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From: Shaun <xowr(*)leonlai.net>
Date: Fri, 2 Dec 2005 23:57:10 -0500
To: test.tester(*)testcompany.com


"Even if you're an adult, it doesn't change the fact that it's a really great story that people get hooked on."

attorneys. "I loved the book. I hated the ending," said 39-year-old Shelly Blackmore of Centerville, Ohio. "There is a death. I sobbed. It was horrible." "Prince" already has worldwide pre-orders of more than 2 million copies, 1.4 million from Amazon alone. Half of those are in the United States, so many that the United Parcel Service and the U.S. Postal Service are teaming up to deliver them all. Indeed, a couple characters were knocked off in previous books, and ugly politics hung heavy over "Order of the Phoenix." Romance has begun entering the air -- perhaps even involving Harry, not to mention his friends Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger -- and so has death. "It didn't seem to drone on and on," she said. "There was a lot of stuff in the fourth book that could have been cut out, and the fifth book was really long. In the sixth book, everything fit in." Dracula, however, has nothing on the great white shark. Susan Casey went in search of the vicious sea creatures in one of their native habitats, a string of wind-whipped rock outcroppings called the Farallon Islands, about 25 miles west of San Francisco. (Indeed, the islands are considered within Getting over the ending may take a little longer. But the books ... well, the books are in no danger of going wanting. Dracula, however, has nothing on the great white shark. Susan Casey went in search of the vicious sea creatures in one of their native habitats, a string of wind-whipped rock outcroppings called the Farallon Islands, about 25 miles west of San Francisco. (Indeed, the islands are considered within


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Received on Fri Dec 02 2005 - 23:57:21 EST

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