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On the Western Front in France in the summer of 1918, World War I
whirled around U.S. Army nurse Jenny Drake. Lured into patriotic
espionage, she is thrown together with U.S. Army Air Service pilot,
Joseph Morgan. The two are instantly attracted to each other, but
the race to find the traitors in their midst puts Jenny in the
direct path of a life-threatening situation. Thus begins The Morgan
Chronicles in Destiny Rising, Book One-The Master's Rose. Destiny
Rising, Book Two-Fatal Mark continues The Morgan Chronicles during
the last months of World War II. When Annie Bell's flight
instructor Jessie is found dead, Annie becomes a nurse at Tulsa
General Hospital, the place Jessie was last seen alive. Determined
to find the truth, Annie is drawn into a relationship with Stewart
Morgan, Navy pilot and intelligence officer. Together they pursue
the investigation until he is given overseas orders. Annie proceeds
on her own, tumbling into a criminal web that is trapping women
patients into a psychotic state.
CHARIOTS OF THE CLOUDS For as long as she could remember, Colley
Morgan wanted to be a pilot. Determined to achieve her childhood
dream, she accepts a position flying for Aero Pacific Aviation in
Southern California owned by Geoff Fillmore. Their first encounter
draws them together yet at the same time sets a quirky pace for
their relationship. While flying a charter flight to Baja
California, Colley finds herself in jeopardy when her plane is
forced down in an isolated area and then stolen. Alone in a strange
country, Colley turns to the only person she can reach, Geoff.
Colley and Geoff put their personal differences aside to pursue
recovering "their" airplane. As the mystery of the stolen plane
unfolds, their decision leads them into the treacherous world of
smugglers. Chariots of the Clouds is the second book in the Morgan
Family Genealogy Series.
Ireland, 1014 AD, was a turbulent time; but wing walkers Kate
Phillips and Jen Fillmore discover that the fate of the island is
tied to an island in another world-Gudsrika Isle in the world of
Bigna. Caught in a world between medieval mercenaries and
twenty-first century cell phones, Kate and Jen find their lives
hurled into a sinister domain of deceit, treachery and tomblike
dungeons. Brought to Gudsrika Isle to prevent the magic of the BOK,
the sacred writings of Gudsrika, falling into the sorcery powers of
wicked Queen Ionta, they must trust the supernatural power within
their lockets to save them from being imprisoned for eternity by
Rapio--the dark, mystical leader of Gudsrika.
BOK, the first book in The Locket Chronicles, is a continuation of
the lives of two characters, Kate and Jen, in the first series by
Carole Bailey, The Morgan Chronicles.
Jerusalem, 1099 AD, was the central focus of the First Crusade, the
holy war between Christian Crusaders and the Saracens. Passionately
motivated by the sight of their Holy City, the Crusaders stop and
wait for orders to assault the city's stone walls. In that moment
of hesitation, wing-walkers Kate Phillips and Jen Fillmore are
pulled from twenty-first century Earth World and hurled into the
land of Domar in Bigna World. The two find their lives caught in a
world of medieval knights and scaly beasts, far from their high
tech world. Brought to Domar to find a cure for the Bas plague
spreading throughout Domar, Kate and Jen are plunged into the deep,
mystical chambers of Rapio, the sinister, dark Prince of Bigna. The
fate of Jerusalem 1099 AD hangs on their actions in Domar. Blasting
Trumpets, the second book in The Locket Chronicles, is a
continuation of the life journey of two characters, Kate and Jen,
who first appeared in The Morgan Chronicles, the first series by
Carole Bailey.
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Temecula Valley Wineries
Rob Crisell; Foreword by Bailey, Carol Bailey
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R602
R508
Discovery Miles 5 080
Save R94 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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A Fierce Green Place: New and Selected Poems brings together,
across the span of thirty-plus years, the rebellious, innovative
work of the Jamaican-born Canadian writer Pamela Mordecai. From her
acclaimed first collection Journey Poem published in 1989, to the
moving elegy for her murdered brother in the true blue of islands,
to the stories of freed slaves told in subversive sonnets, and on
to her dazzling reimaginings of biblical stories, A Fierce Green
Place highlights the astounding range and depths of a poet who
mixes Jamaican Creole with standard English, profanity and
reverence with dub and blues, the oral and vernacular with metrical
virtuosity. Mordecai's words, written out of a "womb-space" of
sound and power, shine through neo-colonial violence and patriarchy
with such lines as: "Women together / in one place will / bleed in
solidarity / till every last body / turn super bitch at once."
