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Books > Health, Home & Family > Mind, body & spirit > Unexplained phenomena / the paranormal > General
Scarface ingeniously traces the origin of today's violence,
bloodshed and wickedness, to the first bloodshed and murder on the
face of the earth, back to Cain and Abel. It took a great flood
that destroyed the wicked children of Cain; the children of Noah
replenished the earth. Two of Noah's sons replenished the earth
with pagan gentiles, godless and wicked evil children; their
children were Canaanites and Cushites, they are known as the
children of Scarface until this day. These gentiles with the help
of the Jews crucified and shed the blood of Jesus Christ, the Son
of the Most High God. They persecuted the children of the Most High
God and the church. Children killing their fathers and mothers,
parents murdered and abused their children, brothers killing their
sisters and brothers in the streets and in the homes. This book is
in sequence to "My Little Garden of Eden" a place in time once
abundant is now desolate and barren. Evil spiritual forces came out
from the wilderness and arrived in the cities, it dwelled in the
mind of evildoers, the wicked children of Scarface. Many
unbelievers found refuge in the churches, they became sheep amongst
wolves, but many were wolves disguised in sheep clothing. They
carry a Bible in one hand and a gun in the other, their lips speak
enticing words that deceived many, but their hearts were full of
poisonous venom. The children of Scarface lust for material wealth,
money and young women, they prowled in darkness and take pride in
violence and bloodshed. They roamed the streets at night seeking to
devour the vulnerable poor and the weak. Am I my brother's keeper?
I have focused on the idea of man in creation and have tried to
clarify it. Perhaps there is as much confusion and uncertainty here
as anywhere today, even in Christian ranks. There is confusion and
uncertainty of the beginning of man, was he created as man as of
today or did he evolve from an ape? Also, there are other things
that confuse and seem uncertain to man that I tried to point out in
this study. The idea of God is being attacked in many ways and in
many quarters. But there seems to be, also, a growing recognition
of man's need of God. Man within himself is helpless in the midst
of hostile forces on every hand. God is man's only refuge and help
in time of need. I feel that man should know about his total self,
and relationship with God. I will try to point out and focus on
studies of man before the world was created, the three-folds of
man's nature and functional parts, his fall and punishment, and
also his renewal stages and his final destiny.
Come nose around in the creepier corners of the Grand Rapids of
yesteryear. Discover why Hell's Bridge persists as such an oft-told
urban legend and what horrific history earned Heritage Hill the
title of Michigan's most haunted neighborhood. Mingle with the
spooky inhabitants of the Phillips Mansion, Holmdene Manor, San
Chez Restaurant and St. Cecilia Music Center. Meet the guests who
never quite checked out of the Amway Grand. Read the true stories
behind the Michigan Bell Building and the Ada Witch Legend. Nicole
Bray, Robert Du Shane and Julie Rathsack illuminate the shadows of
local sites you thought you knew.
Nothing like some good ghost stories on a cool Florida evening
around a campfire (or at home in your favorite reading chair). And
nothing like a swamp as a good, scary setting, especially Florida's
famous ones--from the Everglades to Mosquito Lagoon. Mysterious
things just happen in swamps. Maybe it's because they are often
wet, shadowy places of wild beauty where few people go. Where else
but a swamp can you find a ghost who is obsessed with the ghost
orchid? Throw in a skunk ape or two and you've got the ingredients
for many entertaining hours. In writing tales for this book, Doug
Alderson drew upon many years of entertaining young people as a
summer camp counselor and storyteller, and also from decades as a
swamp explorer. He is a former associate editor of Florida Wildlife
magazine. To learn more about his writing and photography, log onto
his website at www.dougalderson.net.
A rare collection of messages from members of a family reunited in the afterlife.
Lesley May was living in KwaZulu-Natal when she received and conveyed detailed descriptions of different aspects of the afterlife from her mother and various family members who had passed on.
Many people have precognitive dreams, others hear voices or see
things once in a while, and some get a funny feeling in their bones
telling them that something is wrong. It tends to run in families.
In August of 2000, shortly after my sister-in-law, Diane, died,
dark shadows started to attack my daughter Mary during the night.
At first, fearful of sounding crazy, she didn't tell anyone. Who
would believe her? When Mary finally got up the nerve to tell her
roommate about the attacks, she was shocked to discover that Lauren
had seen things too. Then another friend, Ned, told her evil
spirits surrounded her. How would he know that? When Mary called to
tell me that weird things had been happening to her and her
friends, paranormal activity was furthest from my mind. They all
liked to party so I reasoned that it must be drugs and alcohol
causing this hysteria. But when Mary moved out, the weird things
stopped for them, not for her. As the attacks escalated, she could
see the shadows gather in the corner of her living room. She
started hearing voices, and the TV and radio were nothing but
static. Mary hid her problems from me as for long as she could, but
I knew there was something seriously wrong. I was having dreams
that she was in danger. Even then, I refused to believe her
problems were paranormal. Logically, I wanted them to be fixable
issues, like bad friends, or a sleep disorder, or even mental
illness. That all changed when I finally realized that Mary really
was being attacked by evil spirits. My daughter's story is about
that year.
