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All episodes from the complete five series of the HBO drama following Bill Hendrickson (Bill Paxton), a Mormon living just outside Salt Lake City. Every problem in Bill's life is multiplied by three: three wives, three houses and three families. With seven kids in tow, and a business partner who's also a polygamist, life can get a little complicated from time to time. The episodes comprise: 'Pilot', 'Viagra Blue', 'Home Invasion', 'Eclipse', 'Affair', 'Roberta's Funeral', 'Eviction', 'Easter', 'A Barbecue for Betty', 'The Baptism', 'Where There's a Will', 'The Ceremony', 'Damage Control', 'The Writing On the Wall', 'Reunion', 'Rock and a Hard Place', 'Vision Thing', 'Dating Game', 'Good Guys and Bad Guys', 'Kingdom Come', 'Circle the Wagons', 'The Happiest Girl', 'Take Me As I Am', 'Oh, Pioneers', 'Block Party', 'Empire', 'Prom Queen', 'On Trial', 'For Better Or Worse', 'Come, Ye Saints', 'Fight Or Flight', 'Rough Edges', 'Outer Darkness', 'Sacrament', 'Free at Last', 'The Greater Good', 'Strange Bedfellows', 'The Mighty and Strong', 'Sins of the Father', 'Under One Roof', 'Blood Atonement', 'Next Ticket Out', 'End of Days', 'Winter', 'A Seat at the Table', 'Certain Poor Shepherds', 'The Oath', 'The Special Relationship', 'D.I.V.O.R.C.E.', 'Til Death Do Us Part', 'The Noose Tightens', 'Exorcism' and 'Where Men and Mountains Meet'.
Poetry. Grace Zabriskie's book of poems is an oeuvre that encompasses her thirty year writing career. F. D. Reeve writes of Ms. Zabriskie's poems: "An impassioned potpourri of images and speech rhythms, of places and figures, spiced by independent wit and indelible memories choreographing choruses of contradictions. 'The Castle Builds Itself, ' says one poem; in that spirit Grace Zabriskie has built herself from her father's New Orleans cafe to LA. This visual artist and poet of three decades so loves life that she makes all kinds of games of its parts and pieces, projecting her womb as a cupboard, a scene shop as the world, a house as a man's woman, and even herself as the East Pacific Rise. Her social satire is quick and clever; her dramatic irony is as bright as sunlight. She's too spritely a spirit and too accomplished an artist to leave anything human out." And Rosemary Daniell writes "Unfettered by poetic or any other convention, Zabriskie has created a collection that is witty, clever and provocative, and above all, original. That her poems--untainted by sentimentality--are also at times hard, dark and skeptical, will paradoxically lift and delight her readers.
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