IrishCentral’s Book of the Month: “Strange Flowers” by Donal Ryan
“Strange Flowers” by Donal Ryan is the January selection for IrishCentral’s Book Club. Each month, we will pick a new Irish book or a great book by an Irish author and
Free eBooks of the Netherlands
“Strange Flowers” by Donal Ryan is the January selection for IrishCentral’s Book Club. Each month, we will pick a new Irish book or a great book by an Irish author and
By Tim D. Stone "The Great Nightfall: How We Win The New Cold War," by J. William Middendorf II and Kenneth R. Dooley. Heritage Harbor Foundation, 316 pages. $29.95. "The Great Nightfall:
If 2020 has been a year to forget for producers, it’s been a year of opportunity for some writers. In the darkest depths of lockdown, when cameras had stopped rolling
Book: Braided in Fire: Black GIs and Tuscan Villagers on the Gothic Line 1944Author: Solace Wales Review by: John Mulholland, longtime manufacturing executive and current director of business development for CMS,
One of the first complaints students and lovers of literature have about Russian novels: "They're so long!" That might be because they were written over long, long winters, or maybe
LONDON — (AP) — Britain has completed its economic break from the European Union, ending its 48-year partnership with the trading bloc and starting a new and more distant relationship
France's President Emmanuel Macron gives a speech to unveil his strategy to promote French as part of the International Francophonie Day before members of the French Academy (Academie Francaise) and
Photo shows a miniature ice book created by Russian artist Anatoly Konenko, Dec. 28, 2020. (Photo/IC Photo) Anatoly Konenko specializes in miniatures, including micrographics, micro-sculpture, micro-carving, and micro-modeling; he creates jewelry,
SUDBURY — Ann Patchett's novel, "The Dutch House," tops the list of the most-borrowed books from the Goodnow Library in 2020. The book is a family saga centering on a brother
Book review: ‘Thomas Mann’s War: Literature, Politics, and the World Republic of Letters’ by Tobias Boes Flames of ignorance and hate lit the darkness on a May evening in 1933. The