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Old 07-28-2016, 03:04 PM   #1901
tubemonkey
monkey on the fringe
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SYNC Weekly Deals -- Week 13 -- exp 04 Aug @ 7:00 AM ET

Note: further info can be found here --> SYNC 2016 | SYNC FAQs
  • FREE -- Pennies for Hitler -- Jackie French/ H Bower --> 9.1 hrs/ R-4.2 --> historical
  • FREE -- Juba -- Walter Myers/ Brandon Gill --> 4.4 hrs/ R-na --> historical
Quote:
Pennies for Hitler

Book Length: SYNC download= 9h 09m | Audible= 9h 08m

It′s 1939, and for Georg, son of an English academic living in Germany, life is full of cream cakes and loving parents. It is also a time when his teacher measures the pupils′ heads to see which of them have the most ′Aryan′- shaped heads.

But when a university graduation ceremony turns into a pro-Nazi demonstration, Georg is smuggled out of Germany to war-torn London and then across enemy seas to Australia where he must forget his past and who he is in order to survive. Hatred is contagious, but Georg finds that kindness can be, too. The companion piece to Hitler's Daughter, Pennies for Hitler examines the life of a child during World War II, from a different perspective.
Quote:
Juba

Book Length: SYNC download= 4h 17m | Audible= 4h 25m

New York City's Five Points district in 1846 is a volatile mixture of poor blacks and immigrants from Europe. William Henry Lane is a teenager working odd jobs to make ends meet, but he really loves to dance. Watching the other dancers in Five Points, and practicing when he can, he gets so good that he begins to call himself "Master Juba."

Master Juba is just another entertainer, dancing in return for supper money, until he is brought to the attention of Charles Dickens, the great English novelist. Dickens writes about Juba and his dancing in his book American Notes, and it is as "Boz's Juba" (Boz was Dickens's nom de plume) that Juba performs in England with the Pell Serenaders. Juba quickly finds that, in London, he's turning heads and taking the city by storm with his dancing skills and sense of rhythm.

But what will Juba do when the Serenaders have to return to the United States? Slavery has been abolished in England; in the U.S., it still exists in all its ugliness. Free black men and women are often captured in the North and sent down South as slaves. England offers freedoms that Juba could only dream of in the States, and returning home may prove a dangerous decision.

This novel is based on a true story, the intricacies of Juba's meteoric rise as an explosive young black dancer brought to life by Walter Dean Myers through meticulous and intensive research.

Last edited by tubemonkey; 08-04-2016 at 12:02 AM.
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