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106.1 KISS FM Jingle Ball: Selena Gomez, Flo Rida & Fall Out Boy Tickets on Sunday, 12/8/2013, 7:3 in Everett, Washington For Sale

Type: Tickets & Traveling, For Sale - Private.

106.1 KISS FM Jingle Ball: Selena Gomez, Flo Rida & Fall Out Boy Tickets
Comcast Arena At Everett
Everett, WA
Sunday, 12/8/xxxx, 7:30 PM
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Sometimes the plot flows underground through stretches of this novel as Holland focuses on Maria's daily life in medieval Norman Sicily, but it does flow. Immured in her marriage to an equally strong-willed husband who, as men of his time did, considered wives to be under the dominion of their husbands, Maria requires patience and cunning along with her will and determination in order to win a measure of control over her own life. The power of this novel is in the power of Maria's personality, and also in Holland's extraordinary ability to convey not just the external world of a past time, but also the internal attitudes of its people, something few writers are able to achieve so thoroughly and gracefully. Buck won a Pulitzer Prize for this novel in xxxx. She deserved it. Her characters are simple farmers living in the last decades of Imperial China. Her prose is plain and earthy, but singing. Readers experience everything through the viewpoint of the man Wang Lung, who marries a former slave girl. Because he is so poor, he feels lucky to get her, but she has no beauty to excite his heart. He treats her as a workhorse. The novel seems to be about Wang Lung's struggle to rise out of poverty, but by the time I reached the end, I thought it was really about his wife's ever-so-patient campaign to win his respect. And then, of course, there's the land This is a splendid, big novel with a love story at its center that will thrill readers looking for heart-wrenching romance. It's no literary novel: the characters are bigger than life, and the prose is competent without being lyrical. But the characters' passions, whether romantic or political, are rich, lusty and infectious. Most people remember this novel for its controversial portrayal of Richard III as a paragon of virtue who, far from murdering his nephews (the famous Princes in the Tower), treated them with consistent kindness. But it's almost as much about his brother Edward, king before him. It's a compelling novel of the Wars of the Roses.This was the first Anya Seton novel I read as a teenager, when I relished the stirring (not very graphic) love scenes. It sparked a Seton binge, and this novel and Katherine have lingered in my memory for decades. Rereading it this year, I was delighted to find I enjoyed it as much as ever. It's not really a romance, but a novel about a woman's life amid the Puritans who founded the Massachusetts Bay Company and migrated to the American Colonies, and of her struggle to exchange the harsh and unbending Puritan view of religion for a more gentle, mystical and consoling experienceI'm not usually a big fan of sweep-of-history novels that dip into one time period with a brief story, then skip ahead a century or so to the next one. Brooks makes this work, though, because each of her stories is in itself a beautifully written, absorbing tale that would be worth reading even if the rest of the book were not. But it is. The stories are linked by the passage through time and place of a unique, illustrated Haggadah, a Jewish prayer book. The novel was inspired by a real Haggadah that, like its fictional counterpart, survived the bombing of SarajevoThis mystery novel has been criticized for its portrayal of a medieval woman whose work resembles that of a modern coroner perhaps a little too much for the medieval context. I was willing to suspend disbelief, because the character is engaging and does come from southern Italy, where the Arabic-influenced approach to medicine was less benighted than in the rest of Europe. It's worth reading even for those fussy about such details, because the portrayal of King Henry II near the novel's conclusion is nothing less than brilliant. Ariana Franklin is a pen name of Diana Norman, whose well-regarded xxxx novel Fitzempress' Law, also about Henry II and his legal reforms, has never been published in the U.S. and is scarce as hens' teeth herA woman's domestic life can be as tense and dramatic as any other kind of life, and sometimes as relevant to life in the public arena. Smiley's protagonist in this absorbing novel must sort out whether her astronomer husband's pet projects are the result of his undeniable brilliance or his shaky grasp on reality. Both characters, along with their supporting cast, are