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Amy Leigh McCorkle is a special author whose "Letters to Daniel" is an uncompromisingly brave, well-written and sometimes disquieting tome detailing - through letters to a favorite actor - her very personal struggles with bi-polar disorder. This explosive volume is thought-provoking, always engaging and ultimately optimistic and humbling. A page-turning, extraordinary work from an author on the verge." - Joel Eisenberg, author "The Chronicles of Ara" "Letters to Daniel provides an engaging point of view on a personal story that is at once distinctive and familiar, relatable enough to make a valuable contribution to larger conversations about mental health and what a person needs to survive."-L. Andrew Cooper, Ph.D., novelist, film critic
Autumn Reighn is running from her past and the only thing she has with her is her pen, and her brother. With a dark secret revealed from her past at her mother's death bed she must decide whether to continue to live in the past, seek revenge in the future, or to welcome the gentleness of a new chance, at a new life.
Kiara Jackson is a survivor with one passion in life. Kentucky Wildcat basketball. She is a card carrying member of the Big Blue Nation. She never expects to find love with a wannabe sports journalist, or for her life to intersect with the brightest star in the Big Blue Nation sky. But when she does her life is altered forever.
Zelda is a world renown classical violinist who has performed for sold out theaters, heads of state, and even for her father's dinner parties. She also just happens to be his number one mob enforcer.Special Agent Dr. Lucas Hart is the profiler sent in undercover to take her and her family down. But what he finds is a tangled conspiracy linking the mob to the government, and the government to the unexplained, using Zelda Gregoria as their guinea pig.The clock is running and he must make a fateful decision, is Zelda friend or foe? Criminal or victim? He must choose quickly, because in matters of the heart nothing is as ever as black and white as it seems.
A NaNoWriMo Winning Novel! Parapsychologist Aaron Hewitt gets more than a new job and a new home after losing everything including his long term vixen girlfriend Veronica. Aaron has been looking for ghosts all over the ancient city of St. Augustine when all he had to do was look at home. Sarah SanCrist lived during the harshest time in our nation. She was a Civil War nurse stationed at Ft. Marion now known as the Castillo de San Marcos. What begins as a study of the spirit in his home leads Aaron on a journey to many local haunts and more than a friendship with Sarah. Can true love overcome the grave? Or will lust and jealousy tear it apart.
Logan Mitchell is a half-breed human-alien bounty hunter and he's the best at what he does. But when the file of a fugitive with ties to his missing father comes across his desk he must decide, help the enemy capture her, or find her himself. With so many questions surrounding her, Carrie-Anne 'Alabama' Newsome must find a way to survive. On the run and fearing for her life she finds an easy ally in Logan Mitchell. General Runyon is the enemy. A Lonegal alien general stationed on a slave ship. Having brutalized and tortured many humans, half-breeds, and Lonegals alike he had Alabama in his sights for murdering his family and nothing will stop him in his quest to capture her and kill her. As they run from the law, Logan is forced to ask himself, who is Alabama Newsome? And is she really a cold blooded murderer, or just an innocent half-breed driven to extremes?
In 1882, Dewitt "De" Martin Vance (1857-1932), the son of William Martin and Hepsa Jane Vance, married Florella Augusta Crews (1862- 1959). They had 12 children. Descendants lived chiefly in the South, but eventually scattered westward.
An argument for reimagining skill in a way that can extend economic opportunity to workers at the bottom of the labor market. The United States has a jobs problem—not enough well-paying jobs to go around and not enough clear pathways leading to them. Skill development is critical for addressing this employment crisis, but there are many unresolved questions about who has skill, how it is attained, and whose responsibility it is to build skills over time. In this book, Nichola Lowe tells the stories of pioneering workforce intermediaries—nonprofits, unions, community colleges—that harness this ambiguity around skill to extend economic opportunity to workers at the bottom of the labor ma...