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About the Author Liana Margiva, from Russia, graduated from Russian Institute of Writers in Moscow. She has published five books of short stories and poems and translated Poor Folk by F. Dostoevsky, A. Kuprin, Henri Barbusse and Prosper Merimee.
Two days later Douglas called Lorena his best friend ever. His words touched Lorena deeply, she sat staring into the front yard through the glass door, thinking of Douglas. Little did she know then that she would never be able to shut him out of her soul, that he would always be beside her, in her dreams. The cage she was confined to, albeit temporarily, hardly brought Lorena any joy, but it couldn't prevent her from being carried away in her dream to the ocean beach next to Douglas. They were on the beach, side by side, Lorena's eyes fixated on Douglas's smiley face. Unable to speek, mesmerized by his presence, Lorena longed to touch his cheek, caress his face, but resisted the urge. After ...
“From a very early age, Amelia was an avid reader. In books she found what she lacked in her life—love. Having gobbled up a tremendous number of books, Amelia started to write stories herself. She was only thirteen when one of her stories was published in a local newspaper. The payment she received for her publication was minuscule, but it was enough to pay for a fancy dress, which Amelia wore with great pride. ” Excerpt From: Liana Margiva. “Love Letters From The Black Sea”.
"This night, when the sky will be veiled by darkness, which will swallow Earth, I'll come to you-not in person but in a dream when I'm free as a bird. I'll come to see you, to please my heart regardless of the fact that my heart doesn't matter to you anymore, because it loves you like it did when it still believed in your love. This night, when the world slips into peaceful sleep, when the stars come out to replace the sun, I'll come to you to please my eyes, which still yearn to see you. Put your arms around me, kiss me in your dream, and deceive my heart again, as you did before. Kiss my eyes to make them believe you're the one who you pretended to be. The world without you is called loneliness, and loneliness is soul pain, yearning for you. If just once I could visit you in a dream, to awaken your sleeping heart, to rekindle the fire that used to burn in it, I would be lonely no more."
HEART & SOUL is a collection of original writings by Richard Lee Orey whose life-long participation in passionate courtroom dramas provides a unique Dickenslike background for his heartfelt poems, treasured short stories and life-changing essays. With over fifty full-color high-lighting images, HEART & SOUL is a feast for your eyes as well as your mind. The footnotes in the Reviewers Say sections suggest that many of these writings may also touch your heart and your emotions, all yours to enjoy and to share.
A tribute to love comparing it to a bowl of porridge, sweet or sour...your choice.A few thoughts to our Native American's Hundred Nations.The Traveler's long journey searching for God.The end of the Colonel's Saga (started on Portrait of a Sad Man, 305 poems)At the end, the book of Andre, the Sheik of Literary Sands.
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«Поездка в Америку» – повесть о любви, о знакомстве с Америкой, с ее людьми, а также о тяжелой жизни нелегальных эмигрантов. В ней ничего не придумано, все правда, грустная, нерадостная правда жизни автора этой книги.
This book is a compilation of nineteen humorous short story poems set in easy to follow verse and rhyme. Although these poems will help early readers to develop and practice reading skills, these poems and the stories they tell have already been enjoyed by thousands of adults. They are filled with delightful and sometimes quacky humor that the entire family will love and at the same time provoke thought and query of simple things and situations families encounter every day. From toddlers to grandparents, from the listener to the teller of these tales, everyone will want to visit these stories again and again for their wonderful wordplay. It is the author's hope that these poems will bring a little cheer to anyone who opens this book and reads any poem and guess what? It is guaranteed to do just that!