je.st
news
Tag: 0617
06-17 & 18-20
2020-08-04 22:54:31| PortlandOnline
PDF Document, 177kbCategory: Council Calendar with Fiscal Impact Statements
Tags: 0617
06.17: Kids' Storytime
2015-05-29 03:05:52| Powells Books Events Calendar
Join us every Wednesday during the summer months for a special midweek kids' storytime. Today we're reading Gorillas in Our Midst by Richard Fairgray.
06.17: Kids' Storytime
2015-05-18 22:04:43| Powells Books Events Calendar
Join us every Wednesday during the summer months for a special midweek kids' storytime. Today we're reading Gorillas in Our Midst by Richard Fairgray.
06.17: April Henry
2015-05-18 22:04:43| Powells Books Events Calendar
When a woman's body is found in a Portland park, suspicion falls on an awkward kid who lives only a few blocks away, a teen who collects knives, loves first-person shooter video games, and obsessively doodles violent scenes in his school notebooks. Nick Walker goes from being a member of Portland's Search and Rescue team to the prime suspect in a murder, his very interest in SAR seen as proof of his fascination with violence. April Henry weaves another page-turning, high-stakes mystery in Blood Will Tell (Henry Holt), the second book in her Point Last Seen series.
Tags: april
henry
april henry
henry april
06.17: Vendela Vida
2015-05-18 22:04:43| Powells Books Events Calendar
In The Diver's Clothes Lie Empty (Ecco), Vendela Vida's mesmerizing novel of ideas, a woman travels to Casablanca, Morocco, on mysterious business. While checking into her hotel, the woman is robbed of her wallet and passport. Though the police investigate, the woman senses an undercurrent of complicity between the hotel staff and the authorities. Stripped of her identity, she feels burdened by the crime yet strangely liberated by her sudden freedom to be anyone she chooses. Told with vibrant, lush detail and a wicked sense of humor, The Diver's Clothes Lie Empty is part literary mystery, part psychological thriller — an unforgettable novel that explores free will, power, and a woman's right to choose not her past, perhaps not her present, but certainly her future.
Tags: vida
vendela
vendela vida
vida vendela