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A blindingly blonde woman walks into private detective Mike
Garfin’s downtown Montreal office, complaining that she’s being
followed by a man. That evening, at a luxurious Lakeshore home, he
witnesses another woman being forced into a car. Garfin gives
chase, only to find her dead and disfigured beneath the wheels of a
large truck on Highway 20. At first he sees no connection between
the two– why should he?– but Garfin’s pursuit of the truth
shows they are inextricably linked by basic vice on the highest
floors of the swankiest Sherbrooke Street apartments. This Douglas
Sanderson thriller follows Hot Freeze as the second Mike Garfin
adventure. First published in 1954 under the title The Darker
Traffic, a Dodd, Mead Red Detective Mystery, it was reissued the
following year as Blondes are My Trouble by Popular Library. This
Ricochet Books edition is the first in sixty years.
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Dark Passions Subdue (Paperback)
Douglas Sanderson; Introduction by Paul Charosh, Jonas Westover
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R436
R369
Discovery Miles 3 690
Save R67 (15%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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If you have ever felt like giving up, or that life is too hard,
this book is for you. It will encourage you to not give up on God;
it will strengthen your ability to see God's hand upon your life,
and it will inspire you to cling to the Lord through every storm
that comes your way. For a young Nigerian girl named Happiness,
life's journey became almost unbearable. She endured refugee status
in the Biafra War, an arranged marriage to a man she had never met,
being smuggled across the U.S.-Mexican border, experiencing the
toll of a physically and mentally abusive husband, standing in food
lines, and living in a homeless shelter. Through it all, Happiness
learned to draw closer to God and today owns her own business and
understands her life's purpose. This is a compelling story of the
power of destiny on a life surrendered to God, and what amazing
things God will do, if we just trust him. Douglas S. Anderson is a
graduate of the University of Oregon and Pepperdine School of Law
where he was a member of the Pepperdine Law Review. He also holds a
Masters of Law degree with a specialty in International Law from
The Army Judge Advocate General School. He is a former Judge
Advocate with the U.S. Air Force retiring as a Lieutenant Colonel.
Currently he is a licensed minister, an attorney in private
practice, licensed in both Virginia and Oregon, the Co-founder and
President of America Reclaimed Ministries, a Christian educational
ministry, and he has published several law review articles, as well
as co-authoring the book, Contending for the Constitution. He and
his wife Laura have two children and are currently living in
Woodbridge, Virginia.
More than thirty years ago, section 35 of the Constitution Act
recognized and affirmed "the existing aboriginal and treaty rights
of the aboriginal peoples of Canada." Hailed at the time as a
watershed moment in the legal and political relationship between
Indigenous peoples and settler societies in Canada, the
constitutional entrenchment of Aboriginal and treaty rights has
proven to be only the beginning of the long and complicated process
of giving meaning to that constitutional recognition. In From
Recognition to Reconciliation, twenty leading scholars reflect on
the continuing transformation of the constitutional relationship
between Indigenous peoples and the Canadian state. The book
features essays on themes such as the role of sovereignty in
constitutional jurisprudence, the diversity of methodologies at
play in these legal and political questions, and connections
between the Canadian constitutional experience and developments
elsewhere in the world.
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