
AARP The Magazine – the world’s largest-circulation magazine, with more than 47 million readers – helps people 50+ live their most fulfilling lives.

AARP The Magazine – the world’s largest-circulation magazine, with more than 47 million readers – helps people 50+ live their most fulfilling lives.

AARP The Magazine – the world’s largest-circulation magazine, with more than 47 million readers – helps people 50+ live their most fulfilling lives.

We’ll help you answer “What’s for Dinner” before 6:00pm. Planning is everything. This book has loads of lunch & dinner menus, weekly grocery lists, large batch hints and the contributor provided recipes loved by Gooseberry Patch fans for more than 20 years. Also tips on making dinner a special family time. 256pp 215 recipes.

The time has come for brave warriors to conquer an indomitable foe. But can the ultimate sacrifice bring lasting peace — to all possible worlds?

Nancy, a teenage girl, runs away from home. Hitchhiking to Virginia to stay with a friend, she is picked up by a couple on a camping trip. The trip turns deadly when the campers are attacked by a group of crazed Satanists.

The Son of Sam case grew into a lifelong obsession for journalist Maury Terry, who became convinced that the murders were linked to a satanic cult.

A beautiful, pure-hearted young woman, Maleficent has an idyllic life growing up in a peaceable forest kingdom, until one day when an invading army threatens the harmony of the land. Maleficent rises to be the land’s fiercest protector, but she ultimately suffers a ruthless betrayal – an act that begins to turn her heart into stone. Bent on revenge, Maleficent faces an epic battle with the invading King’s successor and, as a result, places a curse upon his newborn infant Aurora. As the child grows, Maleficent realizes that Aurora holds the key to peace in the kingdom – and to Maleficent’s true happiness as well.

An early milestone in urban TV comedy, Sanford and Son was an immediate critical and audience favorite when it debuted in the early ’70s, signaling the arrival of one of TV’s most memorable characters: Cantankerous-but-lovable junk dealer Fred Sanford (Redd Foxx). An African American answer to “Archie Bunker,” widower Sanford and his “Dummy” son Lamont (Demond Wilson) run a family junk business in Watts, dreaming up schemes to strike it rich…