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Caitlin O'Rourke is not your typical Irish-American lass. A former MVP on the Italian Pro Volleyball circuit, she is a has-been in her late 20s, prematurely retired due to a blown-out knee. Although retirement does not sit well with Kate, she soon finds herself so entangled in other peoples difficulties that she doesn't have time to dwell on her own problems. Kehough's Irish Pub in Nashville, Tennessee, with its upstairs apartment, is home to Kate, and the pub itself not only provides employment for her brother Seamus and his wife Mary Grace, but serves as an office for Kate's fledgling confidential inquiries business. In Icon Feel Your Power, the second Caitlin O'Rourke Mystery, Kate goes undercover to investigate a mentally unstable woman's claims that art objects are disappearing and reappearing in her mother-in-law's home. But when Kate's client is accused of murder and the arson used to cover it up, Kate must find a way to prove the woman's innocence by unmasking the real killer.
This is a story about how Mother Nature flowers the fields of the Earth with flowers of all kinds. She does this with the help of bees, beavers and earthworms.
Miranda Stevens a teenager devoted to horses her all her days in Montana, discovers there is much more to life than just her horse, but nothing more important than having her black stallion, Stalight safe at home.
V.1. U.S. Master, Alabama-Minnesota. -- v.2. U.S. Master, Missouri-Wyoming. -- v.3. U.S. Operations. -- v.4. International.
Focused on an early twentieth-century home in Texarkana, Arkansas, Doris Douglas Davis’s The Ahern Home of Texarkana offers not only a discussion of the architecture of a Classical Revival dwelling but also provides a closely observed account of the material culture and social structures of a particular time and place in the American South. Built in 1905–1906 by Patrick Ahern, who immigrated to the United States from Dungarvan, Ireland, in 1881, the house at 403 Laurel Street was home to Ahern, his wife Mary, their six children, and a variety of descendants for over a century before its acquisition by the Texarkana Museums System in 2011. Today, the house, listed on the National Register...
This local history has a broad application to a number of historical types: community history, regional history, Progressive Era history, social history and women's studies. Texarkana women have been virtually left out of histories written about the East Texas area, yet their contributions are a major component in the success of the city, the county and the region. This book focuses on women's status within the community, looking first at prescriptions they learned as they came of age. It examines education, employment, increasing leisure time, organizational skills and increasing access to quality health care.