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Julia's plan was simple. She'd make Aden notice her by trying to make him jealous, hoping he'd realize that they were destined to be. They'd already established a bond between them, but it never went beyond friendship, and Julia feared it would never move beyond that.Aden had no idea how to react to Julia showing up at one of his normal haunts. They were two different people who lived two different lives, and she was not the kind of girl who fit in with the uncultivated characters he often found himself with. But she was stubborn and determined, and nothing he could say would change her mind. She knew what she wanted, and she was going after it with a vengeance.It wasn't that Aden didn't care for Julia, he did, but he feared her like he feared nothing else. She represented the very thing that he'd been steering clear of, and he was just as determined to keep his life unattached and uncomplicated, as Julia was to have him.
Scientology is arguably the most persistently controversial of all contemporary New Religious Movements. James R. Lewis has assembled an unusually comprehensive anthology, incorporating a wide range of different approaches. In this book, a group of well-known scholars of New Religious Movements offers an extensive and evenhanded overview and analysis of all of these aspects of Scientology, including the controversies to which it continues to give rise.
Flexible men! Photographer David Aden Sprigle, has conducted a 10 year photographic essay of naked young men in the classic yoga pose Ananda Balasana, also known as "The Blissful Baby." Each man, in this happy state, reveals an expression that is uniquely his own. Vulnerable, intimate, beautiful and very sexy, each photograph conveys the many moods of this private position: joy, power, humor, fear and openness.
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The India trade in Oriental spices, pharmaceutical, dyeing and other materials was the backbone of medieval economy, especially in the Islamic world. A unique source of documentation is now available in 11th-12th century Geniza letters, written in Judeo-Arabic (Middle Arabic in Hebrew characters), by participants in this activity. The documents are presented in translation with an introduction and notes. They deal with economic history and material, social, and spiritual civilization. Besides illuminating the activities of the Jewish traders of the Indian Ocean and their families in the territories from the Far East to southern Arabia and Egypt, the letters contain valuable information on Jewish and Islamic culture, relations between Jews and Arabs, Mediterranean culture, and Judeo-Arabic.
McCane offers here a dazzling examination of funerary practices in early Roman Palestine.