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Being a keeper of the home is one of the very important things God has called women to do, as we are instructed in Titus chapter two. In other words, much of our time should be focused on looking well to the ways of our household. In this eight-week study, you will learn practical steps from God's Word on how to be a keeper of the home, and the eternal impact it will have if you are willing to be a vessel through which God works! Everything you do as a wife and mother has a direct impact on your home and family. Expect the blessings of God to be poured out, as you study the scriptures, applying them to your life in these areas: - Putting God First - Loving Your Husband - Loving Your Children...
This is a biography of John Wesley Gilbert, a man famous as 'the first black archaeologist.' The text uses previously unstudied sources to reveal the triumphs and challenges of an overlooked pioneer in American archaeology.
After Bill Wilson's supreme achievement in founding Alcoholics Anonymous, why would he have suffered a serious depression that lasted more than a decade? This book attempts to throw light on the question, one that has never been answered and rarely asked. In doing so, it involves the reader in many other themes of vital relevance to everyone-not to those in recovery alone. This in-depth psychological study of the AA founder is generally based on the facts of Wilson's life, but not restricted to the literal truth: the prerogative of the novel. Some biographical events in Wilson's history have been passed over in favor of an intensive, original recreation of its key moments, from childhood to ...
Harry Hartshorne Tate was born 6 June 1883 in Canso, Nova Scotia. His parents were John Angus Tate (1857-1889) and Harriet Ann Hartshorn (1856-1941). He married Gertrude Rosina Smith (1879-1967), daughter of John S. Smith and Sarah Jane Anderton, 7 September 1918 in Winnipeg, Manitoba. They had one daughter, Agatha, who married Edward John Wilford and had four children. Ancestors, descendants and relatives lived mainly in Nova Scotia, Ontario, Manitoba, Alberta and British Columbia.
"Nancy Pickard pushes at the presumed limits of [crime fiction]" said the Los Angeles Times Book Review, praising the award-winning creator of the Jenny Cain mysteries. Now, Pickard blurs the line between fiction and reality in a novel of gripping intensity, and premieres a superb new heroine: true-crime author Marie Lightfoot. For her next surefire bestseller, Marie is covering the trial of a Florida killer -- a case that penetrates her own life, layer by disturbing layer. Whether real like Ted Bundy, or imagined like Hannibal Lecter, few killers of our time are in the same league as Raymond Raintree. And as he stands flanked by lawyers in a Florida courtroom, waiting to be convicted for th...
When the author's wife died it was a shattering loss for him and for the multitude of readers who loved her as the heroine in his enchanting books about their life in a cottage near Land's End. This is his moving love story in which he recalls the joys of their marriage.
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A fiction writer has hit the jackpot in the life of a convicted killer that she is sure will make a best selling novel.