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Book 3 of the Turner Series. Rich Kimball was once a good guy. He was a youth Pastor, played drums in a Christian band, a member of the Jesus Freaks Christian Motorcycle Ministry and often helped hurting people in the streets of Texas. Now released from his jail cell he wandered the streets in a drug induced fog to fight back the horrible memories of turning his back on the church and his abuse to his sweet wife. She divorced him and he abandoned all his friends. Could he ever go home again? Could he be a man of God after all he'd done? He didn't expect his friends to accept him back so easily. He also didn't expect to be living under the same roof as his ex-wife and her new, giant Irish husband. This relationship challenging story will make you wonder how far you would go with forgiveness?
An experienced financial advisor integrates money, psychology, and spirituality to offer a gratitude- and awareness-based approach for maximizing your net worth—and your self-worth. Understanding money is crucial in today’s financially driven world. However, attaining wealth has more to do with internal motivations and experiences than with external circumstances. The Abundance Loop reveals what blocks you from achieving the prosperity that is your natural birthright. By breaking free from a fear-based mind-set, you will learn to cultivate gratitude and awareness—and take conscious action to create the life you want. Juliana Park, a Certified Financial Planner and financial advisor for...
A History of Fort Worth in Black & White fills a long-empty niche on the Fort Worth bookshelf: a scholarly history of the city's black community that starts at the beginning with Ripley Arnold and the early settlers, and comes down to today with our current battles over education, housing, and representation in city affairs. The book's sidebars on some noted and some not-so-noted African Americans make it appealing as a school text as well as a book for the general reader. Using a wealth of primary sources, Richard Selcer dispels several enduring myths, for instance the mistaken belief that Camp Bowie trained only white soldiers, and the spurious claim that Fort Worth managed to avoid the racial violence that plagued other American cities in the twentieth century. Selcer arrives at some surprisingly frank conclusions that will challenge current politically correct notions.
Bodmin Moor is an upland landscape, heavily protected, farmed extensively and with an increasingly light touch, and enjoyed by many as a retreat from busier modern worlds. But it is also a place of industry and the home of busy agricultural communities. Well-preserved remains of streamworking, mining, quarrying, clay working, turf cutting and more intensive farming were subjected to archaeological survey and historical research as part of the wider-ranging survey partly covered in the first volume (on prehistoric and medieval landscapes). Supplementing the survey text are aerial photographs and detailed line drawings, mainly plans and elevations, but also reconstructions of sites and schematic representations of processes as well as large-scale maps of key areas
The History of England from the Norman Conquest to the Death of John is a historical collection of experiences of the time period from 1066 to 1216. Readers will go through the journey of Development in England which explores the life of Norman Conquest, the dynasty of various English monarchs, the Angevin Empire, and the Magna Carta. Anyone interested in reading an objective description of the time period will find this interesting. The evolution of British law and the constitution is discussed. Your interest in Stephen and Empress Maude's civil war will grow as you read the novel.