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You can either browse our store directories or search the item you want to know. You can search using keywords, title, publisher, ISBN, artist, and so on. If you see the item you want, click Add to Shopping Cart. After that, you can either Continue Shopping or Proceed to Checkout. After clicking Proceed to Checkout, you can simulate your total charges based on your preferred shipping method and enter the shipping address. When you are done, you will receive instruction where to send your payment and you're done! Simple, isn't it?


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BukuDunia.com Web site Launch
Wednesday, 27 February 2008
Dear loyal customers, it brings me great excitement to announce the launch of our new book website:

http://www.bukudunia.com

BukuDunia.com is a website that provide books from around the world. All kinds of books such as Text books, Rare & Out of stock books, in New & Used conditions are available. These books are provided from thousands of sellers, book agents, and publishers from around the world. If JuraganBuku.com is identical with Amazon, then BukuDunia.com is the rest of the world :-)

Just search for books using the search feature on the left part of the page. One book may have hundreds of sellers with hundreds of different prices. Make sure to read the description of the book before placing an order. With a built-in user management console, you can now easily track your orders, check out your shopping cart, confirm payments, and create a wish list easily.

Before beginning your shopping spree, please read the FAQ, Terms & Condition, and Privacy Policy first!
With the launch of BukuDunia.com , we hope to provide more book selections for your to choose from.


Enjoy your books!

PS: Constructive feedback on the website and our service is always welcomed. Just go to the "contact us" page and inform us of any issues you may have.

 - Api Perdana -

 
100 Books Every Child Should Read, UK-style
Tuesday, 05 February 2008

In mid-January, Telegraph.co.uk published a list of the "100 books every child should read." Like many must-read lists, it includes expected stalwarts such as Where the Wild Things Are, Charlotte's Web, The Chronicles of Narnia, and To Kill a Mockingbird. But this Brit list focuses on stories that are exciting to read (vs. books that teach you things you ought to know) and it actually has some titles I haven't seen on American recommended book lists.

I'm adding a sampling here, but I recommend clicking through to the actual list for the thoughtful introduction by author Michael Morpurgo about kids and stories, as well as fun thumbnail reviews like "A stirring tale," "No reader remains untouched," and my favorite: "Runcible."

Read more...
 
We have moved our office!
Wednesday, 14 November 2007
Dear Customers,

We have moved our office to:

PT. Avevo Dinamika
Gedung JCD Lt.4
Jl. Wahid Hasyim No.27
Jakarta Pusat 10340
Ph/Facs: +62 21 3140269

 
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Results 5 - 8 of 10
NY Times Sunday Book Review
  • African Idyll
    The Times?s Helene Cooper fled a warring Liberia as a child. In this memoir, she returns to confront the ghosts of her past -- and to find a lost sister.

  • Books of The Times: A Leader Beyond Denial, as War Plans Flounder
    Bob Woodward paints a picture of an administration shrugging off bad news and postponing decisions as the crisis in Iraq deepened.

  • True Grit
    In a new story collection, Annie Proulx returns to disrupt the mythology of the Old West.

  • Bowling for Justices
    In Christopher Buckley?s new novel, the fun begins when a popular TV judge is appointed to the Supreme Court.

  • The Lives of the Irish
    Anne Enright?s working-class characters grapple with love, marriage, parenthood, boredom, confusion and desire in this collection of stories, old and new.

Yahoo! Movies: DVD Releases This Week
  • The Brotherhood of the Wolf
    Set in 1765 during the reign of Louis XV, a mysterious creature is laying waste to the countryside in a rural province of France, savagely killing scores of women and children. Unseen, possessed of enormous strength and a seemingly near-human intelligence, the beast has eluded capture for years. Desperate to end the growing unrest of the populace, the King sends in a renowned scientist and his Iroquois blood brother, an unconventional team whose combined methods and capabilities may finally bring the beast down. (2 hrs. 23 min.)
  • Tim Burton's The Nightmare Before Christmas
    Despite having recently presided over a very successful Halloween, Jack Skellington, aka the Pumpkin King, is bored with his job and feels that life in Halloweenland lacks meaning. Then he stumbles upon Christmastown and promptly decides to make the Yuletide his own. (1 hr. 15 min.)
  • Redbelt
    Actor Chiwetel Ejiofor follows his turn in AMERICAN GANGSTER by taking the lead role in this thoughtful fight movie from writer/director David Mamet. Ejiofor plays Mike Terry, a man who runs his own Jiu-jitsu studio in Los Angeles. Terry's business is failing, causing tension between him and his wife, Sondra (Alice Braga). But their lives change drastically when Terry is compelled to come to the aid of an actor, Chet Frank (Tim Allen), during a bar fight. Frank befriends Terry and invites him to come and work as a consultant on a movie he is shooting. Just as Terry's fortunes seem to be changing, he finds himself caught up in a deceitful plan that has been carefully hatched by Frank's devious agent (who is played by Mamet regular Joe Mantegna). With his debts piling up, Terry decides to go against all his instincts and enter the competitive fighting world, where he stands to win a huge cash prize. But the good-natured fighter is in for a shock when he gets a close-up glimpse of the corruption that runs rife throughout the sport.

    REDBELT is full of the usual plot twists and fine performances that mark any Mamet movie. It's fascinating to watch the director draw on his longstanding passion for Jiu-jitsu to fill out the storyline, and Ejiofor does a convincing job as a man who draws on the discipline of the sport to stay calm during some testing times. As with many Mamet films, a series of cons are liberally sprinkled throughout the script, calling on viewers to remain alert as each strand of the storyline slowly unravels. The bulk of the movie is conversational, shying away from the action sequences that mark most fight movies, and making REDBELT an unusual and invaluable addition to the genre. (1 hr. 39 min.)
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