Kelly Koepke
Content by Kelly Koepke
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Author Suzanne Chazin, a member of the International Association of Arson Investigators, has unusual access to the inner workings of the New York City Fire Department.
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Picture a gigantic, Florentine bed, carved with dolphins and sea creatures, and topped with a ruby red canopy, being carted around the streets of San Francisco in 1862 in defiance of a rich man's m
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In the late 1970s, millions of little girls cut their hair into a short, bouncy wedge, signed up for ice skating lessons and tried to emulate their idol's signature move, the Hamill camel.
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Part travelogue, part political treatise, Finding George Orwell in Burma traces Orwell's experiences in 20th-century Burma while keenly observing the realities of daily existence under the bru
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Here's a dilemma that more of us should face: Your wife gives birth to twins the same day you find out you've won a prestigious award.
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Kathy Harrison deserves a medal for taking more than 120 foster children into her Massachusetts home over a 15-year period.
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Coming from anyone other than Julie Andrews, name-dropping would seem like bragging.
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Malika Oufkir's first book, Stolen Lives, told the horrific story of her 20-year imprisonment in Morocco.
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Wendy Kann lives a comfortable suburban life in Connecticut.
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As the story of the pioneers of any land becomes legend, many details fall away. Who were the women behind the men and what happened to them?
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ulitzer Prize-winning author Alice Walker's writing has a way of creeping up on you, taking you unawares, and affecting you long after you've put the book on the shelf.
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r.
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ching the traditions of Latino literatureToday's Hispanic writers whether they call themselves Latino, Mejicano or Chicano craft diverse stories from a common culture.
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nriching the traditions of Latino literatureToday's Hispanic writers whether they call themselves Latino, Mejicano or Chicano craft diverse stories from a common culture.
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nriching the traditions of Latino literatureToday's Hispanic writers whether they call themselves Latino, Mejicano or Chicano craft diverse stories from a common culture.
Read more »
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nriching the traditions of Latino literatureToday's Hispanic writers whether they call themselves Latino, Mejicano or Chicano craft diverse stories from a common culture.
Read more »
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nriching the traditions of Latino literatureToday's Hispanic writers whether they call themselves Latino, Mejicano or Chicano craft diverse stories from a common culture.
Read more »
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nriching the traditions of Latino literatureToday's Hispanic writers whether they call themselves Latino, Mejicano or Chicano craft diverse stories from a common culture.
Read more »
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ff the beaten pathThere are still places in America where one can get lost on country roads and meet people whose families have lived on the land for generations.
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Most of us speculate about the lives our parents and grandparents led before they were parents and grandparents, inventing details to flesh out the bare facts of births, deaths and marriages.
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Master of horror Stephen King returns on Sept. 24 with the release of From a Buick 8, a gather-round-the-campfire tale of a sinister car.
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Was there ever a time when Betty Crocker wasn't an American cultural touchstone?
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is an enchanting, bittersweet story that demonstrates in convincing fashion how keeping secrets leads to unhappiness, while true communication can lead to love.
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In his first full-length novel since Bag of Bones, horror master Stephen King takes us back to Derry, Maine, the setting for It and Insomnia.
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They say God laughs when men make plans. Well, God laughs at women’s plans, too, especially the plans of happy women. At least that’s what Alice Eve Cohen thinks.
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