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The time has come for nondualism. As a fundamentally unifying
concept, nondualism may seem out of place in an age of rising
nationalism and bitter deglobalization, but our current debates
over tribalism and universalism all grant nondualism an informative
relevance. Nondualism rejects both separation and identity, thereby
encouraging unity-in-difference. Yet “nondualism” as a word
occupies a large semantic field. Nondual theists advocate the unity
of humankind and God, while nondual atheists advocate the
inseparability of all persons, without reference to a divinity.
Ecological nondualism asserts that we are in nature and nature is
in us, while monistic nondualists assert that only God exists and
all difference is illusion. Edited by Jon Paul Sydnor and Anthony
Watson, and guided by scholars from different religions and
specializations, Nondualism: An Interreligious Exploration explores
the semantic field that nondualism occupies. The collection elicits
the expansive potential of the concept, clarifies agreement and
disagreement, and considers current applications. In every case,
nondualism is universal in its relevance yet always distinctive in
its contribution.
Forensic psychiatrist Barrett Conyors is back . . . Barrett Conyors
finds the discovery of the bodies of two heroin-addicted teens
particularly hard to accept. Barrett's convinced that chief suspect
Jerod, a homeless schizophrenic, didn't do it but she's the only
one, apart from Detective Ed Hobbs, who is. But even Hobbs can't
stop Barrett from following a complex trail of drugs and death that
places her in the cross hairs of a killer . . .
TV presenting proves dangerous, when Ada and her partner Lil become
involved in a new antiques show and get sucked into a morass of
lies, secrets and murder . . . Barry Stromstein has a serious
problem. If he can't come up with a concept for a new TV antiques
show asap, his terrifying boss - TV sensation Lenore Parks - will
fire him, and his perfect life will be over. But when he talks to
antiques columnist Lil Campbell, he unexpectedly hits pay dirt. Her
partner, Ada Strauss, not only suggests the perfect hook for the
show, but is the perfect woman to host it. Ada's elated, but
production of The Final Reckoning seems blighted before it's even
begun when, shockingly, Leonore dies. But Barry seems strangely
determined to continue, and as Lenore's children - the unsettling
Rachel and her beloved older brother Richard - become involved, the
pilot episode becomes increasingly ghoulish in tone. Ada's enjoying
herself - really, she is - but as she and Lil are drawn deeper into
the lives and affairs of the Parks, they begin to suspect that
there are dark, twisted secrets at the heart of the family, and
very real danger for them all . . .
Retiree sleuths Lilian and Ada find that though their town might
look postcard pretty, there's something rank festering below the
surface . . . Lilian Campbell and her best friend and lover, Ada
Strauss, are woken early by the sound of sirens: the local nursing
home, Nillewaug Village, is ablaze. The police and fire chiefs find
evidence to suggest the fire was accidental, but Detective Mattie
Perez can't help but wonder why the smoke alarms didn't work. Soon,
it's looking less like accident and more like arson . . . and Lil
and Ada are swept up into an investigation that grows increasingly
more complex, and frightening, by the hour.
Lesbian sleuths Lil Campbell and Ada Strauss are on the case in the
first of a highly entertaining cozy mystery series. Something
wicked has come to Grenville Connecticut, a town famous for
antiques and the systematic fleecing of its well-heeled elders as
they down-size, sicken and die. Clearly, someone is unhappy with
the status quo as high-end antique dealers are being murdered in
gruesome--yet fitting--ways. When a severed finger shows up at the
Friday night auction, unlikely heroines Lil Campbell and Ada
Strauss have to wonder--where's the rest of the body? A question
that leads to festering small-town secrets, and the unraveling of a
mystery that shows all is not well in a town famed for its postcard
perfect New England charm. For Lil and Ada, long-time friends and
neighbors, the murders take a personal turn as unspeakable
accusations are raised against Lil's dead husband and she becomes
the focus of the killer's rage. And to make things worse--or
better--the two friends are forced to confront powerful feelings
for one another that threaten their idyllic lives.
From page one, the chase is on and many will die unnecessarily.
Forensic psychiatrist, Ms Barrett Conyors knew that if Richard
Glash weren't manacled to his chair, he would kill her. He had
likely imagined every detail of her murder and then obsessively
sketched the scene hundreds of times. At forty-two Richard, who'd
spent all but four and a half years of his life locked away, had
few interests, other than drawing. And killing.
Dr Frank Garfield has found a cure for cancer, but cut-throat
businesses are looking to profit on the research and don't care who
they trample over to do so. Paediatric oncologist Dr Frank Garfield
has discovered a genetic cure for cancer that can save his young
patients. But his mentor, Nobel Prize laureate Dr Jackson Atlas,
believes his research is like blood in the water for profit-hungry
drug companies that will twist and weaponize it. UNICO
Pharmaceuticals CEO Leona Lang is desperate to find a new product,
and Frank's formula could be the answer. But Jackson is an
obstacle. Dalton Lang, Leona's sociopathic son, has been tasked
with seducing Frank into joining UNICO. His first steps are to
eliminate Jackson and make it look like a burglary. With Jackson
gone, will Frank be persuaded to join UNICO or let his research,
which could blow apart the cancer industry, die? The lives of
innocent children hang in the balance. Frank can save them . . .
but at what cost?
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