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Show New arrivals at the Parle City Library Recent arrivals at the Park City Library include cold weather comforters ranging from works of fiction to thrillers to self-help self-help books and travelogues. So find yourself a cozy fireplace and curl up with a hot drink and any of the following. "Alive With Color" by Leatrice Eisenman examines ex-amines which color goes with what and why, decorating decorat-ing with color, marketing yourself with color, and color and your personality. In "Guide to Outdoor Careers" by Martha Thomas Thom-as a career expert tells what you need to know about jobs in forestry, oceanography, wildlife management and agribusiness, and offers tips on choosing a job, investigating investigat-ing the market, and more. Emanuel Cheraski's "The Vitamin C Connection," based on years of scientific ,t research, explains why we can't live without the orange juice vitamin. .. Europe's best-kept budget secrets are revealed in "Passport to Europe's Small Hotels and Inns" by Beverly' Beyer, a guidebook of 850 great places to stay in 23 countries. With "Richard Simmons' Better Body Book" (Richard Simmons) you can learn to redesign your body with 200 illustrated exercises. Travelers from nine countries coun-tries are "Trespassers on the Roof of the World" in Peter Hopkirk's tale of a century-long contest to penetrate pene-trate Lhasa, sacred capital of Tibet. "Triathlon: A Triple Fitness Fit-ness Sport" is a manual for the novice and the practitioner practi-tioner by endurance athlete Sally Edwards. In "Death of an American" Ameri-can" former Park Record news editor David Fleisher details the story of 'funda mentalist -Mormon farmer - John Singer, whose struggle for the right to educate his children at home ended in his death on Jan. 18, 1979. Stephen King's "Pet Cemetery" is a nightmare of the supernatural set in a small town in Maine and a graveyard where generations genera-tions of children have buried their pets. "Birdy" a novel by William Wil-liam Wharton, describes a 13-year-old boy's obsessive fascination with birds and his desire to fly. "A Trembling Upon Rome" is Richard Condon's novel of the Middle Ages and Baldassare Cossa. Lawyer, army general, son of pirates, Cossa twice refused the papacy and left a name reviled in church history after he was trapped into becoming Pope John XXIII. "The Women of Brewster ' Place" are seven characters whose fractured perspectives perspec-tives and lives in a dead-end street are the subjects of a novel by Gloria Naylor. "Poland" is James Mich-ener's Mich-ener's latest epic, in which fact and fiction are intertwined inter-twined in a narrative of Polish history from the 13th century. Thomas McGuane's "Nobody's "No-body's Angel" is the story of a former army tank captain and sometime whiskey addict ad-dict who goes home to the family ranch near Dead-rock, Dead-rock, Montana, to repair his life. In 1973, blocked writer Nathan Zuckerman consoles himself with women as he decides to abandon writing and become a doctor in Philip Roth's "Anatomy Lesson." Columnist Erma Bombeck returns to hardcover wit and wisdom with "Motherhood: The Second Oldest Profession." Profes-sion." -."""' |