Added by: KundAlini | Karma: 1594.10 | Fiction literature | 21 April 2011
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The Death and Life of Charlie St. Cloud
by Ben Sherwood
Not even death can keep two brothers from meeting to play ball: it sounds like a sentimental TV movie, doesn't it? Actually, Sherwood's second novel (after The Man Who Ate the 747) is warmhearted but not maudlin, exploring the bonds between the living and the dead and the lengths to which we'll go for love.
Management Strategies for the Cloud Revolution: How Cloud Computing Is Transforming Business and Why You Can't Afford to Be Left Behind
Increase efficiency while saving money with “on-demand” computing The biggest game-changing force in business since the creation of the Internet, cloud computing simplifies and lowers the cost of operations while providing flexibility and power you never dreamed possible. Make your strategic move now, with Management Strategies for the Cloud Revolution!
This book is intended for young teenage students of English as a foreign language.
A series of adventure readers for young teenage learners of the English language, featuring a puzzle on each double page spread, which the reader must solve before continuing with the story. Students need to use their powers of perception and deduction, as well as clues in the text.
"Sarah has just got a job at Cloud Company. But one day when she goes to the office, Cloud Company has vanished! A strange series of occurrences leads her to a haunted farmhouse."
Take a Wild Ride Through Cloud Nine with Reader Rabbit with the Reader Rabbit 1st Grade Capers on Cloud Nine! Visit Cloud Nine with Reader Rabbit and Sam the Lion! It’s suddenly started raining wacky raingear, so let’s high-tail it to find out what’s up with the weather. With fun activities in spelling, math, vocabulary, and science, your forecast calls for a 100% chance of learning fun! Musical Marble Patterns: Use colorful singing marbles to complete the pattern and unlock the mystery door! Create moving pictures and then display your masterpieces in the Amazing Art Gallery!
At 7.14 a.m. on 30 June 1908 a huge fireball exploded in the Siberian sky. A thousand times the force of the Hiroshima bomb, it flattened an area of remote Tunguska forest bigger than Greater London, forming a mushroom cloud that almost reached into space.