5/28/2023 0 Comments Robyn peterman hot damned seriesSo I shall do what any sane leader of Hell would do-die my hair, shave my eyebrows and go into hiding for a century.ĭesperate Devils do stupid things. But no one hides from Mother Nature for long, not even God and the Devil. The certifiable woman has threatened a pole dancing punishment if I don’t play nice with my brother. All I need now is a potty song.Īpparently, sending Lizard to clog all the commodes in Heaven has put me in hot water with Mother Nature. I am prepared to teach my boy to put the poo in the hole. I have pilfered plastic potties, Cheerios and bagels. Word on the street is that my brother’s son was potty trained at eight months old. Welcome to my Hell… and not the good one where I’m in charge. Available in ebook: & amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp lt a href=”” target=”_blank”& amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp gt Buy from Robyn& amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp #39 s Bookstore!& amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp lt /a& amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp amp gt
0 Comments
5/28/2023 0 Comments Blackshirts and redsHe affirms the relevance of taboo ideologies like Marxism, demonstrating the importance of class analysis in understanding political realities and dealing with the ongoing collision between ecology and global corporatism. He also maps out the external and internal forces that destroyed communism, and the disastrous impact of the "free-market" victory on eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union. Parenti shows how "rational fascism" renders service to capitalism, how corporate power undermines democracy, and how revolutions are a mass empowerment against the forces of exploitative privilege. These terms are often bandied about, but seldom explored in the original and exciting way that has become Michael Parenti's trademark. A bold and entertaining exploration of the epic struggles of yesterday and today.īlackshirts & Reds explores some of the big issues of our time: fascism, capitalism, communism, revolution, democracy, and ecology. The text is a first person fictionalized description of Smart’s feelings leading up to and through the affair, with very little description of Barker, let alone what he is feeling. Smart gave birth to 4 of Barker’s children and eventually moved to rural England the affair had cooled by then, but the two remained friendly. She arranged to meet him, their attraction was mutual and it led to a long trans-Atlantic love affair through and following WWII. Her novel is almost all raw emotion, so Wikipedia helped me to fill in some of the details: Smart read a volume of Barker’s poetry in a bookstore in London in the late 1930s and fell in love with him through his work. By Grand Central Station I Sat Down and Wept is her ‘prose poetry’ novel of her long term love affair with the married English poet George Barker. Elizabeth Smart was a Canadian author born just before WWI. 5/28/2023 0 Comments This Is Not a Book by Keri SmithMost recently Random House, The Washington Post, The New York Times, Ford Motor Co., the Boston Globe, Galison/Mudpuppy Press, and Hallmark. Keri spends her days playing with her husband and son, and divides her time between upstate New York, and the countryside of Canada.Īs a free lance illustrator she has worked for a wide variety of clientsworldwide. She is the author of the popular weblog the Wish Jar which attracts over 10,000 readers daily, and writes on occasion for a variety of magazines (including How Magazine). Her newest book, This is Not a Book will be released fall 2009 by Penguin Books. She is the author of several bestselling books about creativity including How to be an Explorer of the World -the Portable Life/Art Museum,( 2008 Perigee), Wreck this Journal (2007 Perigee). Keri Smith is an author/illustrator turned guerilla artist. 5/27/2023 0 Comments Amy engel the familiar darkFound next to the body of her best friend in the park of their small, broken town. Her mother, a hard and cruel woman who dragged her up in a rundown trailer park, was not who she wanted to be to her own daughter, Junie.But 12-year old Junie is now dead. Sometimes it's better not to know.Eve Taggert's life has been spent steadily climbing away from her roots. From the heartbreaking beginning to the shocking conclusion, it was a journey so powerful that it'll stay with me for a long time to come' Alice Hunter, bestselling author of The Serial Killer's Wife'Raw, powerful, beautiful - devastatingly good' TM Logan, bestselling author of The Holiday'Beautiful and harrowing and everything in between' Chris Whitaker, award-winning author of We Begin at the EndSometimes it's better not to ask questions. This is the reality of motherhood - red in tooth and claw' Sarah J Naughton, bestselling author of The Festival'An achingly raw, emotional story that was beautifully written. 'A high quality, sharply written thriller whose motley cast of deviants and misfits delivers some breathtaking twists on the way to a bleak but very satisfying conclusion.
