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One of love's definitions is "to be passionately devoted." Such passion may be positive or negative, helpful or harmful. These stories are about desires and emotions, but most of them are not about sexual excitement. Devotion (faithfulness) can be blind and lead one to disaster. It can also lead one to happiness and fulfillment. These eighteen stories take you to the heights and depths of love. They bring love and hate to life. Here you will see love improve life and bring about death. These stories are packed with powerful emotions. You will cry and even rant and rage because of what the characters do and say. These are definitely "Love Stories."
There is a point where everyone breaks. Some can be repaired and eventually come out stronger, while some are left forever broken and mentally shattered. The change that both groups experience will open their mind to the world they live in as they come to the belief that they are to blame for everything that has happened. But if everyone is blaming themselves, the question is: who really is to blame for it all?
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"Coursebook for Trials classes in law school"--
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The OUPblog Tenth Anniversary Book: Ten Years of Academic Insights for the Thinking World celebrates the incisive works that made the OUPblog what it is today: an unrivaled source for sophisticated learning, understanding, and reflection. Hand-picked by Oxford University Press editors, these selections feature James M. McPherson on Lincoln's greatest moment, Arne L. Kalleberg's on police brutality in Ferguson, Missouri, and Anatoly Liberman's exploration into the origins of the word "bigot, ]among many others. From the fall of Rome and the science of happiness, to race relations and international law, the OUPblog has adapted the insights of authors, staff, and friends of Oxford University Press for an entire decade, earning its place as a 2013 Webby Award Honoree. Since 2005, more than 8,000 articles have been published, featuring daily commentary on a wide range of topics spanning politics, science, philosophy, music, and everything in between. Today, the OUPblog continues to represent the Oxford University Press's commitment to excellence in research, scholarship, and education, disseminating insights from the world's greatest thinkers. "