In this volume, the editors and authors strive to understand the
evolving Trans-Caribbean as a discontinuous, displacing and
displaced, transnational space. It considers the imagined community
in the islands as its psycho-social homeland, while simultaneously
pursuing different cultural strategies of redefining and resisting
colonial 'homeland' conventions (which Kamau Brathwaite
appropriately termed the 'inner plantation'). Thus, the
Trans-Caribbean is suspended in a double-dialectic, which opposes
both the hegemonic metropolitan space inhabited, as well as the
romanticized, yet colonialized, 'inner plantation, ' whose
transcendence via migration perpetually turns out to be an
illusion. Given this, cultural production and migration remain at
the vortex of the Trans-Caribbean. The construction of cultural
products in the Trans-Caribbean understood as a collection of
social and new migratory practices both reflects and contests
post-colonial metropolitan hegemonies. Following Arjun Appadurai's
distinction, these homogenizing and heterogenizing counter-trends
in Trans-Cariabbean spaces can be observed through cultural
transactions manifesting themselves as ethnoscapes, mediascapes,
technoscapes, financescapes, cityscapes, ideoscapes, etc. For the
purposes of this book the editors invited anthropologists,
sociologists, political scientists, linguists, liberal arts and
gender studies specialists, as well as cultural and literary
historians to begin drawing some of the diasporic trajectories on
the huge canvas of cultural production throughout the
Trans-Caribbean.Constructing Vernacular Culture in the
Trans-Caribbean will find its audience among scholars in cultural
studies, migration, literary theory, and cultural criticism who
have a special interest in Caribbean and Latin American Studies, as
well as among students and scholars of migration and
postcolonialism and postmodernity in general."
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Growing Old in Christ (Paperback)
Stanley Hauerwas, Carol Bailey Stoneking, Keith G. Meador, David Cloutier
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R829
R707
Discovery Miles 7 070
Save R122 (15%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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One of the hallmarks of contemporary culture is its attitude toward
aging and the elderly. Youth and productivity are celebrated in
today's society, while the elderly are increasingly marginalized.
This not only poses difficulties for old people but is also a loss
for the young and middle-agers, who could learn much from the
elderly, including what it means to grow old (and die) in Christ.
"Growing Old in Christ" presents the first serious theological
reflection ever on what it means to grow old, particularly in our
culture and particularly as a Christian. In a full-orbed discussion
of the subject, eighteen first-rate Christian thinkers survey
biblical and historical perspectives on aging, look at aging in the
modern world, and describe the Christian practice of growing old.
Along the way they address many timely issues, including the
medicalization of aging, the debate over physician-assisted
suicide, and the importance of friendships both among the elderly
and between the elderly and the young.
Weighty enough to instruct theologians, ethicists, and
professional caregivers yet accessible enough for pastors and
general readers, this book will benefit anyone seeking faith-based
insight into growing old.
CONTRIBUTORS: David Aers
David Cloutier
Rowan A. Greer
Stanley Hauerwas
Judith C. Hays
Richard B. Hays
Shaun C. Henson
L. Gregory Jones
Susan Pendleton Jones
Patricia Beattie Jung
D. Stephen Long
M. Therese Lysaught
David Matzko McCarthy
Keith G. Meador
Charles Pinches
Joel James Shuman
Carole Bailey Stoneking
Laura Yordy
A Poetics of Performance: The Oral-Scribal Aesthetics in Anglophone
Caribbean Fiction explores the impact of orature-performance on
Caribbean prose fiction. Arguing that orature-performance is the
structuring device for many contemporary novels and short stories,
this work extends the critical consensus that Caribbean oral modes
infuse all genres of literature from the region. This book also
examines how the formal and thematic synergies between Caribbean
orature and literature constitute an inter-performative
relationship between the region's literary and performance
cultures. Beginning with a retrospective analysis of New Day and
The Lonely Londoners, two harbingers of an aesthetic of orality, A
Poetics of Performance reads fictions by post-1950s writers Earl
Lovelace, Merle Collins, Marie-Elena John, Marlon James and Collin
Channer alongside calypso, reggae, and different modes of Caribbean
oral storytelling. The analyses elucidate what may be termed the
most consequential aspect of Caribbean literary self-fashioning: an
"inward turn" to the expressive resources and discursive tools of
folk and popular culture. This recuperation has in turn forged a
literary tradition grounded, not only in the folk and urban
working-class performance cultures, but inevitably in a
"woman"-centered poetics.
Jerusalem, 1099 AD, was the central focus of the First Crusade, the
holy war between Christian Crusaders and the Saracens. Passionately
motivated by the sight of their Holy City, the Crusaders stop and
wait for orders to assault the city's stone walls. In that moment
of hesitation, wing-walkers Kate Phillips and Jen Fillmore are
pulled from twenty-first century Earth World and hurled into the
land of Domar in Bigna World. The two find their lives caught in a
world of medieval knights and scaly beasts, far from their high
tech world. Brought to Domar to find a cure for the Bas plague
spreading throughout Domar, Kate and Jen are plunged into the deep,
mystical chambers of Rapio, the sinister, dark Prince of Bigna. The
fate of Jerusalem 1099 AD hangs on their actions in Domar. Blasting
Trumpets, the second book in The Locket Chronicles, is a
continuation of the life journey of two characters, Kate and Jen,
who first appeared in The Morgan Chronicles, the first series by
Carole Bailey.
