| No | Book | Bookshelf | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
Book DescriptionNo description. |
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| 2 |
Book DescriptionNo description. |
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| 3 |
Book DescriptionNo description. |
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| 4 |
Book DescriptionNo description. |
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| 5 |
Book DescriptionNo description. |
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| 6 |
Book DescriptionNo description. |
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| 7 |
Book DescriptionThe scene is the St. Gregory Hotel in the lusty, tumultuous city of New Oreleans. Time: 1964. Through five eventful days we share the fortunes, conflicts, and intimacies affecting the hotel, its guests and its echelon of management. Across the novel's pages stride memorable characters. More than this, a star of the story is the hotel itself. Seldom, if ever, has there been a more fascinating glimpse into the inner machinery and secrets of a great hotel, laid open to the reader by a master storyteller. |
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| 8 |
Book DescriptionNo description. |
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| 9 |
Book DescriptionHours before he is due to set off on a long-delayed and much-deserved vacation with his wife and son, Det.-Sgt. Malcolm Ainslie takes a phone call he would have been better off ignoring. The caller is the chaplain at Florida State Prison, delivering a message from Elroy Doil, the serial murderer Ainslie helped put on the prison's death row. On the eve of his execution, Doil has asked to make a confession. But there is a condition: he will deliver it only in person to Ainslie.Ainslie has no choice. Doil was convicted of a double murder, but he was suspected in ten more. No homicide detective... |
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| 10 |
Book DescriptionNo description. |
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