Ebooks Download
            
HomeNew Links Add to FavouritesContact

Search
Categories
Business to Business
Computing & Internet
Fun & Entertainment
Money & Employment
Sports & Recreation
Health & Fitness
Home & Family
Marketing & Ads
Society & Culture

| All Products


 

All Products : Bestsellers

All Products : Bestsellers

$15 off $200 exp 11/30  - New Customers Only
Adult Products Adult Products     Apparel Apparel     Baby Baby    
Beauty Beauty     Books Books     Classical Music Classical Music    
DVD DVD     DigitalCameras DigitalCameras     Electronics Electronics    
Fashion Accessories Fashion Accessories     GiftsForHer GiftsForHer     Gourmet Food Gourmet Food    
Health & Personal Care Health & Personal Care     Jewelry Jewelry     Kitchen & Housewares Kitchen & Housewares    
Lingerie Lingerie     Magazines Magazines     Music Music    
Music BoxSets Music BoxSets     Musical Instruments Musical Instruments     Office Products Office Products    
Outdoor Living Outdoor Living     PC Hardware PC Hardware     Pet Supplies Pet Supplies    
Photo Photo     Software Software     Sporting Goods Sporting Goods    
Tools & Hardware Tools & Hardware     Toys Toys     VHS VHS    
Video Games Video Games    

 


Personal Chef Services - South Beach Diet Recipes |













by York Membery

Average customer rating: 3.5 ISBN: 0233992901

by Michael Ondaatje, Ralph Fiennes
$15.61

Average customer rating: 4.0 ISBN: 0739343947
Haunting and harrowing, as beautiful as it is disturbing, The English Patient tells the story of the entanglement of four damaged lives in an Italian monastery as World War II ends. The exhausted nurse, Hana; the maimed thief, Caravaggio; the wary sapper, Kip: each is haunted by the riddle of the English patient, the nameless, burn victim who lies in an upstairs room and whose memories of passion, betrayal, and rescue illuminate this book like flashes of heat lightning. In lyrical prose informed by a poetic consciousness, Michael Ondaatje weaves these characters together, pulls them tight, then unravels the threads with unsettling acumen.

A book that binds readers of great literature, The English Patient garnered the Booker Prize for author Ondaatje. The poet and novelist has also written In the Skin of a Lion, Coming Through Slaughter and The Collected Works of Billy the Kid; two collections of poems, The Cinnamon Peeler and There's a Trick with a Knife I'm Learning to Do; and a memoir, Running in the Family.





  Covaxil Laboratories




Shopping at electronics.shopping-club.biz  Created at Wed Oct 8 12:20:44 2008
Search Results


Real Estate With No Credit Checks!


Invest in Real Estate without credit checks and $1-10.00 Down! #1 Rated Real Estate Program for over 1 year!..



Build Massive Wealth With Foreclosures.


Step by step formula for building massive wealth through real estate foreclosures. Affiliates earn up to $76...



How To Build Your Free House


The #1 Best-Selling Real Estate Development E-Book on ClickBank - Affiliates Earn $21.24 - Readers Earn $100,000+..



A Second Home In New Zealand


Unique guide reveals insider secrets on how to migrate, live, work or invest in New Zealand the smart way...



Mortgage Cycling Revealed


Brand New Patent Pending Mortgage Reduction Program Quickly Builds A Minimum Of $40,000 Worth Of Home Equity...



How To Buy Foreclosures - Just $9.95!


Sick of get rich quick stories? Something fishy in those other websites? Get the REAL DEAL! All partners pay increased to 75%..



Mortgage Loan Tips


Why some people almost always get the lowest interest rate on their mortgage - for the least points - and NO Junk Fees!..



Fixer-Upper Fortunes


How to safetly make a fortune from real estate and quit your job forever...



Home Inspection Success


How to become a successful home inspector...



Find Ugly Homes And Assign The Contracts


Profit in real estate without cash, credit or risk. Learn how to make quick cash in real estate without owning property...


Next - Next - Next - Next - Next - Next - Next - Next - Next - Next


Every Tenant's Legal Guide, 2nd Ed | Search Every Tenant's Legal Guide, 2nd Ed


 

Search: family.realestate

Search: family.realestate

Order
Park City: the best real-estate buys. (Utah): An article from: Utah Business

Park City: the best real-estate buys. (Utah): An article from: Utah Business

»rank:

by: Kristen Rogers


: :This digital document is an article from Utah Business, published by American Diversified Publishing Company, lnc. on August 1, 1991. The length of the article is 1480 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.Citation DetailsTitle: Park City: the best real-estate buys. (Utah)Author: ...

