Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Authors - Coolidge Clark

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 2     21-40 of 91    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Coolidge Clark:     more books (100)
  1. The So: Poems 1966. by Clark. COOLIDGE, 1971
  2. Angel Hair Sleeps with a Boy in My Head: The Angel Hair Anthology by Tom Greenwald, Joanne Kyger, et all 2001-06-15
  3. Solution Passage by Clark Coolidge, 1986-03
  4. The Act of Providence by Clark Coolidge, 2010-03-01
  5. Philip Guston: Collected Writings, Lectures, and Conversations (Documents of Twentieth-Century Art) by Philip Guston, 2010-12-01
  6. Far Out West (Adventures in Poetry) by Clark Coolidge, 2001-09-01
  7. Postmodern Poetry: The Talisman Interviews : William Bronk, Clark Coolidge, Anselm Hollo, Susan Howe, Nathaniel Mackey, Alice Notley, Ron Padgett, L by Edward Halsey Foster, 1994-03
  8. Drawings from the Philip Guston and Clark Coolidge Exchange by Debra Bricker Balken, 1990
  9. Biography - Coolidge, Clark (1939-): An article from: Contemporary Authors by Gale Reference Team, 2003-01-01
  10. This Time We Are Both by Clark Coolidge, 2010-10-01
  11. The Cave (Adventures in Poetry) by Clark Coolidge, Bernadette Mayer, 2008-05-01
  12. Talisman 3: Coolidge Issue. by Clark]. Foster, Edward. ed. [COOLIDGE, 1989
  13. Lowell Connector by Clark Coolidge, 2001-03
  14. Smithsonian Depositions and Subject to a Film by Clark Coolidge, 1980-12

21. PRICEFARMER.COM: Farm-Fresh Price Comparisons Of Books
clark coolidge. 13 Titles Sorted by Title Alphabetically. 1. AlienTatters (Paperback) by clark coolidge December 2000
http://www.pricefarmer.com/cgi-bin/farm?author=Coolidge, Clark

22. Poetry Previews: Clark Coolidge
Mesh Sense, Sensuality, and the Poetry of clark coolidge. Also by clark coolidgeCrystal TextClick to Order coolidge's Crystal Text (soft $).
http://www.poetrypreviews.com/poets/poet-coolidge.html
CheapStakes
Poem-a-Day

Trivia

Strange News
...
Ghost Stories

Mesh: Sense, Sensuality, and the Poetry of Clark Coolidge
  • Genre(s): Experimental
  • Period: 1960s to the present
  • Lines: (from The Crystal Text
    As electricity is homeless. Continental baseless.
    Bones to a radiant inner. Coaxless stocking
    the brittle tone, sash of stone without a cord.
    You leave me out in weathers, the languages,
    the footless mounts. ... To immerse one's self into the work of a poet who is as ephemeral and sensual as Clark Coolidge calls for the reader's questioning of the representation of the sexual, the sensual, the senses that make up the receptors of pleasure: touch, sight, smell, taste, and especially sound. Sound, or rather rhythm and cadence, lend a quality to the work of Coolidge that is both striking and alluring. One is rather seduced into the poem by his neologisms (carey, sonance) and surprising adjectives or nouns (popple, beryl). The context from which Coolidge writes is a "mesh," a twisting of our expectations so that "the evening ladder of thighs adhesive" becomes quite an arresting and suggestive image. [ Click to Order Coolidge's Mesh (soft $) ] Or is it egg she needs? Man withdraws
  • 23. After All, Kerouac's First Language Was Not English, It Was A
    clark coolidge on Jack Kerouac clark coolidge, Kerouac, publishedin the January/February 1995 issue of American Poetry Review.
    http://www.english.upenn.edu/~afilreis/88v/kerouac-per-coolidge.html
    Clark Coolidge on Jack Kerouac Clark Coolidge, "Kerouac," published in the January/February 1995 issue of American Poetry Review . Clark Coolidge has performed his work across the U.S. and Europe, and is a contributing editor to Sulfur . Coolidge originally presented this essay as a lecture at the Naropa Institute on July 8, 1991, and portions of "Kerouac" appeared in Talisman . The essay was excerpted for APR from a book that had not yet appeared Disembodied Poetics: Annals of the Jack Kerouac School edited by Anne Waldman and Andrew Schelling, which was published by the University of New Mexico Press. I thought I'd start out with a sort of two-panel quote from Keroac to give the range of his language. You might think of these examples as two polar existences of the words in his work. The first: Black black black black bling bling bling bling black black black black bling bling bling bling black black black black bling bling bling 38//Sword etc., flat part of an oar or calamity, sudden vio- dashing young fellow, lent gust of wind; forcible stream of leaf, air, blare of a trumpet or hom, blamable deserving of Explosion as of gunpowder, blame, find fault with Blight; censure, imputation of a blatant Brawling noisy, Speakill, blaze. Bum with a blameful meriting flame, send forth a flaming light, less, without blame innocent, torch, firebrand, stream of blamelessly blameless flame of light, bursting out, actness ... And the second one: I'm writing this book because we're all going to die-In the loneliness of my life, my father dead, my brother dead, my mother faraway, my sister and my wife far away, nothing here but my own tragic hands that once were guarded by a world, a sweet attention, that now are left to guide and disappear their own way into the common dark of all our death, sleeping in my raw bed, alone and stupid: with just this one pride and consolation: my heart broke in the general despair and opened up inwards to the Lord, I made a supplication in this dream.

