![]() ![]() ![]() PST Podcast Episode 014 Michelle Hartman with Host Terry Jude Miller ![]() Alberto Villoldo, Ph.D., bestselling author of Shaman, Healer, Sage and One Spirit Medicine writes of Echoes from the Stars as, “A well-crafted blend of journeys that take you deeply into process and discovery and imaginative poetry.” Producer Terry Jude Miller. As a founding member and active past-president of the Denton Poets’ Assembly, Beth Honeycutt has poetry in several Texas publications, in her chapbook of poetry Finding Direction, as well as through her mixed genre book, Echoes From the Stars, a 2018 first place winner in the spiritual category awarded by the Association of Texas Authors. ![]()
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![]() ![]() He begins by describing his own conversion to Christianity. ![]() In his second essay, “Down at the Cross: Letter from a Region in My Mind,” Baldwin reflects on religion in three parts. It is his duty to honor and pass on this strong love. ![]() He also tells James that he has a duty to persevere despite the difficulties he will face as a black man in America, because his parents chose to raise him with love despite the fears they harbored. Instead, he advises him to take a loving approach to these people, who remain willfully ignorant of their misdeeds. Baldwin primarily counsels James to avoid adopting a defeated or vengeful attitude toward white men. But he goes on to warn James against following in their footsteps, since they ultimately found themselves downtrodden and overcome by their mistreatment at the hands of their white countrymen. Baldwin begins on a more personal note, by noting that James reminds him of his brother and father, who shared a similarly strong temperament. In his first letter, Baldwin directly addresses his teenaged nephew, James. The first essay is entitled “My Dungeon Shook: Letter to My Nephew on the One Hundredth Anniversary of the Emancipation.” The second essay, “Down at the Cross: Letter from a Region in My Mind” is much longer than the first, and addresses itself to a broader audience. Baldwin’s text is split into two essays, both written in the form of a letter. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() In the Balance: Between Painting and Sculpture, 1965-1985 By Jonathan Goodman.Richard Hearns: Nomad By Raphy Sarkissian.Charles Gaines: Moving Chains By Zoë Hopkins.Michael Berryhill: El Paso By Jason Stopa.Called to the Camera: Black American Studio Photographers By Zoe Ariyama.Beverly Semmes: Marigold By Judith Stein.Sig Olson: This Has Happened By Christopher T.Michiko Itatani: Celestial Stage By Conor Lauesen.Catherine Chalmers: We Rule By Tom McGlynn.Himali Singh Soin: The Third Pole By Ruba Al-Sweel.Gaby Collins-Fernández: To A Portrait By David Whelan.Cubism and the Trompe lOeil Tradition By David Carrier.Leiko Ikemura: Anima Alma - Works 1981≢022 By Jonathan Goodman. ![]() Arcmanoro Niles: You Know I used to Love You but Now I Dont Think I Can: There Aint No Right Way to Say Goodbye Again By Tennae Maki.Jacolby Satterwhite: A Feeling of Healing By Alice Godwin.Richard Jackson with Jeffrey Grunthaner.A message from Phong Bui Publisher and Artistic Director Art ![]() ![]() When Batman and Superman are corned by the Toymaster and Mongul, they are pitted against on another in a battle to the death, with their only hope being the The Worlds’ Finest. ![]() The ultimate fighting game results – and a world-wide network of players must team up to create the most powerful, skilled Super Heroes imaginable with one goal: To kill Batman. The Dark Knight and the Man of Steel uncover a plot by the Toymaster to use a secret, potentially deadly element in his new video game, the characters created by players manifest in real life. 2: Game Over (The New 52) īy Greg Pak (Author), Brett Booth (Illustrator) 1: Cross World (The New 52) īatman/Superman Vol. Reprints: Batman/Superman #1-4 and Justice League #23.1: Darkseidīatman/Superman Vol. Discover how two of the World’s Finest Super Heroes met for the first time in the New 52, and the mysterious adventure that takes them to a whole new world-the world of Earth 2! The heroes of the main DC Universe meet their Earth 2 counterparts for the first time! ![]() The Dark Knight and the Man of Steel are close friends in the modern day – but the two weren’t always such close allies. ![]() 1: Cross World īy Greg Pak (Author), Jae Lee (Illustrator), Ben Oliver (Illustrator) ![]() ![]() ![]() He could feel it in there, perched on that plump drooling tongue. He reached out, catching the lad by the chin and wriggling one finger between his wee jaws. He didn’t have time for Rabbie’s cold feet. About whether this is the right thing for me. “There’s not much later to be had,” Rabbie said. The boy squirmed and shook his head, lips sealed shut. “Now Connor, you know how much those beasties mean to your mum. ![]() He approached his little hellion of a son with hands up, speaking in a low, soothing voice. “Not so fast, wee Master Connor.” Rabbie plucked the boy off his feet and looked to Logan. Connor barreled straight for the groom himself. Logan chased the giggling ruffian down the spiraling stairs of Lannair Castle and into the great hall, where a dozen people were making ready for the wedding that would take place that evening. When A(nother) Scot Ties the Knot – A Bonus Epilogue Part three will be released Friday, December 23rd. If you’d like to get it in your inbox, make sure you’re signed up for my mailing list! This are the first and second parts, out of three. It got a bit long, so I decided to split it into three parts. So I wrote this bonus epilogue as a way to peek in on them a few years later. It seems that many wanted to know that they all ended happily, and I did, too. ![]() Over the past year, I’ve received many letters and questions from readers about the characters from When a Scot Ties the Knot - Maddie, Logan, Aunt Thea, and all of Logan’s men. Bonus Epilogue! When a Scot Ties the Knot ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Louisa preferred to play the "lurid" parts in these plays, "the villains, ghosts, bandits, and disdainful queens."