5/27/2023 0 Comments Ghost Hunting by Jason HawesThey pointed out that if we didn’t do it someone else would because of the attention we had brought. The article took off as we were not afraid to debunk an alleged haunting and it showed that we were serious about our work.Ī small company called Pilgrim contacted us (now a major production company) and said they wanted us to be ourselves and they would just follow us with cameras. In this case it turned out to be a problem created by mixed prescriptions. We told him from the outset the odds were well against finding something supernatural. Things changed when a guy called John Leland wrote an article based on an investigation with us for the New York Times. I’m not scared of being judged, I don’t give a damn if people like me or not, I am who I am and I’ll always be that person. What if we ended up harming the field of the paranormal? We did not want to become a mockery and not seem professional. It was a real fear of people not understanding what we were doing and trying to accomplish. We were offered our own show numerous times and turned them down as we were hugely concerned with whether the viewers would really understand what we did and would our passion translate on camera. It was the unknown 20% ‘what if’ mentality that led to production companies asking us to work with them behind the scenes on such programmes as ‘Scariest Places on Earth.’ JASON HAWES: Well first I am a firm believer in the paranormal, although at least some 80% of claims can be disproved. 5/27/2023 0 Comments Cosmos saganCherish your species and your planet."-Carl SaganĪs part of his wide-ranging Ph.D. Be open to wonder and at the same time subject all claims to knowledge, without exception, to critical scrutiny. Do not be satisfied with superficial answers. His mentors were the geneticists Hermann Muller and Joshua Lederberg, the geochemist Harold Urey, and the planetary astronomer Gerard Kuiper. He went to the University of Chicago, where he studied biology and physics, and earned his Ph.D. He knew then what he wanted to do with his life, and he prepared himself well. Sagan also learned about a powerful method, called science, that could help him explore such ideas. He understood that if those countless stars are suns, they might have their own planets. The answer-that the stars are suns, only very far away, and the Sun is a star, but close up-opened boundless vistas in his young mind. At age seven, he went to the public library to find out what the stars are. “When you’re in love,” he said, “you want to tell the world.”Ĭarl Sagan (1934–1996) grew up in a working-class family in Brooklyn. To hundreds of millions of people, Sagan communicated his passion for the universe of science. Portrait of Carl Sagan courtesy of Andy Levin/PARADE. Carl Sagan (1934-1996), American planetary astronomer, exobiologist, popular educator, and advocate for science. 5/27/2023 0 Comments Broadway the piano lessonAdditionally, Brooks was nominated for a Critics Choice TV Best Actress in a Limited Series or Movie Made for Television Award and received a Primetime Emmy Award Nomination as a producer on Mahalia. On stage, Brooks starred as Beatrice in The Public Theatre’s Shakespeare in the Park production of Much Ado About Nothing, directed by Kenny Leon. For her performance, Brooks earned the Actress Award for Television from the Critics Choice Association Celebration of Black Cinema & Television. Brooks starred as the legendary Gospel singer Mahalia Jackson in director Kenny Leon’s Mahalia which premiered on Lifetime in April. Danielle Brooks starred as Tasha "Taystee" Jefferson in Netflix’s Emmy nominated series Orange is the New Black, a role that garnered her two NAACP Image Award nominations for Best Actress in a Comedy Series. She also received the Young Hollywood Award for Breakthrough Actress. Next up, Brooks will star opposite John Cena in the HBO Max series Peacemaker, the spinoff series to James Gunn’s upcoming The Suicide Squad movie. As the glaciers melted between 17,000 and 7,000 years ago, sea levels rose and more than 15 million square miles of habitable land were submerged underwater, resulting in a radical change to the Earth's shape and the conditions in which people could live. Guided by cutting-edge science and the latest archaeological scholarship, Hancock begins his mission to discover the truth about these myths and examines the mystery at the end of the last Ice Age. In Underworld, Hancock continues his remarkable quest underwater, where, according to almost a thousand ancient myths from every part of the globe, the ruins of a lost civilization, obliterated in a universal flood, are to be found. Now he returns with an explosive new work of archaeological detection. While Graham Hancock is no stranger to stirring up heated controversy among scientific experts, his books and television documentaries have intrigued millions of people around the world and influenced many to rethink their views about the origins of human civilization. From Graham Hancock, bestselling author of Fingerprints of the Gods, comes a mesmerizing book that takes us on a captivating underwater voyage to find the ruins of a lost civilization that's been hidden for thousands of years beneath the world's oceans. 5/27/2023 0 Comments The essex serpent bookPerry’s excellent debut, After Me Comes the Flood, was short and strange, narrated out of a sensibility difficult to define or place, from a distance that seemed both alienated and intimate. There, “never sure of the difference between thinking and believing”, she hears of the Essex Serpent, a folktale apparently come to life and terrorising the Blackwater estuary and meets its spiritual adversary, the rector of Aldwinter, William Ransome, with whom she is soon entangled in a relationship of voluble opposition and unspoken attraction. New widow Cora Seagrave is patently relieved by the death of her unpleasant husband, a civil servant with “twice the power of a politician and none of the responsibility” accompanied by her socialist companion Martha and her autistic son Francis, she leaves the capital for the wilds of Essex. Every six months someone publishes a paper “setting out ways and places extinct animals might live on”, while smart women collect ammonites or wear necklaces of fossil teeth set in silver. I n Sarah Perry’s second novel, 1890s London is mad about the sciences, especially palaeontology. |