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Webster's dictionary defines Ephemera as, "something with no lasting significance." The poems in this collection have been swept together from decades of open mics and feature performances, and pressed between these pages like fallen leaves like something fleeting, now preserved. This book is the first full-length poetry collection from poet, artist and spoken-word performer Darrell Parry. Complete with nifty drawings and sage bits of wisdom scattered throughout, Twists offers a glimpse into a world of social anxiety and awkwardness with the experience and wisdom to accept an epic unknowing of everything. This unique, expanded second edition includes a poem written after the publication of the original edition never read before in public.
George Albert Smith (1817-1875), a Mormon convert, was born in Potsdam, New York and died in Salt Lake City, Utah. Includes some ancestry (chiefly in New England and New York), and many descendants in Utah, Idaho, Wyoming, Idaho, Nevada, California and elsewhere.
John Strong Jr. (ca. 1610-1699) was a son of John Stronge Sr. and Eleanor Dean of Chard, Somerset County, England. John Jr. married Margery Dean, a first cousin, and immigrated in 1630 to Hingham, Massachusetts. Margery died shortly, and John married Abigail Ford in 1635. He fathered 18 children, of whom 15 had families. His family moved in 1638 to Taunton, in 1646 to Windsor, Connecticut, and in 1659 to Northampton, Massachusetts. Descendants and relatives lived in New England, New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois, North Dakota, Virginia and elsewhere. Some descendants immigrated to Ontario and elsewhere in Canada. Includes ancestry in England to the early 1500s. Also includes history of the Strong Family Association of America, Inc. from its beginning in 1975 to the present, with its constitution and by-laws, as well as its national and regional officers, changes thereto, and brief reports of family reunions.