In the third book of F. T. Bradley's spy adventure series that ALA Booklist calls "hilarious" and "authentic," troublemaker Linc Baker must infiltrate the set of a Hollywood blockbuster in order to stop a terrorist's plan for worldwide destruction. After his last mission, Linc thought his undercover junior agent days were behind him and tons of boring studying ahead of him. But when supersecret government agency Pandora wants your help, you don't exactly have a choice. Sinister criminal Ethan Melais is on the loose in Tinseltown, and it's up to Linc to find him. But while he's on the job, Linc is snagged by a famous director to star in a movie. Add "trying to impress the cute Hollywood starlet Savannah Stone" to Linc's to-do list and this mission has suddenly become more complicated. As always, Linc's look-alike agent nemesis, Ben Green, is hot on Linc's heels, and time is running out. Can Linc nab the thief, charm Savannah, and beat Ben at his own game?
When shy, psychic bookworm 'Cookie' Orbach watches television, she sees things.
Joe Overstreet's New Aunt Jemima (1964) reinterpreted the comforting caricature, keeping her smile and decorative bandanna but placing a machine gun in her hands that she sprayed out from the canvas. In Time, Robert Hughes wrote, ...
Double Vision from Pat Barker, a gripping novel about the effects of violence on the journalists and artists who have dedicated themselves to representing it In the aftermath of September 11, 2001, reeling from the effects of reporting from ...
Dillon Richard is a brilliant and meticulous engineer who's greatly respected by fellow workers, however he has'nt much time for romance.
Double Vision Fiona Brand In the forgotten corners of Rina's mind there is a very valuable secret... one that the Chavez family will kill for.
The author and his friend, the late renowned writer Robert Taylor, are replaced in this novel by two different and imaginary writers, providing a wise and insightful exploration of American literary life "This novel--this creation--is ...
This dramatic memoir by one of America's most respected journalists and media critics takes us from the author's narrow escape from a Turkish massacre of Armenians as a young child, to his secret acquisition of the Pentagon Papers, to the ...
"Surveying more than 175 years of innovation and experimentation, this volume evokes the wonder and excitement of 3D media with over 200 illustrations of artworks, photographs, pop culture ephemera, and more.
Double Vision
In Double Vision, philosopher and literary critic Tzachi Zamir argues that there are more things in Hamlet than are dreamt of--or at least conceded--by most philosophers.