Every Tenant's Legal Guide, 2nd Ed

Every Tenant's Legal Guide, 2nd Ed

»rank: 1600792

by: Janet Portman, Marcia Stewart


: :Every Tenant's Legal Guide gives tenants in all 50 states the legal and practical information they need to deal with landlords and protect their rights when things go wrong. lt shows tenants how to choose and inspect a home before moving in, sign a fair and legal lease agreement, get a landlord to make needed repairs, and complain about legal discrimination. Review:Anyone who's ever run afoul of a landlord will appreciate the information ...


page 1 of  1
 




Some Celebrities

Rena Mero  | Kimiya Mako  | Anita Bryant  | Isabelle Chaudieu  | Aylin Mujica  |












$10.99



On her eighth studio album, Damita Jo--the title lifted from her middle name--Janet Jackson teams up with Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis once again on what is perhaps the most feverish album in her two decade long career. Whether she's taking the listener on a torrid excursion in the four song island suite, or boasting of her sexual prowess on "Sexhibition's" word games lyrics, where she tells fans "relax, it's just sex," the singer tries hard--maybe too hard--to establish herself as a sexual avatar with portfolio. But in "Strawberry Bounce," she seems more like a pole dancer in stilettos than a social revolutionary, as she catalogs the way she plans to make her inamorato lose control, and she just sounds silly on "Moist," which extols the female orgasm. Instead, the best moments on the album are when Jackson comes off as saucy and winsome instead of a heavy breather, like on the down-tempo "Thinkin' Bout My Ex," her collaboration with Babyface, which seems lifted right out of her autobiography, and on the athletic Prince clone "Just A Little While." The title track is Jackson's own version of J-Lo's "Jenny On the Block," and she sounds just as insincere as Lopez when she tried to convince us that she was just an ordinary neighborhood diva. Instead, Janet’s much more persuasive when she joins up with hip-hop savant Kanye West on "My Baby," pairing her breathy, little girl vocals to his sharp, focused rap. Then and only then does Damita Jo sound like love can actually trump sex. --Jaan Uhelszki




- Thursday Plantation




Ed 2nd Guide, Legal Tenant's Every
Shopping at books.shopping-club.biz  Created at Wed Oct 8 12:20:46 2008
Copyright © Shopping-Club.Biz
Shopping Club

Money & Employment
  Health & Fitness
  Home & Family
  Society & Culture
 


Recent Entries
Science Fiction Books  Brittney Spears Posters  Trance Music  Vintage Clothing  Ebooks Download  Office Products  Notebooks & Computers  Plasma Television  Fine Jewelry  LCD TV Shopping  Gourmet Food  Health Care & Wellness  Action Toys  PC Games  Tools & Hardware 






$23.99



The fourth entry in the Harry Potter saga could be retitled Fast Times at Hogwarts, where finding a date to the winter ball is nearly as terrifying as worrying about Lord Voldemort's return. Thus, the young wizards' entry into puberty (and discovery of the opposite sex) opens up a rich mining field to balance out the dark content in the fourth movie (and the stories are only going to get darker). Mike Newell (Four Weddings and a Funeral) handily takes the directing reins and eases his young cast through awkward growth spurts into true young actors. Harry (Daniel Radcliffe, more sure of himself) has his first girl crush on fellow student Cho Chang (Katie Leung), and has his first big fight with best bud Ron (Rupert Grint). Meanwhile, Ron's underlying romantic tension with Hermione (Emma Watson) comes to a head over the winter ball, and when she makes one of those girl-into-woman Cinderella entrances, the boys' reactions indicate they've all crossed a threshold.