    24. Poetry@MIT Presents Clark Coolidge
    Poetry@MIT presents . . . An Evening with clark coolidge. clark coolidgeUNDER A PORCELAIN SYMPATHY. The rule of tommyrot is in place
    http://web.mit.edu/humanistic/www/poetry/coolidge.html
    MIT Program in
    Writing and Humanistic Studies
    MIT, Room 14E-303
    Cambridge, MA 02139-4307
    Telephone: 617-253-7894
    FAX: 617-253-6910
    Poetry@MIT presents . . .
    An Evening with
    Clark Coolidge
    Clark Coolidge UNDER A PORCELAIN SYMPATHY The rule of tommyrot is in place
    every indicator red nose on the planet lit
    the rap of a timpani skin head failure
    in the real studio too much grey space
    starts nailed to a blue plate no hope a crucial hand cut short admits complicity dry grass in tin cylinders activity null who exactly is abroad the USS CreaseFire? the medal at the end of its tassle says God Bless Hysteria noted in notebook at midnight on national roof will the chosen beast have the final say? each citizen to receive a personalized burial pie this is the fabled blank in citizenship a pod with half-speed advance warning thus the places taken a froth is built there is no incoming nationality the illuminated portions are small citizenry doomed latches in place April 20, 2000 - 7:00 p.m.

    25. MIT Program In Writing And Humanistic Studies: Poetry@MIT Presents Clark Coolidg
    . An Evening with clark coolidge April 20, 2000 700 pm MIT Room 6-120 77 MassachusettsAvenue Cambridge, MA. clark coolidge UNDER A PORCELAIN SYMPATHY.
    http://web.mit.edu/afs/athena.mit.edu/org/h/humanistic/www/poetry/coolidge.shtml
    MIT Program in
    Writing and Humanistic Studies
    MIT, Room 14E-303
    Cambridge, MA 02139-4307
    Telephone: 617-253-7894
    FAX: 617-253-6910
    Poetry@MIT presents . . .
    An Evening with
    Clark Coolidge April 20, 2000 - 7:00 p.m.
    MIT Room 6-120
    77 Massachusetts Avenue
    Cambridge, MA
    Clark Coolidge UNDER A PORCELAIN SYMPATHY The rule of tommyrot is in place
    every indicator red nose on the planet lit the rap of a timpani skin head failure in the real studio too much grey space starts nailed to a blue plate no hope a crucial hand cut short admits complicity dry grass in tin cylinders activity null who exactly is abroad the USS CreaseFire? the medal at the end of its tassle says God Bless Hysteria noted in notebook at midnight on national roof will the chosen beast have the final say? each citizen to receive a personalized burial pie this is the fabled blank in citizenship a pod with half-speed advance warning thus the places taken a froth is built there is no incoming nationality the illuminated portions are small citizenry doomed latches in place Free and open to the public Sponsored by the Program in Writing and Humanistic Studies For more information, call 617/253-7894

