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The small college town of Forest Lakes, a group of beautiful young girls who grew up in the community together, add an obsessed killer who feels taunted and aroused by their innocent flirting ways and you have the perfect ingredients for filling a community with fear, uncertainty, and distrust. Who could be stalking these girls? The most obvious rise to the top, but some things are not so obvious.
Please Help Me Die Well reveals the seven crucial promises you must make to your end-of-life patient if they are to make their journey through their fi nal days in peace and comfort. Whether you are a nurse, a caregiver in a nursing facility, or are caring for your own loved one at home, this book is a powerful resource for you. Full of grace, compassion, and deep insight, this guide will change the way you look at the dying process forever. “JoAnne shows us how to take the inevitable pain, suffering, and loss at the end of life, and infuse it with meaning and deeply attuned care for our loved ones. Please Help Me Die Well is an in-depth and trustworthy guide for navigating the myriads of personal, existential, medical, and ethical issues that confront everyone who is charged to care for someone at the ‘great transition’ which awaits us all at the end. If you’ve ever wondered how to practically love and support a dying loved one as they begin to cross over the great threshold of life, this is the book to read.” – Gary D. Salyer, Ph.D., author of Safe to Love Again.
Janet Dailey, the New York Times bestselling author who has touched the hearts of millions, shines in this unforgettable novel. Sweeping from the wealth and glamour of a modern Texas city to the rugged majesty of Mexico’s High Sierras, this is a magnificent tale of desire and destiny from one of the world’s most beloved storytellers. All her life, beautiful Sheila got what she wanted. Now she yearned for the raw passion of a man beyond her reach, a violent, mysterious outlaw whose followers adored him. A lion of a man who held her for ransom—a man who would trade her for a fortune in gold. But Sheila wanted only him—with all the reckless longing of her body and soul.
When Angus Murchie, son of a Scotch father and an Indian mother, came to the trading post run by his father, the old Scot told him that treacherous Jacques Larue, a rival trader and a whisky smuggler, had tried to murder him and would probably try again. Colin Murchie made his son promise that even if Larue succeeded, Angus would not kill him personally, but would help the law seek vengeance. Angus reluctantly agreed. The next day the old man was shot down in cold blood by Larue, and Angus, true to his word, had to hold his fire. Corporal Downey of the Mounted took charge, and Larue was tried in Edmonton but acquitted. Outside the courtroom, Angus told the sneering Larue that no amount of lying could save him from paying the penalty for his crime. Larue returned to the North, but terror clung to him.
How Angus creates a psychological world of horror to destroy the murderer is a tale of revenge to remember.
Winner of the Air Force Historical Foundation's Space History Book Award Selected for the US Space Com 2024 Commander's Reading List Selected for USSF's National Security Space Institute 2024 Space Professional Reading List Fight for the Final Frontier uses the concepts associated with irregular warfare to offer new insights for understanding the nature of strategic competition in space. Today’s most pressing security concerns are best considered using an irregular warfare lens because incidents and points of potential conflict fall outside the definition of armed conflict. While some universal rules of combat apply across all domains, conflict in space up-ends and flips those assumed stan...
Fake dating wasn’t part of Cagney Adler’s plan to earn her PhD before she’s thirty. But neither was a rash of blind dates. When fictional characters, Alex Zurich and Blake Teesdale, leap out of the romance novel she’s reading into her world, they’re determined Mr. Rock Nerd would not only make a great fake boyfriend, but her happily ever after. The only way get them to leave her alone is to accept the offer. But she draws the line at happily ever after. Brad Townsend, geology doctoral student, knows Cagney Adler is the perfect fake girlfriend to help him avoid blind dates. Sure, they have nothing in common, but that’s what makes her ideal. There’s no way they’ll fall in love. As friends and events throw them together in unexpected ways, they reconsider their compatibility.
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He's only back for a visit… Sadie Brandt loves Halloween almost as much as she adores Beau's Folly, the tiny Kansas town her family has called home for three generations. Almost as much as she secretly adored Tripp Wallace, her older brother's best friend. When Tripp suddenly shows up just in time for the annual fall festival, long-buried hopes arise to haunt Sadie. When he finally seems to notice she's all grown up, Sadie isn't sure if the brief fling he offers is a trick or treat. …but can he let go—again—of the small-town girl he never forgot? Tripp Wallace has spent the last few years traveling around the world as a digital nomad, managing his tech support business from exotic lo...
Idol is about a brilliant schizophrenic serial killer, Steven Wently, whose sensational murders of famous false idols receive universal publicity and public support. Wently imagines that the cumulative weight of revelations of crimes committed by false idols after their deaths will destroy humankinds faith in its heroes. He further reasons that such exposures will cast shadows over legitimacy of promises of mans immortality made by religious heroes like Christ, Hindu deities, and Muhammad. The result of civilizations loss of faith in its heroes and immortality will cause the collapse of civilization, Wently believes. He uses his wifes enormous wealth and her familys vast network of contacts ...
The romance novel has the strange distinction of being the most popular but least respected of literary genres. While it remains consistently dominant in bookstores and on best-seller lists, it is also widely dismissed by the critical community. Scholars have alleged that romance novels help create subservient readers, who are largely women, by confining heroines to stories that ignore issues other than love and marriage. Pamela Regis argues that such critical studies fail to take into consideration the personal choice of readers, offer any true definition of the romance novel, or discuss the nature and scope of the genre. Presenting the counterclaim that the romance novel does not enslave w...