Award in the travel essay category. [15] In 1999, Wilson learned of the Camino de Santiago, a Spanish pilgrimage trail and continued his walks for peace in the historic tradition.