Pamphlets


The Mistake of the Machine: A Father Brown Mystery
The Absence of Mr Glass - A Father Brown Mystery
Common Sense
The Communist Manifesto
The Crystal Egg
The Geordie Song Book
100 Geordie Jokes
Geordie Songs, Jokes and Recitations
Geordie-English Glossary
Lathyrus: Cousins of the Sweet Pea
East Anglia: Historic Houses and Gardens (Cotman House)
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Tremendous Trifles
 
by
Unknown Author
The Shop of Ghosts
A Pail of Air
The Curse of the Golden Cross
3 American Tantrums by Michael BrownsteinNorth American Book of the Dead, Parts one and two by d.a. levyThe Uncelebrated Ceremony of Pants-Factory Fatso by Louis Daniel BrodskyNorth American Book of the Dead by d.a. levyDream the Lunar Realm of Alchemy by Brian Cotnoir
Chapped
125 books — 2 voters
Milena, Milena, Ecstatic by Bae SuahFive Preludes & a Fugue by Cheon HeerahnBergje by Bregje HofstedeDivorce by Kim SoomDemons by Kang Hwagil
Strangers Press Favourites
12 books — 1 voter

Jamestown by Joyce CrawfordThe Declaration of Independence and the United States Constit... by Founding FathersThe Federalist Papers & Anti-Federalist Papers by Alexander HamiltonThe Declaration of Independence by Thomas JeffersonThe American Revolution by Gordon S. Wood
American Founding Texts (nonfiction)
53 books — 6 voters

Gavin John Adams
Contrary to the tenets of conventional wisdom, viral ideas and campaigns were not first transmitted via the electronic media of the Internet age. Their ideological forebears lived and replicated in the host coffee-houses, inns and taverns of the early eighteenth-century.
Gavin John Adams, Letters to John Law

Gavin John Adams
The primary purposes of the political pamphlets of the early 1700s were neither to enlighten nor educate the masses, but to incite partisan conversation and spread commensurate ideas . . . Facts were not permitted to fetter the views they espoused, and the restraints of objective journalistic credibility were discarded by pamphleteers bent on promoting subjective slant to an insatiable general public for whom political dissonance was an integral part of social interaction.
Gavin John Adams, Letters to John Law

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