You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
Vols. 13-62 include abridged annual reports and proceedings of the annual meetings of the American Missionary Association, 1869-1908; v. 38-62 include abridged annual reports of the Congregational Home Missionary Society's Executive Committee, 1883/84-1907/08.
When the daughter of the renowned JGS Co., Alene J, and the son of a man who owns more than sixteen soccer teams, Bailey Caron go missing, no one in the world may find them. Two of the best, experienced, youth soccer players have disappeared without a trace. Their parents and fellow comrades have narrowed it down to only one suspect, the Kasanonians. What may have thought, who or what are they? They were beauti ful, mysterious people with amazing abilities. The Kasanonians were a race... incomparable, unthinkable, and so beauti ful that one couldn’t imagine it. They make looks like a human, but the Kasanonian beauty definitely exceeds that of a person. However there are two races of Kasano...
Kaya, Anna, and Reed hope their pumpkin, Herbert, will take home first prize at the Windy City Pumpkin Fest, but when Herbert suddenly disappears, the friends must catch the thief in time for the festival.
None
Rebecca Hall, a lovely young nurse from Louisiana, travels with her family to a thriving riverboat town on the Ohio River, before the turn of the century and eventually marries Charles Thain. Rebecca believes that she has found happiness with Charles, but things quickly deteriorate and their marriage ends in tragedy, putting into motion the nightmare that has haunted her since her early days in Louisiana, when a notorious voodoo witch, Grandma Phoebe, cursed her. Rebecca finds herself embroiled in circumstances beyond her knowledge of nursing when she becomes the victim of a series of attacks by a predator bent on killing her as he has other young women in the city. Her journey leads her through an intricacy of deceit before she can separate the truth from the façade.
Beer connects commercial, social, and political history in this sobering look at the culture of drinking in South Africa. Beginning where stories of colonial liquor control, Mager looks at the current commerce of beer, its valorizing of male sociability and sports, and the corporate culture of South African Breweries.