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Forgotten Book One: Revelations By Brown Wolf Forgotten Book One: Revelations was written to portray the author’s own feelings about the world as he sees it. Brown Wolf had many dreams that characterize the effects of God’s black tear, as he calls it, and has turned it into a harrowing tale of survival for one family. The main characters go through many trials in order to fulfill their destinies: the three chosen ones must listen to God and save humanity from themselves. This book is about their plight and the growing threat of demons and suffering that will plague the human race after the end of days is upon us. Miguel, the main character, has a haunted past that he must come to terms with before he will be able to fulfill his destiny as God’s chosen one.
When best friends reunite, it’s all fun and games. Caught up in a spiral of twists and deceits, they think they have it all figured out until they get thrown in a curve ball. Game on now as they embrace the unexpected and dive right into it headfirst!
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Reprint of the original, first published in 1871. The publishing house Anatiposi publishes historical books as reprints. Due to their age, these books may have missing pages or inferior quality. Our aim is to preserve these books and make them available to the public so that they do not get lost.
Mexican history is as tortured and crooked (in both senses of the word) as an ox cart trail--unexpected turns around every corner, replete with bumps and declivities. The casual reader of general Mexican history will find it difficult keeping up with the list of Mexico's principal characters over the centuries, now expanding, then suddenly contracting due to assassinations, exiles, military defeats, and alliances gone awry. Oaxacan writer Bruce Stores solves that problem by employing a simple technique used for millennia by the local indigenous peoples: storytelling. His take on historical fiction paints a human, everyday face on the historian's cold mask of dates, places, and wars. Structur...
Lucrezia Borgia is among the most fascinating and controversial personalities of the Renaissance. The daughter of Pope Alexander VI, she was intensely involved in the political life of Italy during the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries. While her marriage alliances helped advance the political objectives of the papacy, she also held the office of Governor of Spoleto, a role normally reserved for Cardinals, making her one of the most powerful and dynamic female figures of the Renaissance. Among the first books to employ historical method to move beyond myth and romance that had obscured the fascinating story of Lucrezia Borgia was this biography written by the noted German historia...
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On one of the green slopes of the Sierra Morena, shaded by a few cork-trees, and with wild craggy heights and bare brown wastes stretching far above, there stood, about the middle of the sixteenth century, a castle even then old and rather dilapidated. It had once been a strong place, but was not very spacious; and certainly, according to our modern ideas of comfort, the interior could not have been a particularly comfortable dwelling-place. A large proportion of it was occupied by the great hall, which was hung with faded, well-repaired tapestry, and furnished with oaken tables, settles, and benches, very elaborately carved, but bearing evident marks of age. Narrow unglazed slits in the thi...