Furniture

Osullivan Book Case

West

Bookcase


Federal White Collar Crime: Cases and Materials (American Casebook Series)

Julie R. O'Sullivan (Hardcover) West 2009-05-26


Price: $182.00 $158.26

Colonel March - Error At Daybreak


John Dickson Carr's (aka Carter Dickson) fictional detective Colonel March from his book The Department of Queer Complaints (1940). Carr was a ...


News

O'Sullivan's First Law in Action

Power Line (blog) - Feb 03, 2012

O'Sullivan's First Law in ActionO'Sullivan's First Law, named for John O'Sullivan, former editor of National Review, speechwriter for Margaret Thatcher, and author of the fine book The President, The Pope, and the Prime Minister, goes as follows: Any institution that is not and more »
Robert Fitzpatrick's Memoir Reveals Attempts to Stop Whitey Bulger

Daily Beast - Jan 27, 2012

Robert Fitzpatrick's Memoir Reveals Attempts to Stop Whitey Bulger Robert Fitzpatrick's Memoir Reveals Attempts to Stop Whitey BulgerThe book has the feel of an ongoing therapy session, as Fitzpatrick seeks to make sense of a sprawling conspiracy of agents, cops, judges, criminals, and politicians who for decades enabled Bulger and made it possible for his campaign of corruption and and more »
Kurt Zellers and Matt Dean are all in for Romney

MinnPost.com (blog) - Feb 03, 2012

The correspondence to Ms. Brinker over the last two days would make a book. I missed the part where Rick Santorum's sweater vests are made in Minnesota. He hasn't. FoxNews reports: “On Sunday, sweater-vest-loving GOP presidential candidate Rick and more »
Fiction Reviews, January 2012

Library Journal - Jan 16, 2012

Fiction Reviews, January 2012 Mercy Underhill, a devoted social worker and the object of Tim's unspoken affection, is drawn into the case as she tries to protect her wards. Tim searches for answers amid political scheming, nativist sentiments, and anti-Catholic riots.and more »
The Iron Lady Battles On

RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty - Jan 14, 2012

The Iron Lady Battles On By John O'Sullivan “The Iron Lady” is a term originally coined by a Red Army newspaper in 1975 to demonize Margaret Thatcher. It proved instead to be an uncanny prediction of her part in weakening the Red Army and destroying the Soviet Union in the and more »