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Books with title First Impressions: Michelangelo

  • First Impressions: Michelangelo

    Richard McLanathan

    Hardcover (Harry N. Abrams, May 5, 1993)
    In addition to providing colored plates of his most magnificent works, this volume recounts the life of the famed Renaissance artist, including his dramatic rise to fame, his struggles to complete important commissions, and more.
  • First Impressions

    Laura J. Burns, Melinda Metz

    Mass Market Paperback (Simon Spotlight Entertainment, May 25, 2004)
    Following the death of his mother, a resentful Ephram Brown must leave bustling New York City when his father, neurosurgeon Andy Brown, decides to start a family practice in tranquil Everwood, Colorado.
  • First Impressions

    Laura J. Burns;Melinda Metz

    Mass Market Paperback (Simon Spotlight Entertainment, Aug. 16, 1782)
    None
  • First Impressions

    Marilyn Sachs

    eBook (Roaring Brook Press, March 31, 2015)
    " I read on. And then it happens. On page 89. Mary is humiliated, and I know I have to step in. There she is, in an ill-fitting, wine-colored gown that doesn't do anything for her mousy complexion, gathering up her music, when I pass by, and spill my glass of punch right on her dress. I turn, and there is Kevin, dressed in a scarlet coat and all the rest of the uniform of a British Soldier, circa 1811. 'What are you doing here?' I ask. 'Well, this is the part I'm up to in the book.'"The smart middle child in a blue-collar family identifies with Mary, the middle child in Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice. When Alice enters Mary's world and makes changes in both their lives, she learns that first impressions aren't always right.
  • First Impressions

    Marilyn Sachs

    Hardcover (Roaring Brook Press, March 7, 2006)
    " I read on. And then it happens. On page 89. Mary is humiliated, and I know I have to step in. There she is, in an ill-fitting, wine-colored gown that doesn't do anything for her mousy complexion, gathering up her music, when I pass by, and spill my glass of punch right on her dress. I turn, and there is Kevin, dressed in a scarlet coat and all the rest of the uniform of a British Soldier, circa 1811. 'What are you doing here?' I ask. 'Well, this is the part I'm up to in the book.'" The smart middle child in a blue-collar family identifies with Mary, the middle child in Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice. When Alice enters Mary's world and makes changes in both their lives, she learns that first impressions aren't always right.
    Q
  • First Impressions

    Marilyn Sachs

    Hardcover (Roaring Brook Press, March 7, 2006)
    " I read on. And then it happens. On page 89. Mary is humiliated, and I know I have to step in. There she is, in an ill-fitting, wine-colored gown that doesn't do anything for her mousy complexion, gathering up her music, when I pass by, and spill my glass of punch right on her dress. I turn, and there is Kevin, dressed in a scarlet coat and all the rest of the uniform of a British Soldier, circa 1811. 'What are you doing here?' I ask. 'Well, this is the part I'm up to in the book.'" The smart middle child in a blue-collar family identifies with Mary, the middle child in Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice. When Alice enters Mary's world and makes changes in both their lives, she learns that first impressions aren't always right.