    26. A Ruffled Sheen, By Clark Coolidge
    from lingo 8. clark coolidge. A Ruffled Sheen (after Wieners). TheGurrelieder of Charlie Parker boiling up to a crispness a cheapness
    http://www.cultureport.com/newhp/lingo/authors/coolidge.html
    loadCSS('hp', '../../../cultureport');
    catalog
    new forthcoming lingo ... exit
    from lingo 8
    Clark Coolidge A Ruffled Sheen (after Wieners)
    The Gurrelieder of Charlie Parker
    boiling up to a crispness
    a cheapness of lostness I encounter
    the Hucklebuck
    and the latrine I'll never wear again
    wrist rested on marble block
    the Exorcist caught a treeload of there is laughter and there is putty oh old gold blanker go with me now I'd never look over that shoulder those gold glasses a case of back braces seam of frond and the ten-man stallions know what it's like let's take a pile for our trouble a franking life full of bags and boxes and a tilling of the blokes Lynch says panties and death are the same let's swim awful for your hands to be thrown out as I walk worth saving Sarah Pictures my stormgiven friend Predusil my epigone staggers on the land Breathland between the rungs a solid saliva keeps them there a fly may be fancier but your window knocker blonde cavortrist embellishing and wavering from the top of this knob I sight the central premise Ostragod has a terrible head a mottled brick for a tail and there is no greater farmer than presence or a fat family shirt or the Wallwalker Plantagenet Shropshire or no Hobbyknot I see things sinking in the pushing traffics (accelerate till you hit Marge) those who have nothing but this bubble to love out of the mendicant's very own pen perspire knock off and masturbate (take it in its own telling)

    27. Clark Coolidge: At Egypt
    clark coolidge At Egypt ISBN 0935724-35-4 1988 $7.50, Ralph WaldoEmerson said that when we travel, we take ourselves along, (I
    http://www.durationpress.com/thefigures/egypt.htm
    home catalog ordering
    Clark Coolidge
    At Egypt
    ISBN 0-935724-35-4
    At Egypt
    Philip Whalen
    It is hard to imagine a more generative writer than Clark Coolidge, nor one whose range and influence is more total. At Egypt, a major poem in eleven sections, is a series of "gestures in rock," and like the leaving of stones on a desertsee Tanguymarks time and place, a monument and an alphabet, monadic and nomadic. Monads are complex, and offer a certain resistance to the mental traveler; but stone is also crystalline. There is complexion , light diffused and reflected on sand. Egypt is the darkness (swallowed shadows "near a rodent throne") in which Coolidge moves his verbal flashlight. Signing is singing on a bed of Nileside strawtravel: trave: rave: ave. It is a pleasure to encounter such largeness, benignity, shrewdness, and joy.
    Paul Hoover

    28. Clark Coolidge: Odes Of Roba
    clark coolidge Odes of Roba ISBN 0935724-46-X 1991 $12.00, Poemswritten in Rome, October 1984-February 1985 is the note below
    http://www.durationpress.com/thefigures/roba.htm
    home catalog ordering Clark Coolidge
    Odes of Roba
    ISBN 0-935724-46-X
    "Poems written in Rome, October 1984-February 1985" is the note below the manuscript title of Odes of Roba ("Roba" meaning "stuff" in Italian slang), a period which marked Clark Coolidge's first experience of Italy, particularly Rome, an immersion of five months in an architectural complex and cultural dilation long imagined, often heard extolled by Philip Guston, Alvin Curran and others, and now finally present in the dailiness of the poet's life as a Writer-in-Residence at the American Academy in Rome. In bursts of energy and concentrated excitement, Coolidge catches the verbal light in its multiple bounce off physical presence and cognitive angle alike. Rome is catalyst, oracle, the sound of water. As in his long poem At Egypt , written in response to a trip up the Nile River, Odes of Roba preserves this heterodox poet's nominative expedition into the present foreign ancient flux.

