|
Showing 1 - 6 of
6 matches in All Departments
Bowler's Name? is a tale of a life in cricket's margins. Tom Hicks
is no household name, but he often rubbed shoulders with cricketing
royalty, going from the village green to walking out as captain at
Lord's. As an ambitious youngster, Hicks dreamed of reaching the
top. But trying to make it big and balance the demands of
university, family, a full-time job and a penchant for post-match
fun was no easy feat. Settling for an unglamorous life as a minor
county player, cricket took him to all corners of the country, and
then across the globe, getting an insight into the nether regions
of a cricketing world that was rapidly vanishing. Through the eyes
of a cricket nut, Bowler's Name? takes us on a journey of success,
failure, hilarity and often sheer madness. If you've ever wondered
what it's like to face 90mph bowling, to have lunch with Mike
Gatting or to infiltrate an England post-match party, Hicks is your
man. Bowler's Name? is for fans of cricket idiosyncrasies, lovers
of the underdog and anyone who has tried and failed.
|
Ground Zero (Paperback)
Ronald Charles Cook; As told to Dee Kimbrell, Tom Hicks
|
R375
Discovery Miles 3 750
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
Maybe you're a believer, but you don't feel like you could ever
know God personally. Maybe you've allowed man's acceptance or
approval to obscure how God feels about you. Maybe you used to
believe, but you were never too sure Who or What it was you
believed in. Maybe you've never been able to trust in something you
can't see or feel or touch. What would happen if you could start
all over again with God? Ground Zero's unique MindFast will help
you discover, without interference from anyone else, who God is,
who you are, and who you and God are together. You will have the
opportunity to reflect, to write your thoughts, and to explore
ideas you may not have thought about before: God personally
designed and created you. You are a God-thought; God cannot love
you any more or less than He does right now; God is everywhere and
in everything; God is waiting to share His thoughts with you, His
most personal creation. Imagine what you could create with God as
your partner. Ground Zero is designed to help you get to the place
where you can know God, personally and intimately. Author Ron Cook
writes. Everyone wants to be loved by God and to love God. afraid
to start. Religion can sometimes seem so complicated and
overwhelming. Religious people can seem remote and unaware. But we
don't want to talk about religion - that is the last thing on our
minds. We simply want to present a clear, simple message of who God
is and what He means to us - a message that anyone and everyone can
understand.
As sixty-eight year old Peter Abeles confronts his ambivalence over
his mother's recent death, he laces together his childhood memories
of the prewar Austrian aristocracy his Jewish family belonged to,
the rising tide of hate that engulfed them and their decision to
flee, and the story of his life in America. In trying to come to
terms with his personal history and family, Abeles looks beyond the
immediate horrors of the Holocaust and the Diaspora to some of the
more subtle effects on the reconstructed lives that followed. He
gives a hard, honest account of his upbringing by a cold, demanding
father and an embittered, materialistic mother-but he frames that
account in forgiveness and redemption, imagining his dead mother as
she receives a treasure box of wisdom. that has much to say about
exile and immigration, about class, money, love and forgiveness. In
Otto, the Boy at the Window, they offer readers some hard-earned
shreds of Kabbalah. Praise for Otto, the Boy at the Window: This
unforgettable book opens with the death of Abeles' mother in Long
Island when he was 68, which prompts him to reflect on his Viennese
childhood in the 1930s. His mother was strict and possessive, and
his father was unyielding. The father owned a thriving wholesale
shoe business, and the family had servants and tutors. Abeles
relives the Anschluss of March 12, 1938, when the Nazis took
control of Austria, and he remembers mobs of Nazi sympathizers
destroying synagogues and Jewish-owned properties during
Kristallnacht in November of that year. In November 1939, the
family sailed from Rotterdam to New York with only USD10 left from
their fortune. They went to Chicago, where two sponsoring families
met them.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|