You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
The last time she saw her two husbands alive, they were standing naked before the Altar of the Goddess. Now someone wants her dead, too. Kestrel Firehawk, a polyamorous witch, has lost everything--her lovers, her home, her freedom. Framed for their murders, she has one chance to escape certain death. Only one. Almost as dangerous as the cold-blooded killer is Dylan MacCool, the overworked detective on Kestrel's trail. The night he loses her scent, tragedy strikes and everything he believes in changes. Desperate to find her, he unwittingly tips off the witch-hunter who wants to wipe out her existence and all of her bloodline. But can the burned-out detective reach her first? If you like reincarnation stories realistic witches, and nail-biting suspense, you'll be on the edge of your seat for Lorna Tedder's twisting, multi-layered plot.
The Red Words in the Blue Mind is a poetry book with recordings of either live events of my life or someone that I might have known. In a world of politics, romance, war, social events, religion or just the successes or failures of one’s life the read word is looking to relate and reach different individuals on different levels. These words are meant to meet the poet’s poet to their door come into their lives and inspire and motivate. The motivation is to blow your mind in the realm of poetry, Words have no color but if they did then they should be red like the words spoke in the bible by Jesus.
In 1888, black men were recruited from the southern states to come to Roslyn, Washington, to work in the mines. What they had not known until their arrival was that they were there to break the strike against the coal company. Upon their arrival on the Northern Pacific Coal Company train, they were met with much violence. When the strike was finally settled, everyone-black and white-went to work. After the mines closed, the blacks migrated across the Pacific Northwest. Arcadia's African Americans in Spokane is about those black families who arrived in Spokane, Washington, in 1899. This collection of historic images reveals the story of their survival, culture, churches, and significance in the Spokane community throughout the decades that followed; this is the story of the journey that began once their final destination was reached, in Spokane.
Cleveland's Gospel Music documents the history of black gospel music from the 1920s through the 1980s. The gospel quartet groups, radio announcers, solo artists, and promoters established Cleveland as the gospel singers' metropolitan hub. An integral part of Cleveland's history and its rich African-American community, gospel singers didn't sing for money or fame, but sang to the glory of God, often beyond the point of exhaustion. This work is a celebration of the past praises of those who sang tirelessly for some 60 years.
Each issue includes a classified section on the organization of the Dept.