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As the coffee shop door slammed shut, Dez lost control of his reflexes and dropped his keys to the floor, a strange fear filling every drop of his blood. When his eyes met Catherine’s, the terror became entangled with obsession, and his skin tingled as if someone was caressing him. The inner instinct screamed to run, his heart trying to climb from his body in fear, yet looking into the deep pools of her eyes he was unable to move. Dez’s life as he knew it was over, an onslaught of horror about to befall him in a way he could never have imagined. Dez blended seamlessly into the existence of Catherine and her planetary companion, Julien, creating a sexually charged and dangerous trio they never imagined they would indulge in with a fragile human. While being hunted by another of their kind, the trail of his bloody rampage leading to their doorstep, Catherine and Julien struggle to protect their cherished possession while weaving a story for the mortals pursuing them. In the end all paths lead to a fiery battle, one Catherine hopes her human will survive.
It was the time of the Great Depression and the infamous Dust Bowl; young people were filled with a zest for life. Adults before their time many young men left their homes to follow their wanderlust riding the railroads; among these was Shirleys father. Just for the Hell of It is a conglomerate of family-histories and a little fiction.
Catherine Carter earned her spot as one of New York’s top financial advisors by following the rules and reaching her every goal. The same applies to Catherine’s personal life. Her next self-imposed deadline is looming, and all that’s left to do is to meet the perfect man. At her friend’s urging, skeptical Catherine meets with a psychic who tells her to look for the color blue, and that’s when life spirals from her control. Prospective client, quirky Imogene Harris, is reluctant to hire anyone to help with her inheritance, but when she sees what’s being offered, she has a change of heart. Catherine denies her attraction to Imogene. Imogene is falling for the woman behind the numbers. Not even a rocky start, secret past, or misinterpreted predictions can stop the women from being drawn to one another. Together they learn that perhaps blue isn’t the color of sadness after all…
In The Identities of Catherine de' Medici, Susan Broomhall provides an innovative analysis of the representational strategies that constructed Catherine de’ Medici and sought to explain her behaviour and motivations. Through her detailed exploration of the identities that the queen, her allies, supporters, and clients sought to project, and how contemporaries responded to them, Broomhall establishes a new vision of this important sixteenth-century protagonist, a clearer understanding of the dialogic and dynamic nature of identity construction and reception, and its consequences for Catherine de' Medici’s legacy, memory, and historiography.
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From ther Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, the William and Mary College Quarterly, and Tyler's Quarterly.
Vols. for 1837-52 include the Companion to the Almanac, or Year-book of general information.