Same Kind of Different As Me: A Modern-Day Slave, an International Art Dealer, and the Unlikely Woman Who Bound Them Together

by mrbooks on February 19, 2010

  • ISBN13: 9780849919107
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Descriptiones product dangerous, homeless drifter who grew up picking cotton in virtual slavery. An upscale art dealer in the world of Armani and Chanel used to. A gutsy woman with a stubborn dream. A story so incredible no novelist would dare dream. It begins in front of a burning hut in the fields in Louisiana. . . Honky-tonk and East Texas. . . and probably in the heart of God. It takes place in a Hollywood hacienda. . . an upscale New York gallery. . . a dumpster downtown. . . a ranch in Texas. Gritty with pain and betrayal and brutality, this true story also shines with an unexpected, life-changing love. . . . More>>

Same Kind of Different As Me: A Modern-Day Slave, an International Art Dealer, and the Unlikely Woman Who Bound Them Together

{ 5 comments… read them below or add one }

V. HASELOFF February 19, 2010 at 11:27 am

This book had a huge 50% off-label purchased at the front than someone in a store 1 / 2 price of the book, but charged me the full price for it. I’m not happy. There is no way I could give it as a gift for someone else. The label can not be removed without tearing the cover you. Rating: 1 / 5

rock February 19, 2010 at 1:13 pm

Here are the essential elements of this book: I’m so rich, I have so much money, people who are different from me younger than I, especially if they are poor and black. Oh, look! I have sympathy! Yay me! Ho hum. I guess it’s the money from the book of pocket, because he knows better than anyone and his “New Best Friend” receive a gift card to McDonald’s, and own a piece of cardboard. What a boring creep! Rating: 1 / 5

Objecta February 19, 2010 at 2:54 pm

I have this book because it was a ONE / ONE choice of specifications selected my city. Literature, it is not. Think? No way! The book reminds me of when I was a teenager, lying on the couch fantasies about the ascent of Mount Everest by reading the National Geographic with his feet in the air. I expect that his readers about the development of cultural relations is a useful and go raving in a few weeks. Ron Hall is a very rich art dealer whose wife, Debbie, befriended a man on the street are illiterate and more or less before Ron died of cancer are involved. Apparently, Ron wrote the story, while dealing with their grief, the words of Denver (published partly in dialect) with a tape measure or something that has a third person to fix it something, and, as a vanity publication. How, then why and under what conditions they took Thomas Nelson unclear. I personally was the way he ignores all the hard questions and meaningful social and ego-trip for Ron uninspired apparent. I also found it really poorly written and vague when it came to information about things like Denver never learned to read and what can be done today for children deprived. On the other hand, I have finally mountains of Nepal. Perhaps this book can be the seeds of the plant specific issues for young people who have not thought outside their usual bulle.Rating: 1 / 5

D. Lee February 19, 2010 at 3:05 pm

It was strongly recommended, but after 3 pages, I knew it was not for me:) Rating: 2 / 5

jinxinva February 19, 2010 at 5:06 pm

Did I read the same book as the rest of the people? “It was 150 pages too long, it is morally and simple, and it was very write very badly. The main narrator of the story seemed like a car salesman in an Armani suit. He was vain, materialistic man who his moral compass when they changed their own needs. When people learn that the overuse of words, Christians and Jesus does not make them more moral than an atheist or a Jew or a Muslim? Rating: 1 / 5

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