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Sacramento, California 1989. Leon Sherwood arrives home from high school at the end of his junior year and discovers his parents are dead. After the funeral, a court order makes him live with his aunt, Lilly Furman, who is a spinster and considers Leon an annoyance in her life. He began his senior year at a new high school and he dreamed of going to Purdue and majoring in Engineering. Leon meets Darlene Leftish and they become lovers. When it became time to go to the senior prom, Darlene chose to go with someone else. In a fit of rage, Leon kills her. His aunt was sure he was guilty of the murder and told the police as much. Leon kills his aunt and leaves town in her car. Over the next six y...
This book examines the lived experienes of death penalty defense lawyers and how they created a legal culture of resistance to the death penalty. It argues that an important social component of death penalty abolition in the state of Colorado was due to the efforts of capital defense attorneys. Specifically, it explores how the death penalty defense lawyers created and embraced a legal culture of resistance which compelled the attorneys to fight tenaciously in order to win life sentences for clients that had committed brutal homicides. A legal culture of resistance does not exist in a vacuum. Thwarting Death traces the lived experience of 15 death penalty defense lawyers from when they were kids all the way up through retirement to explain how a legal culture of resistance forms and lawyers operate within it after being established which in turn can have a massive influence on public policy outside of a courtroom; such as creating a social and political environment conducive to abolishing the death penalty.
A beautifully written personal account of the discovery of late antiquity by one of the world’s most influential and distinguished historians The end of the ancient world was long regarded by historians as a time of decadence, decline, and fall. In his career-long engagement with this era, the widely acclaimed and pathbreaking historian Peter Brown has shown, however, that the “neglected half-millennium” now known as late antiquity was in fact crucial to the development of modern Europe and the Middle East. In Journeys of the Mind, Brown recounts his life and work, describing his efforts to recapture the spirit of an age. As he and other scholars opened up the history of the classical ...
Strangers and Kin is the history of adoption. An adoptive mother herself, Barbara Melosh tells the story of how married couples without children sought to care for and nurture other people's children as their own. Taking this history into the early twenty-first century, Melosh offers unflinching insight to the contemporary debates that swirl around adoption: the challenges to adoption secrecy; the ethics and geopolitics of international adoption; and the conflicts over transracial adoption.
The movie industry is a cut throat business. Julius Wilson, a resilient New Yorker who once struggled with self-esteem issues following a bitter divorce, Seeks a fresh new start. Relocating to LA, he finds himself in the glitzy world of Hollywood, surrounded by a new circle of friends within the movie industry. Despite the allure of fame, Julius soon discovers its darker side, facing public scrutiny and personal challenges. However, his positive mindset and determination helps him navigate these turbulent waters. Just as he begins to find his footing, a figure from his past re-emerges, complicating his newfound life. Julius's journey is one of highs and lows, triumphs in film and music, and ultimately, finding love and purpose amidst the chaos of fame.
Fabled Silicon Valley at the turn of the New Millennium provides the backdrop to this compelling love story populated with characters we all think we know. The story unfolds through the eyes of its iconic heroine who draws readers into her world in a visual and entertaining fashion leaving them wanting for more at its dramatic conclusion. Debut novelist Tynes has created a memorable character who faces the challenges presented by her numerous roles with dignity and a sense of humor. Daughter, wife, mother, friend and working professional, Carmen Beckwith will seem like a dear friend relating recent events in her life that will keep readers in suspense until the final pages.
When Detective Inspector Ray Graham an attractive divorcee in his late thirties look out of his office window on a dreary, wet spring morning he is feeling disillusioned with his job. His side-kick Detective Sergeant Lisa Cambridge, a six foot tall lesbian who is good looking, intelligent and has a heart of gold, even if she is quite often out-spoken and slightly uncouth, does her best to cheer him up and give him friendly advice. The office phone rings and they both embark on a case not only shocking and at times gruesome, but also a fortnight that will put their professional relationship and personal friendship to the test. A book to become absorbed in, true to life, full of real characters to relate to. Sometimes sad, sometimes with humour and sometimes with disgust. It is hoped that the reader will enjoy getting to know these characters as well as becoming intrigued with the mystery that they are investigating.
For over twenty years the abortion debate has raged, with each side entrenched in unyielding positions. This book breaks the impasse by using pro-life premises to reach pro-choice conclusions. While it is commonly assumed that state protection of the fetus as a form of human life undermines women's reproductive rights, McDonagh instead illuminates how it is exactly such state protection of the fetus that strengthens, rather than weakens, not only women's right to an abortion, but even more significantly, women's ability to call on the state for abortion funding. McDonagh's approach, by bridging the divide between pro-life and pro-choice advocates, revolutionizes the abortion debate in a way ...