![]() TOPS Receipt Carbonless Duplicate, 2.25 x 5 Inches, 200 Sets per Book (4161 ) $8.99 Check-off box to indicate For Rent and check-off box For other with write-in space. Space to fill in account, paid and due amounts. Check-off boxes to indicate cash, check or money order. Form Type: Receipt; Global Product Type: Forms; Format: 200-Set Book; Form Size (W x H): 2 3/4 in x 5 in. ![]() Duplicate $16.00 I had ordered this movie on Blockbuster Online quite sometime ago and forgotten about it. It finnally showed up yesterday and of course I watched it........ then promptly logged on to Amazon.com and bought it as well as the CD (Sound track!) For pure entertainment this is a FUN! film that I will watch many times over. As to the music, I usually really like one or two of the musical numbers, like 2~3 and oh -hum on the rest....In this film they are all good! There is another similar film staring SRK, that has a a bit darker theme to it, involing identical persons, that is a decent film, but not as fun as Duplicate! Oh yeah, keep your eyes open for Kajol. According to the end credits, she is in this film somewhere (although I did not realize that till I saw her name in the credits.) So I have to go watch again just to find her..oh well :) ! ![]() PM Company 07706 Carbonless Duplicate Cash Register Rolls, 3" X 90', White/Canary, 50 Rolls/ctn $199.00 Carbonless duplicate paper produces crisp, clear images End-of-roll indicator (Not all machines can use multi-ply paper rolls. If in doubt about your machine, consult your user's manual.). ![]() The Duplicate (Novel) $5.99 Not as well known as Sleator's Interstellar Pig, the Duplicate takes a conventional premise (cloning oneself) that's a staple of Saturday morning cartoons and ingeniously twists it into an eerie, gripping parable about employing forces beyond one's control for personal gain. The spare, short novel is a series of episodes that grow darker and darker as Sleator adds touches of realism to the possibilities of cloning: why do we assume that a clone would do our bidding, if it has the same feelings we do? And a copy of yourself might be much like the original--but what about a copy of the copy? These intriguing questions build in a suspenseful, chilly tale with a gripping climax. The narrative has a claustrophic, inevitable feel to it, and there's no unecessary "fat" on the bones of the story. While the characters aren't so fleshed out, and the "unknown" seems to conveniently drop in from nowhere, Sleator's exploration of the premise's unforseen possibilities more than makes up for it. I've always admired this book's intense focus. It would be a surprise to find a more thorough exploration of this particular "what if?". Recommended. |
|