You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
Imagine a beautiful little girl, with long curly, wild red hair, spinning in circles, completely delighted by all that she feels! She wears a long, blue dress, a replica of the one Cinderella wore to the ball. As you watch her, you get the sense that she isn't dreaming of Cinderella; in her heart and in her body, she is Cinderella. Now picture the same little girl, lying on her tummy, spinning on a merry-go-round, dipping her beautiful, long red hair in the puddle of mud that encircles the merry-go-round. When it comes to a stop, she savors the wonderful sensation of the cold mud running down her face. She then submerges her entire body in the puddle, as happy as can be and entirely obliviou...
The author's exploration of her family's experience of nurturing an autistic child provides insight into the condition and offers an approach different from that traditionally employed.
The Castle We Called Home will draw you in from the very first word, until the last. It is simply a captivating story: "By the age of three, it was obvious that someone needed to be with Hayden, almost constantly, and with focus. It wasnt only because of his aggression or his lacking sense of danger. It was as much because he would otherwise wander aimlessly, looking for trouble, putting objects of any type in his mouth or destroying things. Or even worse, he would park himself in front of the TV and slip into Nowhereland. It tormented me. Why couldnt I get more deeply into his head? It was like standing in a corridor, a door ahead, locked and bolted shut.and me, hopelessly and frantically, ...
Christian Wenger (1698-1772) was born in Bern, Switzerland. He fled to the Palatinate in 1705, immigrated to America in 1727 and settled in Lancaster, Pennsylvania where he married Eve Graybill/Krabill/ Kraybill. Descendants and relatives scattered throughout the United States and into Canada.
A genealogy of the descendants of Henry Funck born in Europe. He immigrated to America in 1719 and settled at Indian Creek, Franconia Township, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania where he died in 1760. He married Anne Meyer.
Abraham Beery (1718-1799) settled in Adams County, Pennsylvania, where he lived married years and raised a family. He and his wife, Mary Gochenour, had six children, 1762-1777. After their sons migrated to Virginia, he and his wife followed in 1787 and settled in Rockingham County, Virginia. He died at Cross Keys, Virginia. Descendants lived in Virginia, Illinois, Ohio, Iowa, and elsewhere.
Christian D. Troyer was born 19 July 1840 in Sugarcreek, Ohio. His parents were David D. Troyer and Anna J. Stutzman. He married Catherine Beachy (1847-1926), daughter of Peter M. Miller Beachy and Susanna J. Miller, 10 August 1865. They had twelve children. He died in 1903. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in Ohio.