Where Did It All Go Right?: Growing Up Normal in the 70s

6 best books like Where Did It All Go Right?: Growing Up Normal in the 70s (Andrew Collins): Everybody Died, So I Got a Dog: The funny, heartbreaking memoir of losing a family and gaining a dog, The Body: A Guide for Occupants, Migraine, Cider With Roadies, The History of Mr. Polly, Eve in Hollywood

Everybody Died, So I Got a Dog: The funny, heartbreaking memoir of losing a family and gaining a dog
AuthorEmily Dean
The funny, heart-breaking, wonderfully told story of love, family and overwhelming loss which led Emily Dean to find hope and healing in the dog she always wanted. Growing up with the Deans was a fabulous training ground for many things: ignoring unpaid bills, being the most entertaining guest at...
The Body: A Guide for Occupants
AuthorBill Bryson
ISBN0385539304
In the bestselling, prize-winning A Short History of Nearly Everything, Bill Bryson achieved the seemingly impossible by making the science of our world both understandable and entertaining to millions of people around the globe.

Now he turns his attention inwards to explore the human...
Migraine
AuthorOliver Sacks
The many manifestations of migraine can vary dramatically from one patient to another, even within the same patient at different times. Among the most compelling and perplexing of these symptoms are the strange visual hallucinations and distortions of space, time, and body image which migraineurs...
AuthorStuart Maconie
ISBN0091897459
Cider with Roadies is the story of a boy's obsessive relationship with pop. A life lived through music from Stuart's audience with the Beatles (aged 3); his confessions as a pubescent prog rocker; a youthful gymnastic dalliance with northern soul; the radical effects of punk on his politics, homework...
AuthorH.G. Wells
ISBN0141441070
Welcome to Alfred Polly's mid-existence crisis. That's where we meet him, then we backtrack from his infancy through his life up to what might just be a fresh-starting point...

"...filled him with a vague and mystical happiness that he had no words, even mispronounceable words, to express."...
AuthorAmor Towles
Near the end of Amor Towles’s bestselling novel Rules of Civility, the fiercely independent Evelyn Ross boards a train from New York to Chicago to visit her parents, but never disembarks. Six months later, she appears in a photograph in a gossip magazine exiting the Tropicana Club in Los Angeles on...
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