richly drawn and all too believable, making this novel as mesmerizing as any set on the high seas or in the halls of political power.Plenty of novels have been written about Alexander the Great. This one centers on Aristotle's work as tutor to Alexander as a child. It portrays these two larger-than-life historical people with an intimacy, humor and sympathy that makes them seem utterly real without diminishing the greatness of either. Did history change course when Aristotle, the champion of moderation, agreed to tutor Alexander, still a symbol of what can be achieved - and lost - when the accepted limitations on human endeavor are disregarded?Another novel about moral questions, The Wilding is one of a number of recent novels set in seventeenth-century England and revolving around the English Civil War - in this case, its effects on the next generation. U.S. publishers evidently think readers here shun this setting, because The Wilding so far has not found a home this side of the Atlantic. It's worth special-ordering for its brilliantly twisty plot with surprises around every corner that keep ratcheting up the tension and for its sophisticated theme, as well as for the sheer evocative beauty of the writing. Numerous readers still cherish Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre and her sister Emily's Wuthering Heights, but the sisters' lives were even more harrowing than those of the characters in their novels. Actually, this novel's U.K. title, A Taste of Sorrow, better conveys the classy writing and scope of this novel, which centers on Charlotte's life and includes sister Anne and brother Branwell as characters of perhaps equal importance to Emily. By timing the ending skillfully, Morgan delivers a satisfying happy ending without violating the factual underpinnings of Charlotte's lifeI'm not usually a fan of thrillers, but this one was not only tense enough to keep me turning pages, it was also sophisticated enough to engage my intellect. Delors brings France in the early years of Napoleon's reign to life with vivid, well-researched details woven into a taut story with characters who feel so real you can touch them. And I learned a lot about the wide variety of responses Parisians had to the Revolution. Not everyone was pleased to have Napoleon take over from the Jacobin revolutionaries.Pluto has been in the news lately, demoted from a full-fledged planet to a mere dwarf planet, so this story of Pluto's discovery just before the Great Depression smacked down on the U.S. is timely. Even if it weren't, the cast of characters would be enough to make this novel a treat. A high-school-educated Kansas farm boy persistent enough to grind his own telescope lenses, an amateur paleontologist and a ravishingly beautiful girl with a psychotic delusion are just three of the fascinating characters who converge on the second-rate observatory in the Arizona desert where Pluto was about to be discovered.This novel about the young slave woman who almost surely bore children to Thomas Jefferson over the course of a long relationship was published just five years after Fawn Brodie's controversial biography of Jefferson burst on the scene and made the case for their relationship. DNA evidence didn't confirm the genetic connection between Hemings's children and Jefferson until xxxx. But this is not a novel about genetics and evidence. It's about the human heart and the complications of love between a man and a woman struggling with an inhuman systemReaders of a certain age may remember the "Poldark" TV miniseries on Masterpiece Theatre. Well, the book is better. The hairstyles and the women's make-up don't get dated, and a novel lasts longer than a one-hour television episode. There's a love story here, with the ambitious waif Demelza setting her cap for none other than the master of the house, Ross Poldark, but there's a lot more. Readers will get a thorough, heart-wrenching portrayal of the divide between the relatively rich and the dreadfully poor in the Cornish mining country of the late eighteenth century.I kept hearing good things about Sansom's mystery series featuring a hunchbacked lawyer in Henry VIII's England, so I finally made time to read this first installment. It works as a mystery in every way, but has as much depth and perspective as a solid, serious historical novel. Shardlake, the sleuth, works for Thomas Cromwell, so this novel makes superb reading for anyone anxiously awaiting Hilary Mantel's sequel to Wolf Hall. The Cromwell of this novel is darker than Mantel's Cromwell but by no means a cardboard villain, and Dissolution is set during the later period of Cromwell's ascendancy to be covered in the Wolf Hall sequel