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Examples
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Author: k. avalon | Filed under: Book Club, News Blog
WINGS YA BOOK CLUB: CHAPTERS 10-12 | Open Society Book Club Discussions and Reviews 2010
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Author: k. avalon | Filed under: Book Club, News Blog
WINGS YA BOOK CLUB : CHAPTERS 4-6 | Open Society Book Club Discussions and Reviews 2010
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Author: k. avalon | Filed under: Book Club, News Blog
WINGS YA BOOK CLUB : CHAPTERS 17-20 | Open Society Book Club Discussions and Reviews 2010
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Author: k. avalon | Filed under: Book Club, News Blog
WINGS YA BOOK CLUB- CHAPTERS 21-24 | Open Society Book Club Discussions and Reviews 2010
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Best Billboard Hits of 1967 battle of new orleans, bobby darin, frankie avalon, johnny horton, lloyd price, mack the knife, Music 1959, paul anka, Trivia
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Author: k. avalon | Filed under: Book Club, News Blog
WINGS YA BOOK CLUB- CHAPTERS 7-9 | Open Society Book Club Discussions and Reviews 2010
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Author: k. avalon | Filed under: Book Club, News Blog
WINGS YA BOOK CLUB : CHAPTERS 17-20 | Open Society Book Club Discussions and Reviews 2010
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Author: k. avalon | Filed under: Book Club, News Blog
WINGS YA BOOK CLUB : CHAPTERS 4-6 | Open Society Book Club Discussions and Reviews 2010
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Author: k. avalon | Filed under: Book Club, News Blog
WINGS YA BOOK CLUB: CHAPTERS 13-16 | Open Society Book Club Discussions and Reviews 2010
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Author: k. avalon (online) | Filed under: News Blog
sigi commented on the word avalon
I like this word verymuch, do not know if this place reallyexisted once in a while apart from fairy tales!
January 25, 2008
treeseed commented on the word avalon
Avalon (probably from the Celtic word abal: apple) is a legendary island somewhere in the British Isles featured in the Arthurian legend, famous for its beautiful apples. It first appears in Geoffrey of Monmouth's 1136 pseudohistorical account Historia Regum Britanniae ("The History of the Kings of Britain") as the place where King Arthur is taken to recover from his wounds after his last battle at Camlann, and where his sword Caliburn (Excalibur) was forged. The concept of such an "Isle of the Blessed" has parallels in other Indo-European mythology, in particular Tír na nÓg and the Greek Hesperides, the latter also noted for its apples.
_Wikipedia
January 26, 2008
yarb commented on the word avalon
"We don't feel those locks and chains,
we won't listen to
the lizard part of our brains
giving the orders.
And in the morning we'll be gone:
I'll start the car for Ten Mile Beach,
or maybe Avalon,
across the water."
- The Church, Already Yesterday
February 20, 2008
reesetee commented on the word avalon
Very nice, yarb.
February 20, 2008