![]() ![]() Kate's Vermont Venture by Janice Hanna 22 copies Sydney's Outer Banks Blast (Camp Club Girls) by Jean Fischer 26 copiesĪlexis and the Arizona Escapade (Camp Club Girls) by Erica Rodgers 26 copies ![]() Kate's Philadelphia Frenzy (Camp Club Girls) by Janice Thompson 31 copiesīailey's Peoria Problem (Camp Club Girls) by Linda Carlblom 29 copiesĮlizabeth's Amarillo Adventure (Camp Club Girls) by Renae Brumbaugh 23 copies, 1 review ![]() McKenzie's Montana Mystery by Shari Barr 33 copiesĪlexis and the Sacramento Surprise (Camp Club Girls) by Erica Rodgers 35 copies Sydney's DC Discovery (Camp Club Girls) by Jean Fischer 46 copies, 1 review Camp Club Girls: Bailey by Linda Carlblom 17 copies, 7 reviewsĬamp Club Girls & the Mystery at Discovery Lake by Renae Brumbaugh 55 copies, 2 reviews ![]()
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![]() ![]() “A white-centered religion with a Bible that condones slavery and a history of racism a homophobic religion that denigrates women, and a refusal to acknowledge that love is love.” The post from April explains the woman’s deep problems, referring back to a talk at a TGC conference in which she opened by referring to conservative evangelical faith as… She found “gospel themes” in porn, and wanted the world to know about it.īut perhaps it was this article at Christian Intellectual that best critiqued McLaughlin. McLaughlin also wrote an article for The Gospel Coalition, extrapolating “Gospel themes” from the x-rated franchise, 50 Shades of Grey. McLaughlin wrote an article for The Gospel Coalition, saying that God was “raising up homosexuals to lead us.” Pulpit & Pen warned you about the article and its author, here. Here’s a few things you need to know about this wildly progressive, hopelessly woke, gay-affirming feminist, Rebecca McLaughlin. ![]() ![]() If you notice the book in the far right top corner of the photo, you’ll see this.Īgain, from the top right corner you’ll see this book. Albert Mohler tweeted out a photo of his “favorite section of the new bookstore at Southern Seminary.” Aside from the book rack being a buffet of woke theology, one book in particular caught the attention of more conservative-minded Christians. ![]() ![]() ![]() Generally I have to read them spaced out quite a bit from each other, or I start to get irritated by the lack of intelligence from the characters. ![]() However, if you've read a couple of books from the A-list series, you will start to notice that all the stories start to sound the same, and the books get old, really fast. I picked up this book to read as a guilty pleasure/brain candy treat. If you've read one of Zoey Dean's novels before, that you know you aren't about pick up a literacy masterpiece when you read the A-List series. I mean, Ash didn't even show up to the airport to pick her up on time, and then he didn't even recognize her. Myla was a horrible character, and her ex Ash was just as horrible. I liked Jojo until she got that bag, she didn't let being some famous kid change her until that part, and really, all because of a bag. I haven't read the A-List books, so i have no idea if they need to be read first, i really hope not. Short Review: I was expecting a lot worse, like as horrible as Clique Prequel but it wasn't too bad. **Find this and other reviews, plus fun stuff, on my blogs! Booklikes or Blogspot** ![]() ![]() As Louise Cowan, the founder of the University of Dallas with her husband Don, used to say, yes reading great books makes you melancholy, and that’s why we do it together. Moreover, the great dead can be appreciated together. True, Nietzsche added, “or a philosopher,” who has the best of friends among the dead, but as he, living solitarily, came to suffer, and perhaps see, not for long. Only beasts and gods can live outside the city, solitary like Polyphemos, observes Aristotle. We should stay far away from each other, but can we bear to? Plague makes each of us the possible carrier of death to others, and all those others the possible bringers of death to us, and thus it, the measures it requires, and the panic it stirs, weaken the very communities we need to live, and to live well, as large as a country and as small as fellowships, of families, of parents and children, of man and wife, and of friends. ![]() ![]() No book shows how little we care to find out the truth, how little we know ourselves, how even less we know others, how rumor, prejudice, and illusion, rule our world as Alessandro Manzoni’s “The Betrothed.” Set in Lombardy in the 17th century, it covers the whole horror of a plague in whose deadly grip all suffered. ![]() ![]() ![]() "what would happen if a small American town were stuck under a glass dome and cut off from the outside world". One thing I found fascinating about Under the Dome, is the way King takes a comparatively simple premise, and manages to build on it, examine it and explore it in minute and unexpected ways. I can't really give an adequate reason for this, and judging by the quality of Under the Dome, it's plainly an oversight on my part and one I certainly will be correcting in the future. With the exception of The Dark Tower however, my king reading largely fell off as I got older. Like many people (including my Lady), I first ran into Stephen King as a teenager, and was captivated by books like It, Salem's Lot, Insomnia and