Īt age 15, troubled by the poverty that plagued her family, she vowed: "I will do something by and by. She had a rich imagination and often her stories became melodramas that she and her sisters would act out for friends. ![]() Like her character, Jo March in Little Women, young Louisa was a tomboy: "No boy could be my friend till I had beaten him in a race," she claimed, " and no girl if she refused to climb trees, leap fences."įor Louisa, writing was an early passion. Louisa spent her childhood in Boston and in Concord, Massachusetts, where her days were enlightened by visits to Ralph Waldo Emerson’s library, excursions into nature with Henry David Thoreau and theatricals in the barn at Hillside (now Hawthorne’s "Wayside"). She and her three sisters, Anna, Elizabeth and May were educated by their father, philosopher/ teacher, Bronson Alcott and raised on the practical Christianity of their mother, Abigail May. Louisa May Alcott was born in Germantown, Pennsylvania on November 29, 1832. The Abbot's Ghost, or Maurice Treherne's Temptation (1867)Ī Long Fatal Love Chase (1866 – first published 1995) ![]() ![]() Infinite Country joins a growing category of fiction about the U.S. She finally lands a job with a wealthy family, taking care of a son who forms a stronger bond with Elena than with his own mother. She is mistreated by one employer in a restaurant and disrespected by another. ![]() One of the novel’s multiple storylines follows Talia as she hitches rides back to Bogotá, where Mauro waits with a plane ticket to the United States, offering the possibility of a long-delayed family reunion.Īnother major storyline follows Elena, who tries to make a life for herself in New Jersey with her two older children. The story opens as Talia, now a nervy 15-year-old, breaks out of a Catholic reform school where she was sent after an impulsive, violent act. Unable to bring infant Talia to her minimum-wage jobs, mother Elena sent the child, the youngest of three, to live with Talia’s grandmother in Bogotá. They remained together until the father, Mauro, was briefly imprisoned and then deported. It’s an intriguing, compact tale, rife with both real-life implications and spiritual significance.Įscaping poverty in Colombia, the family initially arrived in the U.S. ![]() The fourth novel by Patricia Engel is a 21st-century odyssey about a Colombian family bifurcated by immigration rules. ![]() ![]() Lehrer’s writing is clear and accessible, making the complex concepts of decision-making easy to understand. He also makes a case for sound decision-making, arguing that making decisions with the right tools, strategies, and an understanding of the process can help us be more effective and successful. He shows readers how decision-making works in the real world and gives practical advice on how to make better decisions. Lehrer addresses topics such as how our emotions affect our decisions, the impact of experience, how to make better decisions, and more. With engaging storytelling, Lehrer draws readers in and captivates them with examples from neuroscience and decision theory. In How We Decide, Lehrer dives into the intricate world of decision-making, examining and contrasting different theories and models in an effort to formulate a comprehensive approach to improving decision-making. ![]() Throughout the book, Lehrer offers practical advice on how to make better decisions in both your personal and professional lives. ![]() ![]() Lehrer examines different theories and models of decision-making, giving readers an accessible way to explore the science behind the brain’s decision-making process. How We Decide, by Jonah Lehrer, is an insightful and timely look into the complex world of decision-making. ![]() ![]() ![]() Before she can reach her happy ending, Rapunzel learns that there may be more to her story, and her magical tresses, than she ever knew. But when she leaves the only home she’s ever known, wanting only to see the floating lights that appear on her birthday, she gets caught up in an adventure across the kingdom with two thieves-a young woman named Gina, and Flynn Rider, a rogue on the run. ![]() For eighteen years Rapunzel stays locked away, knowing she must protect others from her magical hair. For her safety and the safety of the kingdom, Rapunzel is locked in a tower and put under the care of powerful goodwife, Mother Gothel. With it comes dangerous magical powers: the power to hurt, not heal. Liz Braswell's writing captures the magic and makes the story a page turner. ![]() Mrs Potts, Chip Lumiere and Coggsworth are all as loveable in As Old As Time, as they are in Beauty and the Beast. Nonetheless, it heals the queen, and she delivers a healthy baby girl with hair as silver and gray as the moon. This twisted tale is quite dark at the end, and as a result, the target age of this would be older than some of the other twisted tales I have read. Desperate to save the life of their queen and her unborn child, the good people of Corona search for the all-healing Sundrop flower to cure her-but mistakenly acquire the shimmering Moondrop flower instead. ![]() ![]() This is the one and only time when I found myself desperately in need of half star ratings. This was a very different kind of M/M story and a fun, quirky read. I really enjoyed the established couple vibe of Charlie and Bobbie and the apocalypse elements were finely written and disturbing. There's a lot of bathroom humour from the author so if you've read Shy and it didn't work for you, this has similar graphic elements so it may not be a book that you'd get a kick out of. I don't want to give it away but this is not what you think it is and I'll leave it at that. ![]() There's a twist to this story and doing that will ruin it for you. Bad of me I know, still I HAD to know before I could settle down and enjoy the book.ĭon't do that. This book made care about the characters to the point where I had to skip to the end to make sure they both made it out alive. They're a team in bed and in the zombie killing zone. The title and the art are just so original.Ĭharlie and Bobbie are the sole survivors of the apocalpse. ![]() ![]() First of all I need to say that I love the cover of this book. ![]() |