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Laura Nyro was a beloved and pioneering singer-songwriter of the 1960s and 1970s, whose songs were covered with great success by the Fifth Dimension; Blood, Sweat & Tears; Three Dog Night; and Barbra Streisand. This first biography from Michele Kort, Soul Picnic, uncovers previously never revealed details, including a love affair with Jackson Browne, and her relationship with painter Maria Desiderio. Unappreciated in her time, Nyro's legacy is currently experiencing a revival. With her groundbreakingly honest and passionate lyrics, her unusual and innovative rhythms and melody, Nyro's influence is still felt by singers and songwriters today.
Waking up next to a dead body is terrifying enough. Waking up with no memory, a bleeding cut on her forearm, and a dead body? Can it get any worse? Going by what she assumes is a fake name, Clara attempts to fill in her past following the only clues she can... all while balancing mind reading and telekinetic powers she can't remember having. But as the questions keep building about her past, so do the voices in the back of her head that belong to the mysterious Blue Star.It isn't hard for Nate to hide his shadow powers when his parents aren't around. Even easier is that his only friend, Glitch, has his own secret power to deal with, so when a new girl with purple hair shows up in the senior class, it isn't hard to keep that secret up. As his relationship with her grows, with the help of his best friend and wing man, Clara and Nate find out they have a lot more in common than just their taste in music.With the looming threat of death, an evil power in the Blue Star, and more past than Clara wants to know, the three friends try to balance their relationships and keep hope as their history is revealed.
Forever just got longer . . . Sometimes I’d dream of disappearing—shedding all my worries and living the free life. But it’s not all I thought it would be. Being dead is eerily similar to being alive. Except it’s incredibly lonely when your friends don’t know your secret. But that’s not the worst thing I’ve been hiding from them. There’s dark magic looming over Baylor, and lives are at stake. Their lives. It might be too late for me, but I’m doing everything I can to keep them safe. If only I weren’t the monster. "Deliciously dark, comedic, and soulful, Kinsley's supernatural journey is certain to transport readers to a realm of dreams—and nightmares." -Author & Editor, M. Anderson "Laura C Reden has continued her Phantom series with another brilliant heart stopping dark fantasy adventure" -NetGalley Educator
Dreaming is the culmination of a lot of things. It can be magical and alluring. It can be twisted and downright frightening. And sometimes, if you get to the other side of sleep, it can be enlightening. But the truth is often the most terrifying thing of all. Far worse than the monsters that haunt your slumber. And that’s why I decided I was going to fight for a life among the departed. The only one standing in my way . . . was me.
From the moment I drowned in the lake of secrets, I knew things would never be the same. All I’d wanted for my eighteenth birthday was a kiss and a summer to be remembered before heading off for college. What I got was so much more. I wasn’t just trapped in a cabin at the lake with a group of my rowdiest friends; I was trapped in another dimension. A dark one, where dreams manifest before your very eyes, fears are conjured in the cool mist, and the dead are living by our sides. One thing I was certain of, the only way out . . . is in.
The thing about lucid dreaming is, you’re playing a game against yourself. Against the inner workings of your own twisted mind. My friends always said I was my own worst enemy. It’s true. I am. I see it all around me. It’s chilling to be both the predator and the prey. But when you hunt yourself, who do you root for? I want nothing more than to stay in Baylor, but to win this fight, I’d have to let myself die. ★★★★★ "A dark psychological fantasy dive into the mind’s ability to create and control" --PT
★★★★★ "The stakes have always been sky-high, but Reden's grand finale proves more powerful than all before it. Romance of this caliber is rare, indeed, and readers will be tethered till the end!" -Maxwell A. Everything has a cost. Love doesn’t come cheap. The clock is ticking as Beck comes face to face with her destiny . . . once again. But all good things must come to an end, and a Tethered Soul is no exception. This remarkable tale of a love that refuses to quit will leave you breathless. Dive into the final installment of The Tethered Soul Series today.
The Little Soul and the Sun is a simple and powerful story that brings children a profound truth: there is no absolute good or bad, only love. The Little Soul and the Sun gracefully explains spiritual concepts to children and shares a story that helps readers remember the angel within us all. Your child will discover a God that she or he can love, because God is love, as are all the Little Souls who are a part of God. And perhaps parents, too, will rediscover who they really are. A little soul discusses at length with God how he can learn to experience who he really is and which “part of special” he wants to be. The little soul decides he wants to be forgiving; thus another little soul soon obliges by offering to do something “not-so-nice”, so that the first little soul can experience forgiveness. Such messages as “everybody is special, each in their own way” and “it is special to be kind; it is special to be creative” are important for all children to hear, regardless of their faith.
★★★★★ "As an avid reader it has become such an unusual experience to read a book with an unfamiliar story line." -Jamie W. Everly Beck survived her death. That much Easton is certain of. What he doesn’t know is how to find her . . . or how he’ll be received. Lost in this world without his soulmate, Easton travels back to the town of Clover, searching for clues. Nothing could match the pain of having a second shot at love and watching it slip away. Follow along as fate bends and twists, but never breaks.
It has been clear from the beginning that William Blake was both a political radical and a radical psychologist. In William Blake on Self and Soul, Laura Quinney uses her sensitive, surprising readings of the poet to reveal his innovative ideas about the experience of subjectivity.Blake’s central topic, Quinney shows us, is a contemporary one: the discomfiture of being a self or subject. The greater the insecurity of the “I” Blake believed, the more it tries to swell into a false but mighty “Selfhood.” And the larger the Selfhood bulks, the lonelier it grows. But why is that so? How is the illusion of “Selfhood” created? What damage does it do? How can one break its hold? These...