Books published by INGRAM PUBLISHER SERVICES US
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Takes the reader on a journey through the author's ancestral history, and finds Scottish tartan, unlikely lovers and Confederate soldiers in her past. This work aims to challenge us to examine the origins of some of our deeply ingrained notions about what makes a family black or ...white, and offers an alternative. Read more
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Bastogne, Malmedy, St. Vith and other sites of the Battle of the Bulge have become the stuff of American legend.All of the major events, units and personalities of this sector of the dramatic campaign are covered here in full detail, as well as a guide to the battlefield as it is... today. Read more
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Uncovering previously unknown FBI files and sources, as well as new forensics, the authors of America's Secret Jihad convincingly make the case that Martin Luther King was assassinated by a clear and long simmering conspiracy orchestrated by the racial terrorists who were respons...ible for the Mississippi Burning murders Read more
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Offers a look at jazz, and reminisces about the author's own introduction to the music that speaks as easily of the most low-down blues as of man's highest aspirations. This work traces the twisting fortunes of Louis Armstrong, Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Duke Ellington and Thel...onius Monk, and others. Read more
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The author of Notes of a Hanging Judge offers a bracing examination of the problem of authenticity in America--in racial politics, in the arts, and in the media--in this first collection of his original essays.
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The epic story of how humans evolved from intimate chimp communities into a world-dominating species If a chimpanzee ventures into the territory of a different group, it will almost certainly be killed. But a New Yorker can fly to Los Angeles--or Borneo--with very little fear. Ps...ychologists have done little to explain this: for years, they have held that our biology puts a hard upper limit--about 150 people--on the size of our social groups. But human societies are in fact vastly larger. How do we manage--by and large--to get along with each other? In this paradigm-shattering book, biologist Mark W. Moffett draws on findings in psychology, sociology and anthropology to explain the social adaptations that bind societies. He explores how the tension between identity and anonymity defines how societies develop, function, and fail. In the vein of Guns, Germs, and Steel and Sapiens, The Human Swarm reveals how mankind created sprawling civilizations of unrivaled complexity--and what it will take to sustain them. Read more
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A chronicle of marijuana's journey toward and away from legalization examines how grassroots activists from the 1970s nearly secured its decriminalization before conservative parents and the Reagan administration transformed cannabis into a focus for the war on drugs.
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Building upon a framework for understanding black history from slavery to Jim Crow to the modern urban ghetto, this title lays out a new way to think about the past and the future of race in America and charts a new course for racial progress.
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Gaye's stormy relationships with women, including duet partner Tammi Terrell and wives Anna Gordy and Janis Hunter, are examined in light of the sexual revolution of the 1960s and 1970s. Dyson also considers family violence in the larger context of the African-American life and h...ow that heartbreaking legacy resulted in Gaye's murder. Read more
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