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Boris Kay Williams Junior has run away from civilization into the wilderness of Alaska, driven there by his fear of the insanity that swims in his family's gene pool. He has survived for almost two months now and he is proud of his accomplishment, but the world he has created for himself(and one that he has carefully maintained) is ripping apart. He is losing control. One crisis after another forces him toward the truth from which he is trying to escape.
"A hilarious read for dog lovers of all ages"-Canine Times Lucky Banuska is the self-appointed historian of the Great Ribbon War. The Journals are the oral history of that war. Lucky said he gained the position of historian when he befriended Crazy Barry Harful. Crazy Barry's memory is slipping because of numerous concussions he received during his car-chasing, tire-biting escapades in his pursuit of immortality. (A prophecy says that one day a dog will bite a tire and stop a car. On that day all traffic will cease, and the dog that stopped the car will become immortal). Doctor Olga Raysavek, a Golden Retriever, the psychologist for the Midlands Young Dog Obedience/Guide and Guard School say...
The Antichrist has arrived but nobody will believe Pastor Tom Horn or Father Vince Nalone. Jehosea Cahmael has saved the world. He has done nothing but good deeds. How could such a man be evil? The two friends have given up everything to warn the world, but their warnings fall on deaf ears. After Tom loses his family in an explosion both he and Vince are forced into hiding. They ultimately become fugitives from the law-wanted for murder in the deaths of a sheriff and five of his deputies. The sanctuary they find is a death trap. Their attempt to help becomes their undoing. Only God can save them.
School's Out examines the alternatives to failing public schools. It offers parents the means to give their children a real education that prepares them for life as an adult. It includes examples and anecdotes from the writer's thirty-six years of teaching and counseling children in the public schools of San Francisco. School's Out guides parents in planning and carrying out a sound educational program with references to print and electronic sources, teaching techniques, and psychological principles in mentoring their children.
Natasha Crane has spent much of her early life grieving the death of her grandmother, her mother, and the loss of her father's love. It seemed to her that all was lost, and then, for her twelfth birthday, she was given a diary. Through it she discovered a whole New World and a new way to deal with pain, sorrow, and loss. She learned the importance of collecting memories and using the act of collecting as a healing salve for the wounds that are inflicted by everyday living. She learned to cope with her problems, to 'get on' with her life, and to trust in love anew.