A selection of prose, soul, poetry and flash fiction by Out of the Asylum writers, Fremantle
Dave Robicheaux, a detective in the New Iberia, Louisiana, Sheriff's Office, becomes embroiled in a new investigation into the twenty-eight-year-old murder of a famed NAACP leader, when the man convicted...
The more nimble and frothy jukebox shows escape much that is weighty about them —remember the Craymer quote from the top of the chapter that explicitly separates Mamma Mia! from musicals heavy with pathos. These significant differences ...
“You're reporting to Major Webb?” “Right. But if you're expecting Kallitsky, I guess I'm the wrong man.” He was thinking—hoping—they would put him on a plane and fly him right back to Fort Benning. “No, no,” Fingerly said, soft and easy ...
14 In another Video Jukebox promo from , the viewer travels with a coin along its chute into a more traditional music jukebox. Once inside the machine, music instruments are played by robot arms à la Herbie Hancock's Rockit.
on this object, or this subject matter, especially since it seemed that in most countries and places the time of jukeboxes was pretty much past (he, too, was perhaps gradually getting beyond the age for standing in front of these ...
History of the development, technology and stars of jukeboxes (unique coin-operated record players) with information on manufacturers, a photo chronicle of their evolution, and advice on collecting, maintaining and restoring jukeboxes from ...
An adult picture book with a solvable mystery from the bestselling author of the Griffin & Sabine trilogy. Full-color, double-page spreads depict exotic artifacts collected by an eccentric millionaire over...
Jukebox Johnny presents 1,001 of his best trivia questions about all of your favorite performers from the Golden Age of Rock & Roll. The questions in this book will thrill, entertain, amuse, and stump you!
“Jukebox industry bucks Kefauver in D.C. hearings on royalty bill.” Variety, February 6, 1952, pp. 43, 50. “Jukebox industry's political power on copyright bill baffles music biz.” Variety, April 26, 1967, p. 183. “Jukebox invasion.
"Sandra Beasley eschews the poet-as-speaker convention and unleashes a collection teeming with the inanimate, the anachronistic, and the animal kingdom.