ANONYMOUS: No Public Name and No Public Profile
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The Killer Part 1
- Victor the Assassin Series, Book 1
- De: Tom Wood
- Narrado por: Rob Shapiro
- Duración: 7 h y 56 m
- Versión completa
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General
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Narración:
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Historia
Meet Victor. He's an assassin - a man with no past and no surname. He lives alone. He operates alone. He's given a job; he takes out the target; he gets paid. He's The Killer. Victor arrives in Paris to perform a standard kill and collect for an anonymous client. He completes it with trademark efficiency - only to find himself in the middle of an ambush and fighting for his life.
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ONE THING: after spending time choosing this book, I was told it could not be downloaded to my library AND NO REASON WAS GIVEN
- De ANONYMOUS: No Public Name and No Public Profile en 09-07-24
- The Killer Part 1
- Victor the Assassin Series, Book 1
- De: Tom Wood
- Narrado por: Rob Shapiro
ONE THING: after spending time choosing this book, I was told it could not be downloaded to my library AND NO REASON WAS GIVEN
Revisado: 09-07-24
I DID NOT LIKE THE WAY YOU TREAT LOYAL CUSTOMERS. I especially do not like your bait and switch
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Mick Jagger
- De: Philip Norman
- Narrado por: James Langton
- Duración: 24 h y 5 m
- Versión completa
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General
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Narración:
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Historia
Philip Norman has long towered above other rock biographers with his definitive studies of the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, Elton John, Buddy Holly, and John Lennon - legends whom the world thought it knew, but who came to life as never before through the meticulousness of Norman's research, the sweep of his cultural knowledge, and the brilliance of his writing. Now Norman turns to a rock icon who is the most notorious yet enigmatic of them all.
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Subpar bio made worse by awful narrator
- De qtvxzplr en 11-16-12
- Mick Jagger
- De: Philip Norman
- Narrado por: James Langton
MICK
Revisado: 09-29-17
This book is for all men and women
born from 1940-1950. Those are the fortunate ones who literally grew up
with the Rolling Stones and the 1960s.
For many of us, the Rolling Stone were
touchstones that acted as outposts where we could eat, rest and relate to the world inside and outside ourselves.
Although we did not know it, they were mentally in sync us. I remember carefully packing their albums in 1964
for the journey to college and carrying them to parties and serious discussions of what was going on.
You had to live through the 1960s with
your selective service card as your other guide. This card was responsible for your life and death, regardless of your political position. Fear and Loathing in the '60s were as physically palpable as both flowers and bullets.
The nation was blessed with the largest and brightest post graduate students in history. Why? We knew and our soulmates, the RS, knew.
Going to school meant you would live
while not going and losing your student deferrment meant you would probably die in Vietnam. For those of us who can still remember the 1960s, the defining mess at Altamont seemed
a fitting end to not just a the decade
but to any flower power hope for the future. This and so much more is in MICK. Their odd and sometimes painful journey to 2010 mirrored our own.
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