After 29 years of being out of print and almost unobtainable, National Lampoon’s Animal House (the book) has been rereleased on an unsuspecting public. Written by Chris Miller (based on the screenplay by Harold Ramis, Douglas Kenney, and Chris Miller) The National Lampoon’s Animal House Book follows pretty much the same plot as the wild (and wildly popular) film of the same name.
Edited by: stovokor - 6 August 2009
Reason: category changed to fiction (it IS fiction :D), file extention name corrected: it is CBR !)
Edited by Olive Beaupré Miller; published in 1920 by The Bookhouse for Children. A collection of well-known and not so well-known rhymes, poems, stories and tales from Mother Goose, William Shakespeare and more! In the Nursery is a beautiful collection of nursery rhymes with nice illustrations Part 2 added by decabristka
Arthur Miller, best known for his works "The Crucible and Death of a Salesman", is one of America's most important dramatists. "Critical Companion to Arthur Miller" provides a reliable, up-to-date, and encyclopedic source of information on Miller for high school and college-level students, teachers, and the general public. This accessible volume covers his entire canon, including plays, screenplays, fiction, short stories, and poetry, as well as many of his important essays and critical pieces.
This informative and practical guide to the Miller Method [registered] presents an entirely new and dynamic perspective on advancing the body organization, social, and communicative skills of children diagnosed with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs). Taking a cognitive developmental systems approach that uses elevation to build body awareness and focus the children on people and objects, the Miller Method[registered] works on the premise that children with ASDs learn more effectively when their whole bodies are physically and repetitively involved in a learning process or 'system'; a completely different approach from the more traditional schoolroom arrangement in which children learn while sitting at a desk.
Every page of the comic was illustrated as a double-page spread. When the series was gathered into hardcover form, the individual pages were twice as wide as a normal comic. Miller's art style for this project was similar to his Sin City work, although the addition of consistent color is an obvious difference.
I don't usually upload books that are not related to EFL, but with this one I made a small exception. Hope you like it :) REUPLOAD by decabristka / PDF by Pumukl