search for books and compare prices
Bob Drury has written 3 work(s)
Search for other authors with the same name
displaying 1 to 3 |
at end
show results in order: alphabetically | oldest to newest | newest to oldest
Product Description: [Read by Traber Burns] In A Dog's Gift, Bob Drury captures the story of a year in the life of Paws4people and the broken bodies and souls the organization mends. A decade ago, former military counterintelligence officer Terry Henry joined his precocious young daughter, Kyria, on a trip to a nursing home in order to allow its residents to play with their family dog, a golden retriever named Riley...read more
CD/Spoken Word:
9781504601559 | Mp3 una edition (Blackstone Audio Inc, June 2, 2015), cover price $29.95 | About this edition: [Read by Traber Burns] In A Dog's Gift, Bob Drury captures the story of a year in the life of Paws4people and the broken bodies and souls the organization mends.
Product Description: Incident At Howard Beach A Case For Murder By Charles J. Hynes and Bob Drury the 25th anniversary edition The murder that shocked a city and nation and how our justice system works at its best. Late on the night of December 19, 1986, four black men were driving through the all-white community of Howard Beach, in the New York City borough of Queens, when their car broke down...read more
Paperback:
9781462056699 | Iuniverse Inc, November 2, 2011, cover price $21.95 | About this edition: Incident At Howard Beach A Case For Murder By Charles J.
An epic account of the previously classified 1944 naval disaster describes how naval admiral William Halsey's Pacific Fleet was advancing on Tokyo under General MacArthur's orders only to be swept up by a category-four typhoon that capsized three destroyers and ended the lives of nearly eight hundred young soldiers. Reprint. 50,000 first printing.
Paperback:
9780802143372 | Reprint edition (Grove Pr, November 10, 2007), cover price $15.00 | About this edition: An epic account of the previously classified 1944 naval disaster describes how naval admiral William Halsey's Pacific Fleet was advancing on Tokyo under General MacArthur's orders only to be swept up by a category-four typhoon that capsized three destroyers and ended the lives of nearly eight hundred young soldiers.
displaying 1 to 3 |
at end