Ireland, 1014 AD, was a turbulent time; but wing walkers Kate
Phillips and Jen Fillmore discover that the fate of the island is
tied to an island in another world-Gudsrika Isle in the world of
Bigna. Caught in a world between medieval mercenaries and
twenty-first century cell phones, Kate and Jen find their lives
hurled into a sinister domain of deceit, treachery and tomblike
dungeons. Brought to Gudsrika Isle to prevent the magic of the BOK,
the sacred writings of Gudsrika, falling into the sorcery powers of
wicked Queen Ionta, they must trust the supernatural power within
their lockets to save them from being imprisoned for eternity by
Rapio--the dark, mystical leader of Gudsrika.
BOK, the first book in The Locket Chronicles, is a continuation of
the lives of two characters, Kate and Jen, in the first series by
Carole Bailey, The Morgan Chronicles.
On the Western Front in France in the summer of 1918, World War I
whirled around U.S. Army nurse Jenny Drake. Lured into patriotic
espionage, she is thrown together with U.S. Army Air Service pilot,
Joseph Morgan. The two are instantly attracted to each other, but
the race to find the traitors in their midst puts Jenny in the
direct path of a life-threatening situation. Thus begins The Morgan
Chronicles in Destiny Rising, Book One-The Master's Rose. Destiny
Rising, Book Two-Fatal Mark continues The Morgan Chronicles during
the last months of World War II. When Annie Bell's flight
instructor Jessie is found dead, Annie becomes a nurse at Tulsa
General Hospital, the place Jessie was last seen alive. Determined
to find the truth, Annie is drawn into a relationship with Stewart
Morgan, Navy pilot and intelligence officer. Together they pursue
the investigation until he is given overseas orders. Annie proceeds
on her own, tumbling into a criminal web that is trapping women
patients into a psychotic state.
CHARIOTS OF THE CLOUDS For as long as she could remember, Colley
Morgan wanted to be a pilot. Determined to achieve her childhood
dream, she accepts a position flying for Aero Pacific Aviation in
Southern California owned by Geoff Fillmore. Their first encounter
draws them together yet at the same time sets a quirky pace for
their relationship. While flying a charter flight to Baja
California, Colley finds herself in jeopardy when her plane is
forced down in an isolated area and then stolen. Alone in a strange
country, Colley turns to the only person she can reach, Geoff.
Colley and Geoff put their personal differences aside to pursue
recovering "their" airplane. As the mystery of the stolen plane
unfolds, their decision leads them into the treacherous world of
smugglers. Chariots of the Clouds is the second book in the Morgan
Family Genealogy Series.
Writing the Black Diasporic City in the Age of Globalization
theorizes the city as a generative, “semicircular” social
space, where the changes of globalization are most profoundly
experienced. The fictive accounts analyzed here configure cities as
spaces where movement is simultaneously restrictive and liberating,
and where life prospects are at once promising and daunting. In
their depictions of the urban experiences of peoples of
African descent, writers and other creative artists offer a complex
set of renditions of twentieth- and twenty-first-century Black
urban citizens’ experience in European or Euro-dominated cities
such as Boston, London, New York, and Toronto, as well as Global
South cities such as Accra, Kingston, and Lagos—that emerged out
of colonial domination, and which have emerged as hubs of current
globalization. Writing the Black Diasporic City draws on critical
tools of classical postcolonial studies as well as those of
globalization studies to read works by Ama Ata Aidoo, Amma Darko,
Marlon James, Cecil Foster, Zadie Smith, Michael Thomas, Chika
Unigwe, and other contemporary writers. The book also engages the
television series Call the Midwife, the Canada carnival celebration
Caribana, and the film series Small Axe to show how cities
are characterized as open, complicated spaces that are constantly
shifting. Cities collapse boundaries, allowing for both haunting
and healing, and they can sever the connection from kin and
community, or create new connections.
Milady Standard Natural Hair Care and Braiding is designed to be
the training resource of choice for individuals committed to
nurturing textured hair and providing excellent natural hair care
services. This book introduces the technical and creative aspects
of braiding, styling, and grooming hair that is naturally curly,
kinky, or multi-textured. Also included, are 17 procedures with
step-by-step photos and detailed instructions in techniques for
styling and grooming natural hair and natural hair additions. This
is a "must have" for those who are serious about developing a wide
range of services and building a broad, diverse client
base--crucial elements for success in the flourishing hair care
industry.
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