    29. Clark Coolidge: Alien Tatters
    clark coolidge grew up in Providence, Rhode Island and has lived in Manhattan, Cambridge,San Francisco, Boulder, Rome, the Berkshire Hills; he currently lives
    http://www.atelos.org/alien.htm
    home catalog ordering about atelos Clark Coolidge grew up in Providence, Rhode Island and has lived in Manhattan, Cambridge, San Francisco, Boulder, Rome, the Berkshire Hills; he currently lives in Petaluma, California. A poet with markedly heterogeneous interests, Coolidge's work is characteristically energetic, multilayered, and moody. He is the author of over thirty books, the most recent of which are Now It's Jazz (writings on music), Bomb (written in conjunction with visual images by Keith Waldrop), and On the Nameways (poems written in response to and while watching films). Clark Coolidge
    Alien Tatters
    ISBN 1-891190-08-3
    199 pages

    30. Bomb, Clark Coolidge & Keith Waldrop
    granarybooks.com info@granarybooks.com BOMB clark coolidge KeithWaldrop. ISBN 1887123-32-6 $12.00 (Paperback). Bomb is a meditation
    http://www.granarybooks.com/books/bomb/bomb1.html
    forthcoming catalog about granary books search rare/op poetry ... info@granarybooks.com BOMB
    ISBN: 1-887123-32-6
    $12.00 (Paperback) Bomb is a meditation on a book of photographs that document the Manhattan Project, Los Alamos. The thirty-page poem begins with epigraphs by Democritus, Gregory Corso and André Breton/Paul Eluard before embarking upon its own project of lucid investigation via an elliptical glancing narration: "Put the bomb in a glass vase/add dust and forget." Bomb is sharp, stark, rhythmic; Mr. Coolidge tangles with the dreamlike oddness of the photographs in fits and starts of language with an explosive beauty. Keith Waldrop's series of collages are literal reworkings of the original pictures: deep blacks and bright whites excavated from the book, remade here in the image of the poem. Printed offset, two-color cover, perfect binding. 10" x 8", 48 pages, 1-887123-32-6, Paperback, $12.00. forthcoming catalog about granary books search rare/op poetry ...
    orders@granarybooks.com

    31. A Secret Location. . . , This
    This Press books include Andrews, Bruce. Sonnets (Momento Mori).1980 (GRD) coolidge,clark. The Maintains. 1974. coolidge, clark. Quartz Hearts. 1978.
    http://www.granarybooks.com/books/clay/clay8.html
    forthcoming catalog about granary books search rare/op poetry ... info@granarybooks.com
    This 1 (Winter 1971.) Cover drawings by Amy Grenier.
      could see, without reading any of the words in the issue, that This 1 issued a double appeal to fresh beginnings and revered ancestors. The cover displays drawings by Grenier's very young daughter Amy done at the stage when signification was just beginning to emerge from marks on paper (i.e., when big circles first mean heads and two smaller circles with centered dots mean eyes). Balancing this originary gesture, inside were photos of the masters: one of Charles Olson, who had died the previous year, and one shot from street level of the very old Pound....The issue's simultaneous claim to originariness, a tradition, and a productive future follows the basic patterns of Pound's Zukofsky's and Olson's manifestos."
        Bob Perelman, The Marginalization of Poetry: Language Writing and Literary History (Princeton, N. J.: Princeton University Press, 1996)

      In his landmark critical history, The Marginalization of Poetry: Language Writing and Literary History

    32. Internet Public Library: POTUS
    Henry (18751944), on February 10, 1899 Children Herbert clark Hoover (1903 Secretaryof Commerce, 1923-28 (under coolidge). Presidential Salary $75,000/year.
    http://ipl.si.umich.edu/div/potus/hchoover.html
    This collection All of the IPL Advanced You are here: Home Special Collections KidSpace POTUS ...
    Contact Us
    Sponsored by Reference Center
    Reading Room

    Searching Tools
    KidSpace ...
    Special Collections
    IPL Features
    IPL Recognized in Computerworld Honors Program Recent IPL News IPL Recognized in 2002 Computerworld Honors Program New design for the IPL unveiled! Now offering links to over 20,000 books Links immediately following the image of the American Flag ( ) are links to other POTUS sites. All other links lead to sites elsewhere on the Web. Jump to: Presidential Election Results Cabinet Members Notable Events Internet Biographies ... Points of Interest
    Herbert Clark Hoover
    31st President of the United States
    (March 4, 1929 to March 3, 1933) Nickname: None Born: August 10, 1874, in West Branch, Iowa
    Died: October 20, 1964, in New York, New York Father: Jesse Clark Hoover
    Mother: Hulda Randall Minthorn Hoover
    Married: Lou Henry (1875-1944) , on February 10, 1899
    Children: Herbert Clark Hoover (1903-69) ; Allan Henry Hoover (1907-93) Religion: Society of Friends (Quaker) Education: Graduated from Stanford University (1895).

