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What do you do when the voice in your head is telling you to walk out of your job and follow your dreams? What would happen if you listened to the voice in your head? What if you walked out of your job, left your home and a few hours later found yourself jobless and homeless, sitting on a park bench, with a pad and a pen and a desperate hope that the book you are going to write in the park will eventually change your life? That's what Craig Stone, professional nobody did. This is the story he made up to keep his sanity while living alone in Gladstone Park, North London, as he came to terms with the consequences of making bold decisions. He sat under a tree, writing about what it was like to ...
"Forty-five minutes earlier we had been eating, laughing, andenjoying one another's company. And now, in a moment'stime, OUR LIVES WERE FOREVER CHANGED." WHAT BEGAN AS A DELIGHTFUL THREE-DAY FAMILY GATHERING ended intragedy when a car accident left three of Craig Stone's family members deadand one in a vegetative state. Adding to the pain of loss, corruption seemedto overshadow justice in the courtroom trial that followed. As a result, thefamily was thrust into months and even years of unimaginable grief, rage, and unforgiveness. In Forgiving the Unforgivable Stone shares candidly of the emotional turmoiland grief that he experienced in light of these tragic events and how theynearly destroyed his life...until he discovered true forgiveness. Covering themany stages of grief, he shows you why it is important to go through thegrieving process, and he explains what the Bible says about forgiveness andwhy you cannot uncover healing and a prosperous future without it. You may find yourself in a similar situation, with a life struck by deep woundsthat were inflicted by other people. You've hurt long enough. IT'S TIME TO END THE PAIN AND ANGER ANDEMBRACE FREEDOM THROUGH FORGIVENESS.
Years after the legend of the Lost Land, the descendents of Lord Trevelyan find themselves transported to the hidden realms of West Cornwall.
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This new edition of a Craig Childs classic includes his original journal entries and pen-and-ink drawings inspired by the redrock desert of Canyonlands National Park. Originally published over twenty-five years ago, Stone Desert brings the wonder and wildness of one of our nation's most geologically and culturally unique national parks to readers everywhere. With a new introduction by the author, this edition includes Craig Childs's original journal—written over a winter in Canyonlands National Park and complete with pen-and-ink sketches—from which Stone Desert originated. Join Childs as he hikes the high mesas, navigates the winding canyons, and witnesses the ancient rock art of Utah’s most inscrutable and remote slickrock desert.
Are you interested in learning about the everyday lives of people who lived through the American Revolution, Civil War, Westward Expansion, World War II, and the modern era? Using letters, diaries, wills, and other primary documentation shared by my grandmother and her grandmother, this is a collection of family stories that span from 1700 to 1998 with the surnames of: Stone, Hankins, Campbell, Ford, and Simpson. Their stories invite you to view historical events in a more personal manner than a textbook and gives the reader a sense of connection to the past.
This is a mystery novel that revolves around the murder of Harley Madison. Craig Madison invites the beautiful Yvette Verne, a film star, to his home in Long Island. Yvette Verne ends up engaged to his uncle, Harley Madison, the eccentric philanthropist. Harley Madison ends up dead, Fleming Stone is then invited to solve the mystery of his death. Will Fleming Stone unravel the mystery? Is Yvette Verne responsible for Harley's death?
Sweet Chariot is a pathbreaking analysis of slave families and household composition in the nineteenth-century South. Ann Malone presents a carefully drawn picture of the ways in which slaves were constituted into families and households within a community and shows how and why that organization changed through the years. Her book, based on massive research, is both a statistical study over time of 155 slave communities in twenty-six Louisiana parishes and a descriptive study of three plantations: Oakland, Petite Anse, and Tiger Island. Malone first provides a regional analysis of family, household, and community organization. Then, drawing on qualitative sources, she discusses patterns in s...
Flying For Something FLY NAVY is a story that jets through suspenseful currents of Navy life in raw form. Formerly titled Airman Mark for protagonist Airman Mark Kramer, this F-14 Fighter Squadron rookie gets exposed to everything an innocent young recruit never imagined existed in military service: greed, power, lust, murder, and betrayal of the Uniform Code of Military Justice by the Navy's highest ranking officials. Surrounded by a cadre of fighter pilots and enlisted contemporaries, Airman Mark becomes embroiled in a real-life battle to prove his patriotic beliefs are worth the ultimate fight. He follows the squadron through sea trials and deployment to exotic ports about the world, coming full circle in realizing what a sinister definition can encompass those two famous words: FLY NAVY!