Sue Klebold | A Mother’s Reckoning: Living in the Aftermath of Tragedy (Crown)
“Looking down at the perfect bundle in my arms, I was overcome by a strong premonitions this child would bring me a terrible sorrow.”
“Looking down at the perfect bundle in my arms, I was overcome by a strong premonitions this child would bring me a terrible sorrow.”
Technology will always advance, but human nature will always remain imperfect.
Oma fills Rose’s head with tales of “mares,” people who can shape-shift into other creatures, and cause great havoc as changelings.
There is only so much you can say about clemency, and much more to discover about the underpinnings of mass murder.

Katherine Heiny writes like I write. Had I continued writing fiction. And kept growing my craft. And been a better writer.
I had great hopes for Moving Panels: Translating Comics to Film, but unfortunately it reads more like a series of undergraduate papers.
One chapter you’ll swear the murderer has to be this person and next chapter you’ll start to suspect someone else.
Rycroft spins a very colorful and descriptive world in which the story takes place.

It is a reminder you are not the only person on Earth with an anxiety disorder.
There is a depth to the artist not seen in contemporary pop music. It’s predictable; Morrissey isn’t.
Copyright 2016 PLAYBACK:stl