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Justice is a great thing when someone has been wronged or violated.
We want those guilty held accountable for the crime they have
committed. In this book you will read true stories of real case
files of Detective Ron Wallace. The stories are real but the names
of the victim's and suspect have been changed to protect their
identity. The street names have also been changed. Some of the
cases in this book will touch your heart and then be filled with
excitement. The book has been formatted into a case file format
like a real case file. I have tried to bring my experiences as a
Police Detective to book form and give the reader a feel of being a
Detective. I hope this book may inspire readers to make sure that
if someone they know or themselves become more diligent in keeping
peace.
A Hard Life is a story about a Missouri family and their disasters
brought on by our country's tragic nineteenth century Civil War.
Ben Branch Walker was seven years old in 1864, near the end of the
great war that divided our nation. At his family home in Stoddard
County, Missouri, he was made to stand and watch as his innocent
father was hung by a group of union soldiers led by Captain James
Asbury of the U.S. Army. Soon thereafter, Branch's older brother,
Jon David, rescued Branch from the union camp and committed a
murder that would haunt him to his dying day, and forever change
the Walker family's future. Missouri's civil war history is filled
with terrible events and stories, but none illustrates the
tragedies more than this tale aptly titled, "A Hard Life."
The year is 1875 and Fordham Fox is a young gambler setting out on
his quest to win enough money to purchase a horse farm for himself
and his accompanying best friend Bill Garrity. Fordham was raised
on a similar type farm in Kentucky where his Osage Indian
grandfather had taught him how to play cards. Gray Fox, Fordham's
grandfather, had also bestowed a secret gift on Fordham that
practically guaranteed him success in all games of chance. His
grandfather had also warned Fordham that the gift had a dark side,
which, unfortunately, the young gambler would soon experience.
Aboard the Robert E. Lee, a gambling riverboat, Fordham becomes
infatuated with a sixteen year-old beauty from Illinois,
accompanied by her philandering mother and her aging precocious
aunt. Tragedies occur aboard the Robert E. Lee that forever alters
Fordham's dreams, severs his Kentucky family ties for years, and
sets him on a relentless course of retaliation against the men who
had wronged him. Fordham's prowess with a Colt Peacemaker, and a
large Bowie knife with an inscription, Krima Eleusis, are further
gifts his Osage grandfather had bestowed upon him. men in the
practically lawless nineteenth century Arkansas Territory. He has
to accept a new name, a new family, and he is forced to make a new
best friend
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New Jersey (Paperback)
Betsy Andrews; Edited by Ronald Wallace
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R351
R307
Discovery Miles 3 070
Save R44 (13%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Betsy Andrews' sweeping, energetic, book-length poem pounds the
pavement of the New Jersey Turnpike, driving through America - past
landfills and wetlands and weapons labs - under the towering
shadows of engines, oil, and war. With a disarmingly unique voice
that evokes the tradition of Pound and Eliot, Whitman and Williams
and Ginsberg, Andrews creates a pastiche of landscape,
consciousness, history, and politics in this American age.
"Who are we?" is the question at the core of these fascinating
essays from one of the nation's leading intellectual historians.
With old identities increasingly destabilized throughout the world
the result of demographic migration, declining empires, and the
quickening integration of the global capitalist economy and its
attendant communications systems David A. Hollinger argues that the
problem of group solidarity is emerging as one of the central
challenges of the twenty-first century. Building on many of the
topics in his highly acclaimed earlier work, these essays treat a
number of contentious issues, many of them deeply embedded in
America's past and present political polarization. Essays include
"Amalgamation and Hypodescent," "Enough Already: Universities Do
Not Need More Christianity," "Cultural Relativism," "Why Are Jews
Preeminent in Science and Scholarship: The Veblen Thesis
Reconsidered," and "The One Drop Rule and the One Hate Rule."
Hollinger is at his best in his judicious approach to America's
controversial history of race, ethnicity, and religion, and he
offers his own thoughtful prescriptions as Americans and others
throughout the world struggle with the pressing questions of
identity and solidarity."
Bird Skin Coat is brimming with startling moments of beauty found
within a rusty and decayed landscape. With wild lyrical images of
ascent and descent - doves and dives, sparrows and slugs, attics
and cellars - this collection reflects Sorby's keen eye for
blending images. As they shuttle between the Upper Midwest and the
Pacific Northwest, these poems explore how the radical instability
of the world is also the source of its energy. The woman he hit is
still 42. She notes with wonder how her parka fits her perfectly
the way a dove's skin holds the whole bird together. 'Fate is not a
thing with feathers, it's old, bald, and blind, a pope who can't
decipher the man's name, David Pratt, as he scrawls it on scratch
paper' - excerpt from ""Bird Skin Coat"" [copyright]. The Board of
Regents of the University of Wisconsin System. All rights reserved.
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Reactor (Paperback)
Judith Vollmer, Ronald Wallace
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R391
Discovery Miles 3 910
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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"Reactor "gives voice to beloved and ruined American landscapes
through extended meditations of an urban mystical wanderer.
Wallace’s poems cover the range of human experience: music,
religion, sex, art, childhood, adolescence, nuclear war, illness,
and death. But it’s in his wit and good humor, against
undercurrents of sorrow and grief that best characterize his
poetry: part Emily Dickinson, and part Harpo Marx; part Woody
Allen, and part Robert Frost.
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