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Chrysalis: A Forgotten Phase in the Journey of Faith uses the
life-cycle of butterflies as a metaphor for the faith journey that
many contemporary people are experiencing. Increasing numbers of
Christian people find their faith metamorphosing beyond the
standard images and forms of Christian faith but questions about
where this may lead remain. Is this the death of personal faith or
the emergence of something new? Could it be a journey that is
Spirit-led? Drawing on the three principal phases of a butterfly's
life and the transformations between these phases, the book
suggests subtle similarities with the zones of Christian faith that
many encounter. For butterflies and Christians change between these
'phases' or 'zones' is substantial, life-changing and irreversible.
This book accompanies ordinary people in the midst of substantive
faith change. Chrysalis is primarily pastoral and practical drawing
on the author's experience of accompanying people in the midst of
difficult personal faith changes.
macCLOUD FALLS is both an exploration of early Scottish
colonisation of B.C. and its ongoing impact, and a road-trip
romance full of humour, rich characters and incident in the shadow
of impending death, played out against the backdrop of the
Vancouver Canucks' vainglorious Stanley Cup run.
An experimental novel on a grand scale, beautifully carried
through. A Perth minister takes in a traumatised stranger who calls
himself 'the son and heir to being lost'. When the stranger
disappears, the events leading up to and following on from this are
revealed. Shifting perspectives from a contemporary mystery to a
history of Shetland and emigration, it extends the idea of Scottish
empire and diaspora imaginatively, while addressing notions of
being and belonging in 21st century Scotland.
An experimental novel on a grand scale, beautifully carried
through. A Perth minister takes in a traumatised stranger who calls
himself 'the son and heir to being lost'. When the stranger
disappears, the events leading up to and following on from this are
revealed. Shifting perspectives from a contemporary mystery to a
history of Shetland and emigration, it extends the idea of Scottish
empire and diaspora imaginatively, while addressing notions of
being and belonging in 21st century Scotland.
North Atlantic Drift - the warm ocean current that runs past
Shetland, keeping the climate mellower than equivalent latitudes
anywhere else in the world. For centuries Shetland's artistic
tradition has been nurtured by the rhythms of the sea and the
lyrical cadences of a unique dialect. Set halfway between Scotland
and Norway, these North Atlantic isles have produced a distinct and
vibrant culture. Robert Alan Jamieson mixes mythology,
autobiography and history with photographs in a beautiful book not
only for Shetlanders, but everyone who has visited, or dreams of
visiting.
Originally written as a series of Facebook status updates during
the recovery from Covid-19, Robert Alan Jamieson's Plague Clothes
is an immediate and intimate account of one person's battle with
the virus that emphasises the universality of our struggle during
the pandemic. Moving seamlessly between sharp satire, confessional
and philosophical enquiry, Jamieson takes aim at Western
government, laments the current ecological crisis, and challenges
our treatment of the so-called 'old and vulnerable', carried all
the way by a rare voice of wisdom and protest at a time when ageism
in society risks reducing an entire generation to statistics.
Published in beautiful hardback with seventeen black and white
photographs. Longlisted for the 2020 Highland Book Prize.
In the summer of 2011, Gilbert Johnson, an Edinburgh antiquarian
bookseller suffering from cancer who has only ever travelled via
books before, decides to make one big journey while he is still fit
enough – to British Columbia on the trail of an early settler he
believes may have been his runaway grandfather, a man who went on
to become important in the embryonic ‘Indian Rights’ movement
of the 20th century. Flying over the Rocky Mountains he meets a
fellow passenger, a Canadian woman, so beginning a relationship
that ultimately carries the two of them deep into the interior of
the province. macCLOUD FALLS is both an exploration of the Scottish
colonisation of B.C., and a roadtrip romance full of humour, rich
characters and incident in the shadow of impending death.
This text is based on research with those who have left churches
but are nethertheless pursuing a journey of faith. Most of the
church leavers interviewed for this text had been in their churches
for over 15 years; most had held key leadership positions, and 40
per cent had been in full time theological study of church work.
The text outlines how churches can help leavers and suggests a
conversion between post-church groups and churches.
The hadal zone represents one of the last great frontiers in marine
science, accounting for 45% of the total ocean depth range. Despite
very little research effort since the 1950s, the last ten years has
seen a renaissance in hadal exploration, almost certainly as a
result of technological advances that have made this otherwise
largely inaccessible frontier, a viable subject for research.
Providing an overview of the geology involved in trench formation,
the hydrography and food supply, this book details all that is
currently known about organisms at hadal depths and linkages to the
better known abyssal and bathyal depths. New insights on how, where
and what really survives and thrives in the deepest biozone are
provided, allowing this region to be considered when dealing with
sustainability and conservation issues in the marine environment.
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