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"An earlier version of this novel was published as Sister Anna by Discovery Enterprises, 2000."
La Llorona (The Crying Woman) is a sad and haunting tale from Mexico. Parents have told the story for hundreds of years to misbehaving children and to guard against vanity. Some say the story is about Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés and a native Mexican woman who served as his translator. Her loss can be compared to the loss of native Mexican culture after the Spanish conquest.
In the early 1800s, white settlers and missionaries were intent on bringing the English language to the illiterate Native Americans. Sequoyah was intrigued by these leaves of paper with strange marks that talked. Doing what no one had ever done before, Sequoyah set about creating a written Cherokee language—helping preserve the tribe's history and culture even today.
Ten years ago, Marilyn Ferguson ushered in the New Age with her bestseller The Aquarian Conspiracy and then became the founder and editor of the Brain/Mind Bulletin. Now, for the first time, PragMagic collects and updates the most outstanding stories from more than 10 years of Brain/Mind Bulletin.
Near the end of the Terminal Classic Mayan period, a high priest
A cyberspace thriller involving an online bulletin board service. On it, computer buffs take part in virtual reality games devoted to sex, gambling and murder. When fantasies turn to the real thing, the LAPD sends in Det. Nolan Grobowski, the protagonist.
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When a ragtag circus shows up in the town of Buchanan, Kansas, fourteen-year-old Randy Carmichael faces a deep mystery. Why is his alcoholic mother so troubled by the troupe's arrival? What does Circus Olympus mean to her pastand to Randy's future? Voices summon him, a godlike figure appears in his dreams, and supernatural adversaries lay in wait for him as he embarks on a dangerous quest that will take him beyond mortal reality.
In 1856, 15-year-old Bella Lee Dunkinson began hanging around the local railroad in western Tennessee. Engineer John Hardiman took a liking to the spirited girl and gave her a boy's responsibilities helping with the engine. One stormy night, the engine was slipping dangerously on wet rails. While John was putting sand on the tracks, Bella found herself alone in the cab driving the train up a steep and dangerous mountainside. After her heroic and triumphant climb to the mountaintop, she was hailed by the miners who met her there as the "Belle of the Mines and Mountains."