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i recommend this for anyone no matter what they believe.
has anyone here read "Choke", I was wondering whether or not it was worth reading before i saw the movie
You and the D00D have turned this thread into a horrible head-on-collision between a short bus full of regular kids and a van full of paraplegics.
Quote from: All Hail Wu Welsh on September 09, 2008, 08:19:57 PMExpand Quotehas anyone here read "Choke", I was wondering whether or not it was worth reading before i saw the movie[close]It's worth reading.
has anyone here read "Choke", I was wondering whether or not it was worth reading before i saw the movie[close]
make your own meat spin!
Hanz Up! Hoes down.
i need a non-fiction book over 150 pages for school. anybody have suggestions?
"Gravity's Rainbow" by Thomas Pynchon
An interesting look into a "hidden dimension" of American racism. If you have ever wondered why blacks tend to live in bigger cities and urban centers this book explains how it wasn't an accident. It also talks about how racist states like Illinois and Indiana really where and shows that the South really wasn't the center of racism in our country.
Quote from: Gatoraids on September 11, 2008, 01:07:14 PMExpand QuoteAn interesting look into a "hidden dimension" of American racism. If you have ever wondered why blacks tend to live in bigger cities and urban centers this book explains how it wasn't an accident. It also talks about how racist states like Illinois and Indiana really where and shows that the South really wasn't the center of racism in our country. [close]Weren't you arguing that the South WAS the center of racism in the country just a few months ago?
An interesting look into a "hidden dimension" of American racism. If you have ever wondered why blacks tend to live in bigger cities and urban centers this book explains how it wasn't an accident. It also talks about how racist states like Illinois and Indiana really where and shows that the South really wasn't the center of racism in our country. [close]
have you ever read loewen's book "lies across america"? such a promising topic, sbut uch an intensely superficial book... hopefully his work has improved since then. you might like to follow up with robert fogelson's excellent book on restrictive convenants in american suburbs:http://yalepress.yale.edu/yupbooks/book.asp?isbn=9780300124170