    33. Clark Coolidge Poetry Typescripts : Scope/Content
    clark coolidge poetry typescripts. Scope / Content Note. Three collectionsUntitled, dedicated to Tom clark; Whoboddy, dedicated
    http://orpheus.ucsd.edu/speccoll/testing/html/mss0282e.html
    Clark Coolidge poetry typescripts
    Scope / Content Note
    Three collections: Untitled, dedicated to Tom Clark; "Whoboddy," dedicated to Philip and Musa Guston; and "A B," made for Clark.

    34. Tom Clark And Clark Coolidge. Rock Notes
    Register of. Tom clark and clark coolidge. Rock Notes. 1968 1969.MSS 0281. Mandeville Special Collections Library Geisel Library
    http://orpheus.ucsd.edu/speccoll/testing/html/mss0281a.html
    Register of
    Tom Clark and Clark Coolidge. Rock Notes
    MSS 0281 Mandeville Special Collections Library Geisel Library University of California, San Diego Extent: 0.10 linear feet (1 item (139 leaves) in three folders.) This version of the finding aid was produced on

    35. Regarding Morton Feldman's Music ... By Clark Coolidge
    Regarding Morton Feldman's music and wherever it all now goes. by clark coolidge. Youjust have to forget about yourself. . © clark coolidge 1988
    http://www.cnvill.demon.co.uk/mfcooldg.htm
    [Morton Feldman Page] [List of Texts]
    Regarding Morton Feldman's music
    and wherever it all now goes
    by Clark Coolidge
    The following article was first published in Sulfur (No 22, Spring 1988) pp 123-129.
    All quotations are taken from the essays, lectures and interviews of Morton Feldman.

    "I don't start with any plans whatever. I just follow it through." "I ask at the beginning of working on a piece: What is the material?" "I no longer give things a name. (I don't call it variation, I just do it another way.)" "When I work I'm a listener, I'm not a composer." "I never understood what I was supposed to learn and what I was supposed to break. What rules?" The music (or any) profession: a consensus. Imagine that nothing had ever been agreed on (it actually hasn't anyway). How would the sounds appear? We have warblers and we have symphonic bands. And all the lodged complaints, even in terms of notes, one could wish. And when we do happen to be knowing in time, right on it, we're as far as the globe gives from discourse. Walls cracking from pressure of all the claims that made them. 'The question is, and it is because of John Cage that we must ask the question: Is music an art form to begin with? Or has it always been show biz based on a kind of small attention span? And by show biz I mean Monteverdi. Is music an art form, rather than a music form, that one could explore and be flexible with? I don't know if music is that flexible to make a metamorphosis into something that doesn't have a formula. But the minute you don't use formula you're considered a Third World artist, like Ives."

    36. ARRAS: Little Reviews: Clark Coolidge, On The Nameways
    clark coolidge On The Nameways Volume One publisher The Figures isbn 1930589-02-6price $12.50 Like Ashbery in his recent Girls on the Run, coolidge
    http://www.arras.net/the_franks/coolidge_nameways.htm
    arras: e-books sites with legs gallery offsite .pdfs bks stuff: web poetry little reviews misc. writing eye candy free space comix: the blog
    little reviews
    Clark Coolidge

    On The Nameways: Volume One
    publisher: The Figures
    isbn:
    price:

    Like Ashbery in his recent "Girls on the Run," Coolidge indulges in fantasies of serious play among grownups, creating, in this long series of short poems (for which there will, presumably, be a Volume II), a landscape in which words themelves become characters, suggest psychological dimensions, and in the end depart having pleased, perverted or deceived:
    In the Land of Oo Bla Dee
    stooping distance from the Renal Tailpiece
    wore the uniform to the very edge clasping of the mudguard Progress Hornblower was a liar they never set his pants on fire it all came due on Whiteman's Day metallurgy of a log But there's a lowline limiter and Jimmy Semester is lifting it riffs and breaths all hauled away a general snuffing a total rolling just no end to these shifting witnesses but there'll come a day There is something that is not so much anti-intellectual but defiantly slap-happy about the way Coolidge uses language, and it's not because he always quite sure what he's doing (as he freely admits):

