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Böcker utgivna av Epicenter Press (WA)

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  • av Marie Romero Cash
    296,-

    Follow the journey of a Santa Fe artist as she maneuvers through life's ups and downs.

  • av Connie Hampton Connally
    400,-

    In the deadly siege of Budapest, secrets lodge in a teen violinist's heart and the music he writes. Sixty years later, relatives ask about music's story. Is it too painful or can pain, like music, be re-composed as beauty?

  • av Carla Kelly
    296,-

    Surgeon Jesse Randall serves with Marching Hospital Eight, of Wellington's army in Spain. He loves Elinore Mason, daughter of a ne'er-do-well officer. Can Jesse keep her safe from Major Bones, a terrible lecher?

  • av Chris McGillion
    296,-

    The abduction of a Timorese friend's fiancé draws FBI Agent Sara Carter into the investigation of the murder of two youths that could ignite a gang war, or portend a more mysterious threat.

  • av C R Koons
    296,-

    Sheriff Ulysses Walker, up for re-election, faces opposition from corrupt officials and criminals who use bribery, extortion and murder to achieve their ends. At stake is the water and culture of Northern New Mexico.

  • av Rosalind Brackenbury
    296,-

    When the bones of a woman are dug up on a beach in Dorset whose are they? How do they connect with Nessa Halloran's present life as memories of her English post-war childhood emerge to haunt her?

  • av Trevis L Gleason
    360,-

    Nearly two decades of living with and writing about life with chronic illness compiled and distilled into often moving, sometimes funny, always poignant and useful essays by Trevis L Gleason.

  • av Lyn Farrell
    296,-

    When two women come to Rosedale Investigations to report their husbands missing, the team wonders if it's the same man. He's gone on the run to escape a killer.

  • av J W Hodge
    296,-

    Mercedes Harrigan doubts death by "natural causes" explanation when she finds a corpse in her vintage apartment complex, will she expose the truth or wind up in a Harrigan Mortuary casket?

  • av Tricia Brown
    296,-

    Patsy Ann was the friendliest dog on the docks in 1930s Juneau, Alaska, but she refused tobelong to anyone. Still, the whole town adopted the hearing-impaired terrier, naming her "Official BoatGreeter."

  • av Lily H. Tuzroyluke
    326 - 456,-

  • av J L Buck
    296,-

    When a ghost from the past turns his fellow agent's world upside down, Viscount Ware will stop at nothing to save his friend from the hangman's noose.

  • av Carol E Ayer
    280,-

    Kayla Jeffries, home bakery owner and Highly Sensitive Person (HSP), once more finds herself involved in a murder case when her boyfriend, restaurateur Jason Banks, is suspected of killing his longtime nemesis.

  • av Joe Henderson
    400,-

    A daily, mile by mile, journal of one man''s journey with his twenty- two Malamutes, across the vastness and cold of Alaska''s north country. The cold and loneliness of the vastness of Alaska with on the companionship of his faithful dogs.

  • av Constance Helmericks
    336,-

    Our Alaskan Winter continues the story of husband and wife Bud and Connie Helmericks' adventures in the Arctic. That winter they lived a nomadic life with the Eskimos, hunting caribou inland and then sea mammals out on the ice in the spring.

  • av Mary Ames
    336,-

    One can only hope never to face the life-threatening dangers and distinctly Alaskan annoyances that Mary Ames warns about in this how-to-stay-alive reference that is both useful and entertaining. You'll learn: What to do if your bush pilot keels over at the controls; How to avoid starving in the wilderness by listening to ravens; How to ford a river, cross thin ice, and make snow shoes; HOw to start your frozen car at 40 below zero and thaw your plumbing; Defensive measures for avalanches, volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, floods, and tsunamis; Lessons for dealing with wildlife, bad bugs, resident human critters, and bureaucrats.

  • av Tim Jones
    336,-

    Whimsical verse in the tradition of Ogden Nash is paired with rare photographs of wild animals and birds of the north in this unusual book that can be enjoyed on two levels by youngsters and adults. The delightful images of wild critters at "work" and "play" from Tom Walker, a widely published writer and one of Alaska''s premier wilderness photgraphers, and humorous verse from Tim Jones, an accomplished writer and editor, will please all who vernture into these pages.