The Stand. ![]() ![]() ![]() It is only after her mother Maggie commits suicide that she learns that she has inherited this disorder from her father. She occasionally has to have blood transfusions in order to survive. Her pursuit of a cure is personal she also suffers from the disease, and she fears that one day it will kill her. Shea O’Halloran is a brilliant American surgeon and researcher trying to find the cure for a rare blood disorder. ![]() ![]() As time goes on he loses much of his memory (perhaps even his sanity), the only thing he has a clear memory of is of the faces of his human tormentors, and the fact that he was betrayed by someone close to him. The book begins with Jacques Dubrinsky, younger brother to Mikhail, being tortured and buried alive by members of the same fanatical group that attacked Raven and killed his sister some 25 years earlier in Dark Prince. It takes place roughly 25 years after the events in Dark Prince (1999). Dark Desire is the second novel in Christine Feehan's Dark Series. ![]() ![]() ![]() Mental illness and religious fanaticism percolated Maud’s maternal lines back to an ancestor accused of being a witch in Puritan-era Massachusetts. ![]() Her mother’s grandfather killed a man with a hay hook. Her mother’s father was said to have married thirteen times. Maud Newton’s ancestors have fascinated her since she was a girl. ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR: The New Yorker, NPR, Time, Entertainment Weekly, The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Esquire, Garden & Gun An acclaimed writer goes searching for the truth about her complicated Southern family-and finds that our obsession with ancestors opens up new ways of seeing ourselves-in this “brilliant mix of personal memoir and cultural observation” ( The Boston Globe).Finalist for the 2023 John Leonard Prize.Roxane Gay’s Audacious Book Club Pick.a literary feat that simultaneously builds and excavates identity.”- The New York Times Book Review Ancestor Trouble: A Reckoning and a Reconciliation ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Tassone provides a variety of other prayers throughout, including ones such as a “Novena for the Holy Souls,” a “Way of the Cross” and a number of others, such as those to St. Of course, some of Faustina’s own prayers are part of the book as well. Gertrude on the power of Mary and her “Heroic Act of Charity.” These “extras” from different saints add even more weight and reason for us to pray for the holy souls and for the living so they, too, become holy souls. Alphonsus Ligouri’s “Prayer to Our Lady of Pity,” and the other is St. The author also brings in bonus quotes and prayers from other beloved saints. Faustina,” not only are there important insights from Faustina’s diary, but the author adds her own reflection after each one. In another section called “Purgatory in the Eyes of St. ![]() ![]() ![]() No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any matter whatsoever, including Internet usage, without written permission from Llewellyn Publications, except in the form of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.Īs the purchaser of this e-book, you are granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on screen. Haunted Route 66: Ghosts of America’s Legendary Highway © 2013 by Richard Southall.Īll rights reserved. ![]() He is a member of the paranormal group MAJDA. Today, Southall conducts private ghost investigations, teaches workshops on ghost hunting, contributes to numerous periodicals, and has been interviewed on regional and national radio about ghosts and hauntings. ![]() He is the co-creator of a haunted walking tour of Parkersburg, WV, one of the best-received tours in the United States. Richard Southall (West Virginia) has been interested in the paranormal since a very young age and was conducting his own paranormal investigations by the time he was a teenager. ![]() ![]() ![]() She is also a visiting professor in management at The University of Texas at Austin McCombs School of Business.īrené hosts the Unlocking Us Podcast and the Dare to Lead Podcast. And I’m gonna stop taking feedback from people who are not also being brave.”īrené is a research professor at the University of Houston where she holds the Huffington Foundation – Brené Brown Endowed Chair at The Graduate College of Social Work. Two, vulnerability is not a weakness, it’s showing up when you can’t control the outcome, including the trolls on Twitter. And so, it’s not hyperbole to say my life changed when I read, ‘cause I was flooded with this belief that, “You know what? One, I’m going to be in the arena. I found it a really hard time in my life, when I needed to be reminded that I was in the arena, and that I was trying to be brave with my life and my work, and it’s not the critic who counts. Brené Brown has spent the past two decades studying courage, vulnerability, shame, and empathy and is the author of five #1 New York Times bestsellers: The Gifts of Imperfection, Daring Greatly, Rising Strong, Braving the Wilderness, and her latest book, Dare to Lead. That is why I am excited for this episode. ![]() Free from shame, free from fear and free from the untrue stories we tell ourselves. Yet, when we allow ourselves to be vulnerable, we allow ourselves to be free. ![]() Few things are as terrifying as vulnerability. ![]() |