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Six disturbing tales of metaphysical angst and insatiable, ravenous supernature. Read them alone, in an empty house, in a darkened space, in the depths of night. With a sense of dread. You'll never dare wonder what may be breathing down your neck ever again...
Six more rabid tales of dark-edged mystery and supernature to haunt your waking dreams, ravage your nerves and provoke perverse, morbid, inspired reflection. Cower in the face of deranged demons, death and afterlife, creatures born of sacrifice and chaos, dismemberment, damnation and strangled innocence. And beware that movement just beyond the corner of your vision you thought was something insignificant, inconsequential. It might just be the last thing you ever see...
A young girl experiences tragedy at the hands of an unknown fiend and spirals into an abyss of tragedy that follows her through this life and into the next. Share the journey fate imposes on Lucy as she encounters death, immortality and seekers after truth, power, dishonesty and redemption. And experience the flood of emotions spilling out from every page.
This book, Fly It Home, is a biographical compilation about the year that I spent in the war in Viet Nam. It is drawn from many letters that I wrote home to my family. My mother always saved the letters that her sons wrote home from their duty stations and when I was reading some of them a while back, I decided to put them in monthly order and write my thoughts about the letters. The letters that I wrote home usually were specific about what was happening at my duty station. Some were about visiting with my brother, some were about working in the hanger and some were about the weather or the South China Sea. Some were even about the food that we had or about the sorties that our helicopters ...
From Buddy Holly and the Crickets to the Flatlanders, Terry Allen, and Natalie Maines, Lubbock, Texas, has produced songwriters, musicians, and artists as prolifically as cotton, conservatives, and windstorms. While nobody questions where the conservatives come from in a city that a recent nonpartisan study ranked as America's second most conservative, many people wonder why Lubbock is such fertile ground for creative spirits who want to expand the boundaries of thought in music and art. Is it just that "there's nothing else to do," as some have suggested, or is there something in the character of Lubbock that encourages creativity as much as conservatism? In this book, Christopher Oglesby i...
Johann Mathias Hütwohl (1711-1776) was born in Steeg, Germany, the son of John Georg Hütwohl. In 1744 he married Anna Christina and in 1748 they, along with two daughters, sailed for America. Anna Christina and the daughters died at sea. Johann arrived in Philadelphia and settled in the Conestoga valley. In 1765 he married a Miss Haas, and they became the parents of six children. Descendants and relatives lived in Pennsylvania, Virginia, Florida, and elsewhere in the United States, and throughout Canada.
Chiefly a record of some of the ancestors and descendants of Francis Hardgrave. Francis was born 5 Mar 1745 in Augusta County, Virginia, to James Hardgrave III and Elizabeth Cawley. He married Sarah Skelton in 1769. She was born 7 Feb 1751 in Augusta County, Virginia. She died 30 Nov 1832 in Davidson County, Tennessee. He died 7 Aug 1828 in Davidson County, Tennessee. They were the parents of nine children. Descendants lived in Alabama, Kansas, New York, and elsewhere.
Descendants of Thomas Burtchnell who died in Cecil County, Maryland, in 1709.
George Balthazar (Baltzer) Gans (b.1684) was a son of Johann Georg Ganss and Anna Catherine Hertzog. He married Johanna Agnes (?), and immigrated to Holland and then in 1718/1719 to Philadelphia. They settled in Springfield Township near Germantown, Pennsylvania. Descendants and relatives lived in Pennsylvania, Maryland, Kentucky, Illinois and elsewhere. Includes some ancestry and genealogical data to the 1400s, chiefly in Umstadt, Germany.