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O'Reilly, Bill
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Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions: Second Edition by Steinem, Gloria
Getting in Touch with Your Inner Bitch by Hilts, Elizabeth
Clear Springs: A Family Story by Mason, Bobbie Ann
My Life in France by Child, Julia
Knit Two by Jacobs, Kate
My Stroke of Insight: A Brain Scientist's Personal Journey by Taylor, Jill Bolte
American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America by Hedges, Chris
Collaboration and the School Library Media Specialist by Doll, Carol Ann
Empowering Learners: Guidelines for School Library Media Programs by AASL
Jamie at Home: Cook Your Way to the Good Life by Oliver, Jamie
Half Broke Horses: A True-Life Novel by Walls, Jeannette
BILL O’REILLY, a three-time Emmy Award winner for excellence in reporting, served as national correspondent for ABC News and as anchor of the nationally syndicated news magazine program Inside Edition before becoming executive producer and anchor of Fox News’s breakout hit The O’Reilly Factor. He is the author of the mega-bestsellers The O’Reilly Factor, The No Spin Zone, Who’s Looking Out for You?, and Culture Warrior, as well as Kids Are Americans Too, The O’Reilly Factor for Kids, and the novel Those Who Trespass. He holds master’s degrees from Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government and Boston University.
[Edit review] [Delete review]The year was 1957, the month September, and I had just turned eight years old. Dwight Eisenhower was President, but in my life it was the diminutive, intense Sister Mary Lurana who ruled, at least in the third-grade class where I was held captive. For reasons you will soon understand, my parents had remanded me to the penal institution of St. Brigid’s School in Westbury, New York, a cruel and unusual punishment if there ever was one.
Already, I had barely survived my first two years at St. Brigid’s because I was, well, a little nitwit. Not satisfied with memorizing the Baltimore Catechism’s fine prose, which featured passages like “God made me to show his goodness and to make me happy with him in heaven,” I was constantly annoying my classmates and, of course, the no-nonsense Sister Lurana. With sixty overactive students in her class, she was understandably short on patience. For survival, she had also become quick on the draw.
Then it... [More...] [Edit review] [Delete review]
