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As "The Mortal Instruments" tanks, it's time to get past fantasy stories about heroes destined for greatness 08/29/2013 18:21 UTC "The Mortal Instruments": Methadone for Twi-hards ...
Every moviegoer will have his own breaking point, when “The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones” surpasses the mundane and enters the ridiculous. For some, it will be upon first hearing that ...
Three-quarters of the way through “Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End,” Atul Gawande pulls back his carefully stitched curtain of repo ...
Sept. 13, 2013— -- There are a lot of books on 26 year-old Bryton Talyor’s bookshelves. Fantasy, mystery, DIY, cookbooks, it looks like they belong to multiple people. Bright post it notes ...
The steampunk dystopian book series Mortal Engines never got as much traction in the States as popular as Euro-import counterparts Harry Potter or Lord of The Rings. That might be about to change ...
Features Mortal Engines: Differences Between the Book and the Movie. Examining the changes – big and small – made to Philip Reeve's YA novel for the Mortal Engines movie.
Mortal Instruments failed to make a dent at the box office in 2013, but the executive producers behind the new TV adaptation of the best-selling young adult fantasy novels are hoping lightening ...
In “Being Mortal,” Gawande turns his attention to his most important subject yet: how our hypermedicalized culture is failing those who are at the ends of their lives, and their families.