About this product: “Hello, Operator. Give me number nine!” or dial it yourself with our vintage telephone dial address book. Anyone remember party lines where you had to wait for the other family’s teenager to get off the phone before you could call your friends? Indulge yourself—look up someone and call right now. No more waiting! 5-3/8 x 3-1/2" 160 thumb index pages Elastic closure and card pocket
About this product: This handy little 5 1/2" x 4" book has two separate sections. The first half is the E-Mail Addresses section and has places for Name, Office and Home / Other Addresses. In the Passwords section there are plenty of places for Names, Web Addresses, Login or User Names, Passwords and PIN #. In addition, there is space for notes and creative Tips at the beginning of both sections, which are alphabetized. This saddle stitched book has a NEW COVER and may not be reflected in the image shown!
About this product: These gorgeous, elegant address books are wire-o-bound to lie flat when in use. Each address book includes 20 vibrant color photographs that illustrate theme ranging from stylish homes to beautiful flowers.
About this product: These gorgeous, elegant address books are spiral-bound to lie flat when in use and feature smart cloth quarter-binding. Each address book includes vibrant colour photographs that illustrate themes ranging from gorgeous homes and gardens to pampered pets.
About this product: Gather those names, numbers, and addresses together in one cute little book! Our popular ''Designer Dogs'' design is embossed and accented with gloss highlights. Inside you'll find space for Names and Addresses; Home, Cell, Work, and Fax numbers; E-mail addresses; Birthdays; and Notes. Book lies flat for ease of use. Elastic band helps you save your place. Makes an appreciated gift, too! 160 pages. 4-1/4'' wide x 5-3/4'' high.
About this product: The Genealogist's Address Book is a national Yellow Pages for the genealogist. Classified by subject, cross-referenced and alphabetized, it puts you in touch with all the key sources of genealogical information, giving names, addresses, phone numbers, FAX numbers, e-mail addresses, web sites, contact persons, and the business hours of more than 25,000 libraries, archives, genealogical societies, historical societies, government agencies, vital records offices, professional bodies, religious organizations and archives, surname registries, research centers, special interest groups, periodicals, newspaper columns, publishers, booksellers, services, databases, and much, much more. Based on a written survey of thousands of organizations and institutions across the country, and supplemented by information from printed and Internet sources, the new 4th edition of the Address Book has been exhaustively revised and is now more useful to the researcher than ever. With thousands of new entries, and with changes to approximately 75% of the existing entries, the new edition updates addresses and associated details, includes hundreds of organizations new to the scene or overlooked in previous editions, contains an advertising supplement, and has a complete index of genealogical libraries, societies, and institutions, as well as an exhaustive (also unique) index of periodicals and newsletters. The only comprehensive list of current genealogical and historical resources, the Address Book will undoubtedly be the most frequently consulted book on your reference shelf. After all, the fast-changing world of genealogy demands a book that will keep pace, and while the new edition might not answer your every question every time, it will definitely give you the edge you need, keeping you current and placing a world of resources at your fingertips.
About this product: Celebrate the inauguration of America's 44th president with this New York Times bestseller
Tying into the official theme for the 2009 inaugural ceremony, "A New Birth of Freedom" from Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, Penguin presents a keepsake edition commemorating the inauguration of President Barack Obama with words of the two great thinkers and writers who have helped shape him politically, philosophically, and personally: Abraham Lincoln and Ralph Waldo Emerson.
Having Lincoln and Emerson's most influential, memorable, and eloquent words along with Obama's historic inaugural address will be a gift of inspiration for every American for generations to come.
Detective Sloane Pearson is new to the Sex Crimes Division but no stranger to being treated like an incompetent blonde by her hardened male co-workers. She’s also no stranger to hard-to-crack cases, and her latest is as tough as they come: A rapist is on the prowl, dragging women to deserted building sites or vacant apartment buildings peppered all over downtown Chicago, and forcing them to fight---knowing, of course, that he’ll win.
When a real estate agent Sloane knows is attacked by the violent predator, Sloane finds herself taking a case that threatens her secret plans to leave her long-time lover. Her personal bond with the victim and a would-be relationship with a man she interviews along the way lead Sloane down a dangerous path---one that poisons the investigation as well as her personal life.
Sloane’s balancing act topples when her father falls ill. Between coping with his weak heart and following the few weak leads she has, her case begins to go the way that many rape cases go: The victims fall away, one by one, suddenly unsure of what they saw or unwilling to relive the horrifying moments again and again.
When Sloane helps a hungry young Sun-Times reporter declare the case serial, she loses support: Her bosses demand she get a suspect or move on. Sloane stays on the case, though---no matter how much it strains her personal relationships. Even her partner claims she’s in too deep: He doesn’t believe there’s an arrest on the planet worth a cop’s life. Sloane disagrees: Someone’s got to take up the fight.
From the worst slums of Chicago’s west side to the glittering Loop skyscrapers, Sloane finds no shortage of suspects. As she loses everything she’d called home, she can only hope to find the rapist before she also becomes a victim.