But don't worry, there's plenty of wizardry and action in Goblet of Fire. When the deadly Triwizard Tournament is hosted by Hogwarts, Harry finds his name mysteriously submitted (and chosen) to compete against wizards from two neighboring academies, as well as another Hogwarts student. The competition scenes are magnificently shot, with much-improved CGI effects (particularly the underwater challenge). And the climactic confrontation with Lord Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes, in a brilliant bit of casting) is the most thrilling yet. Goblet, the first installment to get a PG-13 rating, contains some violence as well as disturbing images for kids and some barely shrouded references at sexual awakening (Harry's bath scene in particular). The 2 1/2-hour film, lean considering it came from a 734-page book, trims out subplots about house-elves (they're not missed) and gives little screen time to the standard crew of the other Potter films, but adds in more of Britain's finest actors to the cast, such as Brendan Gleeson as Mad-Eye Moody and Miranda Richardson as Rita Skeeter. Michael Gambon, in his second round as Professor Dumbledore, still hasn't brought audiences around to his interpretation of the role he took over after Richard Harris died, but it's a small smudge in an otherwise spotless adaptation. --Ellen A. Kim

On the DVD
The highlight of the two-disc set is a half-hour conversation with actors Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, and Rupert Grint. They discuss their reactions to the film and other topics with British writer Richard Curtis . Then they answer questions from contest-winning fans, such as what are their favorite kids' books (Watson bypasses the obvious answer in favor of Roald Dahl and Philip Pullman) and what scenes are they looking forward to in upcoming films. More routine extras include the "Reflections on the Fourth Film" featurette (14 min.), though it has comments from some of the other young cast members, and "Preparing for the Yule Ball" (9 min.). The 10 minutes of additional scenes are mostly skulking and skullduggery, plus a long musical number from the ball. The remaining material is grouped along the lines of the Triwizard Tournament, with behind-the-scenes looks at each of the competitions (about 22 min. total), two longer featurettes on He Who Must Not Be Named (11 min.) and the workday of the other contestants (Robert Pattinson, Stanislav Ianevski, and Clémence Poésy, 13 min.), and four games, playable with the directional arrows on the remote control, that can be frustrating to figure out. --David Horiuchi

$9.97



Some movie-loving wizards must have cast a magic spell on Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, because it's another grand slam for the Harry Potter franchise. Demonstrating remarkable versatility after the arthouse success of Y Tu Mamá También, director Alfonso Cuarón proves a perfect choice to guide Harry, Hermione, and Ron into treacherous puberty as the now 13-year-old students at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry face a new and daunting challenge: Sirius Black (Gary Oldman) has escaped from Azkaban prison, and for reasons yet unknown (unless, of course, you've read J.K. Rowling's book, considered by many to be the best in the series), he's after Harry in a bid for revenge. This dark and dangerous mystery drives the action while Harry (the fast-growing Daniel Radcliffe) and his third-year Hogwarts classmates discover the flying hippogriff Buckbeak (a marvelous CGI creature), the benevolent but enigmatic Professor Lupin (David Thewlis), horrifying black-robed Dementors, sneaky Peter Pettigrew (Timothy Spall), and the wonderful advantage of having a Time-Turner just when you need one. The familiar Hogwarts staff returns in fine form (including the delightful Michael Gambon, replacing the late Richard Harris as Dumbledore, and Emma Thompson as the goggle-eyed Sybil Trelawney), and even Julie Christie joins this prestigious production for a brief but welcome cameo. Technically dazzling, fast-paced, and chock-full of Rowling's boundless imagination (loyally adapted by ace screenwriter Steve Kloves), The Prisoner of Azkaban is a Potter-movie classic. --Jeff Shannon

by Raven Symone
$10.87

Average customer rating: ISBN: 0786837551
$13.99



It's a pleasant surprise when a Hollywood sequel actually rivals the artistic success of its inspiration, but that's exactly what Dreamworks' second computer animated skewering of the classic fairy tale canon does with consistent wit and charm. It boasts a vibrant song-score (Harry Gregson-Williams' slyly humorous orchestral soundtrack is also available) to match, one that bristles with even more eclectic pop energy than the original, if not quite as many left-field surprises. There are takes on love with a contemporary edge from Eels and Dashboard Confessional, as well as more traditional romantic ballads from Joseph Arthur and Counting Crows, while veterans Tom Waits and Nick Cave offer up slices of their own typically moody melancholia. Covers of Bonnie Tyler's "Holding Out For A Hero" (in a dry techno revamp by Frou Frou) and Bowie's "Changes" (with a cameo by the author himself lighting up an otherwise mundane version) are also featured, though neither reaches the loopy orbit of Antonio Banderas and Eddie Murphy trashing Ricky Martin's kitsch-iconic "La Vida Loca." --Jerry McCulley