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My command is this: Love each other as I have loved you. --Jesus Just imagine what our world would look like if we loved everyone just like Jesus! Did you know the Bible is filled with all sorts of people: from stinky fishermen to little children to people who looked the same and people who didn't? There were people who made good choices and bad ones, were happy or sad, and everything in between. Yet, Jesus was sent to love them all! Jesus tells us in the Bible to love others how He loves us. (And guess what? He loves everybody!) With colorful illustrations, fun prose, and surprises on every page, children will start seeing people through the beautiful lens of God, worthy of being loved, because... Jesus loves everybody!
Preorder the BRAND NEW psychological thriller from the NUMBER ONE bestselling author of The Nurse A terrible wife... Sarah Westfield is unhappily married to perfect husband Nick. Handsome, devoted and kind, he should be the ideal man for her, but Sarah knows their marriage is the biggest mistake she’s ever made...and she wants out. But then Nick offers her one last chance to make their marriage work – a baby. Sarah is horrified – a baby would tie herself to this man forever...wouldn’t it? Or could it be exactly what she needs? So Sarah agrees. A terrible mother? When the baby arrives, Sarah struggles with motherhood and her resentment towards Nick only grows. Sarah feels more trapped...
Nadine Charleston had a career, a brilliant son on college scholarship, and friends as close as siblings. Gerald Phillips was one of the best tax attorneys in the country more than halfway up the fast track. When mutual friends brought these no-nonsense people together, there was electricity, but it was a negative charge. However life continued to push these strong wills together, forcing them to face the wonderful and not so wonderful things in their lives. With the help of Grace, Doc, Katie, Gregory, and the unstoppable Mother Farris the lesson rang through. In this story, the hunger for love, like the hunger for the wonderful food in this book, will not be denied. Bonus: recipes for some of the dishes in Hunger in the back! Enjoy!
Handsome Ebenezer Tweezer has lived comfortably for nearly 512 years by feeding the magical beast in his mansion's attic whatever it wants, but when the beast demands a child, they are not prepared for Bethany.--
Very few women kill. When they do, it is often the tragic outcome of domestic abuse, drug addiction, or mental illness. It is rare for women to kill for pleasure, yet a few of that breed emerge in each generation. At the turn of the last century, with no adoption agencies to protect them, Annie Walters killed unwanted newborns.nbsp;Ninety years later, Aileennbsp;Wuornos sold herself on the highways of Florida, a well-known hunting ground for men looking for prostitutes, until she became the hunter. Rose West exploited lonely girls from nearby children's homes, and Myra Hindley took sickening advantage of the blind trust of Britain in the 1960s where children were safe to walk the streets alone. Beverley Allit and Marybeth Tinning thought that, as a nurse and a mother, the deaths of the children in their care would be seen as tragic accidents. And Karla Homolka exploited a different prejudice. She was prefect, pretty, and so caring as a veterinary nurse. No one ever imagined she could be a sexual predator and killer.
Legends of abandoned old graveyards and some not so abandoned abound-the crying dog in the cemetary well, the wandering ghost of Long Tom March, who carries a deck of cards and won't rest until he finds a winning poker hand. Next to a graveyard where an arm is buried, the old piano in the fogotten church plays. These and other tales along with some more recent real-life experiences will intrigue you, skeptic or not. Read the tales with an open mind. They are for pleasure, a bit of paranormal, a little seriousness, and hopefully a laugh or two. If you are a nonbeliever in the supernatural, you may change your skepticism is etched in stone. Then again the author learned that nothing is etched in stone forever. This humorous book also includes some unusual coffins, tombstones, and epitaphs as well as some early Texas burial traditions.
Approximately 1,350 essays were considered and 150 essays were chosen for this book which contains essays from two Utah children: Maria Elena Ramirez (St. Olaf School, Bountiful, Utah) and Ruth Margaret Spjeldvik (Wasatch Elementary School, Ogden, Utah). The index lists the authors of essays considered. Among them are the following Utah youth authors: Kirsti Campbell, Angela Dean, Jerry Hislop, Sheralee Honey, Katrina Jacobson, Elizabeth Jensen, Jeremy Neilson, Shae Lyn Saylor, and Krista Wood.