    37. ARRAS: Little Reviews: Clark Coolidge, Alien Tatters
    Alien Tatters clark coolidge publisher Atelos Books, 2000 isbn 1891190-08-3 price$12.95 coolidge's latest collection of long poems hot on the heels of
    http://www.arras.net/the_franks/coolidge_alien.htm
    arras: e-books sites with legs gallery offsite .pdfs bks stuff: web poetry little reviews misc. writing eye candy free space comix: the blog
    little reviews
    Alien Tatters

    Clark Coolidge
    publisher: Atelos Books, 2000
    isbn:
    price:

    Coolidge's latest collection of long poems hot on the heels of his massive group of loopy lyrics from The Figures, On The Nameways takes the reader to a delicately upsetting space which seems run by the evil twin of Descarte's god, replacing every object in the room until, like in a swoon, one falls squarely into the lush language: Just kind of a nice frying person. The rest was on the latch moved over. I could just see a foot or threat of one because my head was lying on my head. A bit. Then another weighted hand, sort of spoollike and in spots and dashes. Gaming room with a spread to it. "Puzzle Faces" is framed like a discovery narrative, an air of mystery being created by the author's subjunctive sense of meaning and lack of agency as he/she, in a partly lotus-eater state, tries to avoid panic and indecision: There is something heavy being lifted like a blot from the paper. Are you all prepared? There will be little fun in thin rooms. Might have to barter for favors. This is an uneven clime. I'll have to eat when I can, there being no rooms for it here. Where purest night is considered a sort of vitamin not just anyone should ingest. I watch the lights popping out all the way down the cabin. There must be creatures here who would overlead the populace, just a feeling.

    38. Clark Coolidge: A Geology
    clark coolidge A Geology 36 pages ISBN 1893541-19-31999 $8.00 second edition, close.
    http://www.potespoets.org/chapbooks/geology.htm
    Clark Coolidge
    A Geology
    36 pages
    ISBN 1-893541-19-3
    $8.00 second edition close

    39. MMD Archives Subject Index For: C
    Clarion (1). Clariona (15). Clariophone (1). clark (102). clarke (2). Class (2). Cooking(2). Cooley (2). Cooley's (2). coolidge (2). Cooper (3). Coordination (4). Cop (1).
    http://mmd.foxtail.com/Archives/KWIC/C.html
    Mechanical Music Digest Archives MMD Archives Subject Index (C)
    Entries are listed alphabetically.
    C

    C-2

    C-483

    C.C
    ... Info
    To Post a message in the MMD related to self-playing musical instruments, please send your message via email to: rolls@foxtail.com
    Please read our Republication Policy before copying information from or creating links to this web site.
    Contact our webmaster about technical problems you encounter using this web site.

    40. Arts/Literature/Authors/C/Coolidge,_Clark
    Arts / Literature / Authors / C / coolidge, clark. clark coolidge OnKerouac at the Outpost Article by Steven Robert Allen in Weekly Alibi.
    http://www.arts-entertainment-recreation.com/Arts/Literature/Authors/C/Coolidge,
    Search: Welcome to arts-entertainment-recreation.com, the comprehensive search portal dedicated to the arts. We have located some of the finest art and entertainment resources from across the Web and accumulated them into a single directory. Here you can choose from a wide variety of documents, reviews, articles, and Web sites about your favorite activities. Whether you enjoy film, Broadway shows, television, books, fine art, or travel, there is something here for you. As you peruse the directory, you will notice several categories pertaining to the arts. Feel free to navigate through these categories, from broad art-related topics to specific information on selected subjects. Our search portal also gives you the option to conduct a query using our intelligent search feature. Arts Literature Authors C Coolidge, Clark Clark Coolidge: On Kerouac at the Outpost
    Article by Steven Robert Allen in Weekly Alibi.
    URL: http://www.alibi.com/alibi/1999-11-11/artpics3.html
    Review by Mladen Baudrand.
    URL: http://www.alibi.com/alibi/1999-11-25/speeder2.html

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 2     21-40 of 91    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

    free hit counter