Best Ghost Tales of North Carolina offers twenty-five tales about
strange happenings, creepy places, and engaging specters across the
Old North State. Six are new for this edition. The ghosts of North
Carolina's past linger among the living in this thrilling
collection of ghost tales. Pink Lady at Grove Park Inn The legend
starts in the 1920s when a pretty young girl in a pink ball gown
plummeted to her death from Room 545. The Unknown Soldier and the
Confederate Spy On certain nights when the fog rolls in and the
moonlight is faint, two spirits have been seen walking down by the
river. Ghost Ship of Diamond Shoals What happened to the Carroll A.
Deering is considered by many to be the greatest mystery of the
seas during the first half of the 20th century.
All of my books, and in particular Sixty Psychic Years, relate my
concerns for Earth, its inhabitants and the creatures on it.
Listening to the various scientific bodies located around our
world, I contemplate their submissions of doom. The diversity of
opinion seems, at times, contradictory, and yet as Earth reveals in
her changing moods a threat to humanity's future, the majority of
us continue to ignore her warning. There are two over-powering
reasons that should influence us to pause and rethink the strategy
to live our lives here. First is the transient aspect of it,
second, our inevitable transition into the next world when it ends.
'Sixty Psychic Years' describes a life-time of psychic experiences
I have witnessed both from seances, held by my mother; a practicing
spiritual medium over that period, and many inexplicable events
that have occurred throughout my life.
This title features stories of unexplained phenomena in Delaware,
including the evil murderess Patty Cannon, the judge who was buried
twice, the vengeful phantom dog of Frederica, the wizard of
Belltown who sold his soul to the Devil, the Girl of the Dunes
waiting on her lost love, and many more.
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Blue Weeds
(Paperback)
Francois Meaux
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R776
R685
Discovery Miles 6 850
Save R91 (12%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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While working a part-time job, Linda McGraw has done this writing
in hope of giving comfort and peace to those about to face death.
It is also for those with a question about whether or not angels
and the Trinity truly exists. She has wanted to share some of her
stories with others of what she has been shown in her life. By
writing this book in journal form she wanted you to follow along in
her life and experience what happened and when they occurred. Were
they intended for a learning experience to prepare her for a future
vision? They say God only gives you what he knows you can handle.
Is she still being prepared for something more?
Nantucket Island has just more than 10,000 year-round residents --
and a sizeable population of very real ghosts. The 44 tales in this
book were collected as oral history. Some of these spirits are
benign, even protective; others terrorize the humans who encounter
them. All are memorable.
Because Door County received its name from "Death's Door," the
perilous strait with more freshwater shipwrecks than anywhere else
in the world, it should be no surprise that the idyllic county has
plenty of ghostly history. In the company of storyteller Gayle
Soucek, meet lighthouse keepers whose sense of duty extends beyond
the grave. Catch a glimpse of the phantom ship Le Griffon, never
seen for more than a moment since it sailed through a crack in the
ice in 1679. And it is not just the waters of Door County that
carry the freight of haunted tales--Country Road T has its share of
spooks, bizarre beasts have caused disturbances in the woods and
there are whispered rumors that infamous gangster Al Capone added
to the county's stock of ghosts through a handful of brutal
murders, including an ex-girlfriend and two unacknowledged
children.
Go on a spiritual journey with the author, as he shows how one does
not need expensive equipment to talk to the dead. He takes you to
the heart of Acadiana in south central Louisiana where spirits at a
bed and breakfast tell him that a young woman's suicide there was
actually a murder. He brings you to the heart of New Orleans where
a spirit committed suicide and tells Stanley how he died. Listen to
slaves from the most haunted house in New Orleans, the Laulaurie
House, tell of the torture and abuse they suffered at the hands of
Madame Delphine Laulaurie. Go to Laurel Valley plantation, and hear
spirits talk about a murder that took place in the old slave
quarters. Listen to intelligent spirits speak to Stanley from the
Mojave Desert to the ruins in the foothills of Delos, Greece. Hear
intelligent responses from the spirits of the parents of Stanley
and his wife, Barbara, as they answer questions that only they
could know the answers when they were alive. You will know you're
never alone, again, once you read these true, captivating stories.
It was the winter of 1947 when C. David Priest, then five years
old, first hears his aunt Rosalee tell the vivid and frightening
story of the Whippanini man, a strange presence that only comes out
when darkness falls. Terrified and curious all at the same time, it
is later that same night after David falls asleep that he sees the
Whippanini man for the first time, forever transforming his
innocent life.
As the spectral presence haunts David in his sleep, his aunt
relays more stories that cause him to begin to question everything
in his life-and all who have passed away before him, including a
cousin reported to have looked just like David. But at night,
nothing can stop Whippanini from invading David's dreams, at least
temporarily, and seemingly warning him of tragic events about to
occur. As the years pass and Whippanini disappears, David wonders
if the presence was just a figment of his childhood imagination.
Little does he know that the Whippanini man is about to make his
presence known again.
"The Whippanini Man" shares one man's struggle with a fearful
manifestation as he walks back into his past and he hopes to find
his true self.
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