  • - A Personal Story of Love, Loss, and Anti-War Activism
    av Betsy Bell
    296,-

    It is 1983, and the anti-war movement Target Seattle is preparing for a trip to Tashkent, Seattle's Sister City in Uzbekistan. Betsy Bell's husband, Don, is the chair of the executive committee of Target Seattle, and co-leader of the trip. Travelling with three thousand copies of a peace petition, as well as her seventeen-year-old daughter and thirty others, Betsy sees first-hand the risks of travelling as an American to the USSR. She also sees the heart-warming stories of people-to-people connections across political boundaries. Upon returning to the US, Betsy pushes to find her own voice in a world where a wife's goals are subservient to her husband's. As tensions between the US and USSR are only increasing, Betsy travels to Washington, DC. She speaks to elected officials and the United Nations in favor of open borders, even as conflicting aspirations and careers become a point of contention in her marriage. With honesty and poise, Betsy chronicles a history of a time when ordinary citizens were transformed into agents of peace

  • av Constance Helmericks
    336,-

    At twenty-four, Connie and her young husband, Harmon "Bud" Helmericks, setout from Fairbanks, Alaska in a homemade canoe. Paddling down theTanana and into the great Yukon River, they leave their known worldbehind. Five months later, they portage a hundred miles across muskegand icing ponds to the Kuskokwim River where they battle shifting iceinto the little town of Bethel near the Bering Sea. Along the journeythey encounter Native villages and isolated settlements, learning fromexperience and the kindness of strangers. Connie's honest and lyricalvoice depicts a changing Alaska and its endangered people during apivotal moment in history.

  • av Stewart H Holbrook
    326,-

  • av Stewart H Holbrook
    326,-

  • av James W Phillips
    296,-

    Romantic history-filled names have long fired the imagination of every reader and visitor to the Northland. In Alaska-Yukon Place Names, author James W. Phillips takes the vacationing tourist, historian, and armchair traveler through the most memorable places in the Alaska-Yukon region. Since the most poular routes north to Alaska and the Yukon are the Marine Highway and the Alaska Highway through Canada, the entries of Alaska-Yukon Place Names include ghost towns, islands, waterways mountains and glaciers in northern British Columbia. Whether more interested in the scenery, the historic past or the fabulous yarns connected with the area, you will be delighted by the colorful towns of Alaska and the Yukon: Poorman, Shaman's Village, Chicken and Eek, and will have no trouble imagining the mettle of those pioneers who traveled Moose Pass, shot Sqauaw Rapids or panned in Pure Gold Creek.This alphabetically arranged dictionary detaisl the origins and meanings o fnames for cities, towns and a representative sampling of remote native (both Eskimo and Indian) villages in the state of Alaska and the Yukon Territory. In addition it includes the name sources of many geogaphical features that are of historical significanceTo heighten undersanding of the region, its history, and its developmant, many less prominent place names are included because they explain the flora and fauna (Fireweed Creek, Ptarmigan, Whale and Walrus islands), geology and topography (Platinum, Silver City,Pingaluk River). and exploration and settlement ( Bering Sea, Masaspina and Murir glaciers, Cook Inlet, Mount Vancouver, Sixtymile River, Hydaburg, Watson Lake).

  • av Stewart Holbrook
    296,-

    From the brick-paved streets of Boston and New England, to the deserts of Arizona, to the lush forests of the Pacific Northwest, beloved author and columnist Stewart Holbrook takes his readers down uncharted paths in a series of delightful pieces. Little Annie Oakley and Other Rugged People is pure Americana that delves into the myths of unhackneyed and motley people, and the places they made famous. Interspersed among character bits are rich historical views of places, the author's own experiences in logging camps, and enthusiastic sketches of the near-extinct Yankee.

  • - Revised 2nd Edition
    av Doug Vandegraft
    326,-

  • - A Great Life in Brief
    av Stewart Holbrook
    270,-

    James J. Hill, the "Empire Builder," (1838-1916) was a Canadian-American railroad executive with the Great Northern Railway, responsible for building railways across the northern US. Part visionary, part robber baron, part buccaneer, Stewart Holbrook brings his story to life, in brief, as well as the lives of the other movers and shakers in the railway scene of the times.

  • av Australia
    280,-

  • - A Life of Drama and Adventure on America's Tallest Peak
    av Lew Freedman
    336,-

  • - The History & Hauntings of Alaska's Panhandle
    av James P Devereaux
    280,-

  • - Humorous and Heartwarming Tales of Alaska's Mushers, Rev. 2nd Ed
     
    270,-

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