Mills


Enemy of the State (Mitch Rapp, #16)
Total Power (Mitch Rapp, #19)
Red War (Mitch Rapp, #17)
Rising Phoenix (Mark Beamon, #1)
Enemy at the Gates (Mitch Rapp, #20)
Lethal Agent (Mitch Rapp, #18)
Order to Kill (Mitch Rapp, #15)
Oath of Loyalty (Mitch Rapp, #21)
The Survivor (Mitch Rapp, #14)
Code Red (Mitch Rapp #22)
Free Fall (Mark Beamon, #3)
Storming Heaven (Mark Beamon, #2)
The Second Horseman
Burn Factor
Sphere of Influence (Mark Beamon, #4)
Orphan Train by Christina Baker KlineGirl in Translation by Jean KwokA Little Princess by Frances Hodgson BurnettOliver Twist by Charles DickensLyddie by Katherine Paterson
Sweatshops & Child Labor
222 books — 30 voters
Shattered Trust by Jacqueline BairdSeparate Lives by Caroline JantzThe Dark Side of Desire by Michelle ReidMistress of the Groom by Susan NapierComparative Strangers by Sara Craven
Favorite Harlequins
101 books — 56 voters

Lion of the League by Larry R. GerlachBaseball by Steven P. GietschierIntentional Balk by Daniel LevittForty Years a Giant by Steve TrederStealing Home by Eric Nusbaum
Seymour Award Winners
30 books — 1 voter
The Daring Ladies of Lowell by Kate AlcottMrs. Somebody Somebody by Tracy WinnUnravelling by Elizabeth GraverCall the Darkness Light by Nancy ZaroulisLyddie by Katherine Paterson
Lowell Mills
55 books — 7 voters

Friedrich Engels
The Industrial Revolution brought forth a transformation in the lives of women, as they moved from the domestic sphere to the factories, facing long hours of toil and challenging conditions. This shift not only altered their economic roles but also laid the groundwork for the questioning of established gender norms.
Friedrich Engels