Sound
- Duty to Protect (Love Inspired Large Print Suspense)
- The soft blanket of new snow glittered under the streetlamp and muffled her steps as Emma strode from the city bus stop at the end of the block to the side door of her garage. Anxiety twisted her stomach into a tight knot of fear.The snow could muffle the sound of someone else's steps, too.And even now, that unknown person could be watching her.
- Face Down beneath the Eleanor Cross
- Emerson has the place names and customs right in this Elizabethan whodunnit set in 1565, but too often her lords and ladies and various commoners, despite the occasional archaism ("certes," "mayhap"), sound and act like stock characters in a modern crime melodrama.
- Moby Dick Or the White Whale (Oxford Classic Tales)
- Grade 5 Up-Opening with the classic line, "Call me Ishmael," the narrator's New England accent adds a touch of authenticity to this sometimes melodramatic presentation. The St. Charles Players do a credible job on the major roles, but some of the group responses, such as "Aye, aye Captain," sound more comic than serious.
- Eat At Joe's
- Meet Joe Smith, Native American, Restaurant owner and all around good guy. Joe isn't feeling too good today. His back is killing him, and the feeling that the world around him is trying to tell him something keeps nagging at his thoughts. Shadows shifting in the darkened corners of the morning, the oppressive Texas heat and the sound of horse hooves on the sidewalk behind him seem to be an undeniable warning of things to come.
- Fit to Live: 5 Steps to a Lean, Strong, Fearless You
- Though the authors reading will sound too cheery to some, her optimism is backed up by one of the most complete approaches to fitness on audio. Going beyond talking about belly fat and inactivity, she explains the facets of life that influence these conditions--mind, mouth, muscle, money, and macrocosm (our relationship with our surroundings).
- Old curiosity shop
- The sound of Little Nell clattering hurriedly over cobblestones immediately sets the stage by bringing to mind the narrow and dangerous streets of Victorian London. No fewer than 20 performers are called upon to conjure up the Dickensian world of wanderers, ne'er-do-wells, con artists, and kind Samaritans--and each performance is excellent.
- Eisenhower Republicanism: Pursuing the Middle Way
- “Well written … the argument is logical and well structured. The research and scholarship are impressive and the author’s conclusions are sound.”—Nicol Rae, Florida International University“Wagner provides the first in-depth analysis of the president’s troubled relationship with his own Republican Party and the battles over his major domestic policies and programs.
- Safe and Sound: How Not to Get Lost in the Woods and How to Survive If You Do
- Nobody means to get lost, but it can happen to just about anyone who ventures into the woods. In Safe and Sound, retired RCMP officer Gordon Snow tells how to guard yourself and your children against getting lost, and how young and old can emerge healthy and cheerful if, in spite of everything, they get lost anyway.
- Thunder Rolling in the Mountains
- At the request of the late Newbery medalist O'Dell ( Island of the Blue Dolphins ), his widow, Hall, collaborated on this story about Sound of Running Feet, the daughter of Chief Joseph of the Ne-mee-po, or Nez Perce Indians. Sound of Running Feet narrates the betrayal of her people, their flight, last battles and final surrender.
- Simple English Propers
- This book provides complete entrance, offertory, and communion propers in English with Psalms in modal chant, with four-line notation, for all Sundays and feasts. They can be sung by a single cantor or a full choir. The modes from the Gregorian original are wholly preserved to capture the sound and feel of the Graduale Romanum proper chants.