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ASK SADIE: Marnie Macauley A Game Worth Winning? Dear Sadie: My beau and I are both single, mature adults in our late 30s, who met four months ago. We were immediately very attracted to each other. The problem is we find it difficult to coordinate meeting dates because he travels extensively for a living. Also, he has an ex-wife and four children, and they rightfully take precedence. But I’m terribly frustrated and don’t want to hound him. What should be my game plan with him to get closer? Fourth Place |
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In caveman times, men were Hunters and women were Gatherers. So what’s changed? Not much. Defending the Caveman
In caveman times, men were Hunters and women were Gatherers. So what’s changed? Not much.
Kevin, Why won't my husband stop and ask for directions when he gets lost? ~Susan in Henderson
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By Jeffrey Eugenides Picador, an imprint of Farrar, Straus and Giroux,
Middlese, Jeffrey Eugenides Pulitzer prize-winning novel, brings the Stephanides family — three generations of Greeks — immigrants bearing silkworms and superstitions to Detroit, Michigan. Nature takes a very unusual course and Calliope, or Cal Stephanides, becomes the unsuspecting recipient of a very dark family secret. The characters lives are shaped by historical events: ethnic cleansing, the 1967 Detroit riot, and later, San Francisco’s hippy heyday. Middlesex takes tragedy and comedy in new directions and to delicious heights. There is a reason Eugenides drew upon his heritage and birthplace, spending nine years crafting this superb book. If you appreciate great writing you are in store for a real treat.
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In The Master’s Hands: Picasso’s Ceramics |
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In The Master’s Hands: Picasso’s Ceramics, Treasures from the Estate of Pablo Picasso Review by Linda Lane
The Bellagio Gallery of Fine Art is presenting In the Master’s Hands: Picasso’s Ceramics, Treasures from the Estate of Pablo Picasso, a rare and important exhibition of Pablo Picasso ceramics. The artist’s grandson, Bernard Ruiz-Picasso, has painstakingly selected and lent the gallery 30 pieces of his grandfather’s extraordinary art.
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In caveman times, men were Hunters and women were Gatherers. So what’s changed? Not much. Defending the Caveman
In caveman times, men were Hunters and women were Gatherers. So what’s changed? Not much.
Dear Caveman, I live in a dual-income household. Both my mate and I have demanding full-time jobs. So when something isn't done around the house, why is it always my fault? Deborah, Las Vegas
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