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Books > Reference & Interdisciplinary > Controversial knowledge
"Find your one true love and live happily ever after." The trials
of love and desire provide perennial story material, from the
Biblical Song of Songs to Disney's princesses, but perhaps most
provocatively in the romance novel, a genre known for tales of
fantasy and desire, sex and pleasure. Hailed on the one hand for
its women-centered stories that can be sexually liberating, and
criticized on the other for its emphasis on male/female coupling
and mythical happy endings, romance fiction is a multi-million
dollar publishing phenomenon, creating national and international
societies of enthusiasts, practitioners, and scholars. Catherine M.
Roach, alongside her romance-writer alter-ego, Catherine LaRoche,
guides the reader deep into Romancelandia where the smart and the
witty combine with the sexy and seductive to explore why this genre
has such a grip on readers and what we can learn from the romance
novel about the nature of happiness, love, sex, and desire in
American popular culture.
The odds of collapsing three towers with two planes,
conservatively, are five hundred trillion to one. Aside from the
terror, the probability of the attacks on the World Trade Center is
fantastically implausible. This new mathematical approach by
alternative thinker Paris Tosen exposes the flaws and cracks in the
official 9/11 investigation. This concise book reminds us just how
powerful illusions can be.
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