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A young curious butterfly Angie, who loved adventures and was attached to shiny objects even when she couldn't have then. She almost got her friends hurt out of curiosity. She had to figure out a way to rescue everyone after the mess she got them in. She learnt her lesson of never to disobey her dad again, and she learnt from her mistakes. This book is suitable for children agree of 1 - 10.
Originally published in 2014 by Beach Lane Books.
Michael Anderson was an ordinary person, who lived an ordinary life. He had been married for six years and had two lovely daughters. He worked as an insurance agent in a popular insurance firm, living in Fairfield, Connecticut. One day Michael came home to find a letter written to him from his wife. She had packed the kids and moved out of state and did not tell him where. Underneath the note were divorce papers signed by her, and their divorce was final without his appearance. Michael did not know why she divorced him. When he left for work, everything between them were fine. The next daybaffled, confused, and puzzledMichael goes in to work only to find that he had been fired without reason. Michael gets home, checks his mail, and finds a foreclosure letter. His house had been confiscated by the bank, and he had thirty days to move. The next day, he leaves his house to look for work. His car had been repossessed by the car company. Out of work, no car, and out of money, Michael turns to his best friend, Andrew Barler, a shift manager at a tire factory in Bridgeport. Andrew agrees to help Michael and offers him to move with him and his family in Bridgeport. It is until then that Michael finds out what friends are really for when he discovers his best friend is not the person he grew up with or knew from years ago. And as the days pass, he slowly discovers the terrifying secrets of Andrew Barler and the factory he works and why things are not what they seem.
A strange new race of modified men had fantastic powers and a kind of immortality. But something the human touch itself had been lost, and in consequence a terrible barrier grew. It looked as if a cataclysmic war would be inevitable.
Spite the Devil begins with a legend of Dutch settlers sailing up the Hudson River near New Jersey in the 1600's. One brave man beholds the opposite New York shore and dives into the icy waters shouting he will make it to that "other side" in spite of the devil. When he reaches New York he names the land "Spuyten Duyvil" which means spite the devil. This is where our heroine Janice Rashco gets her roots. Janice grows up in the 1950's with a strong Irish Catholic faith and relentless encounters with the devil. She receives her education from a small community of Dominican nuns. When the family overgrows their tiny New York apartment they move to Connecticut where Janice finds some disturbing changes taking place in her religion. She begins a quest to find the truth. In the interim of her searching she meets and instantly falls in love with Jack Watkins. They enjoy many blissful years of love. Suddenly this changes with a death in Jack's family. Jack becomes unfaithful. But Janice's love for him never fails. After many episodes of his cheating the two young lovers part ways. Jack moves to California and Janice is drawn to the South of France where she enters a Dominican convent. She is taught a great life's lesson there. But because she is discouraged by what she sees in France she returns to the States continuing her investigation of the Catholic Church and soon meets and marries Matt O'Malley. All the while she never lets go of her unfailing and everlasting love for Jack. Spite the Devil is a heartwarming tale of good versus evil while steeped in history and everlasting love. The journey teaches the fundamental concepts of love and rationalizes suffering conveying this experience as beneficial not only for ourselves, but for others as well, to gain entrance into heaven or reach the "other side" in spite of the devil.
Contributing to the conversation regarding Angela Carter's problematic relationship with what she viewed as the interrelated traditions of surrealism and psychoanalysis, Scott Dimovitz explores the intricate connections between Carter's private life and her public writing. He begins with Carter's assertion that it was through her "sexual and emotional life" that she was radicalized, drawing extensively on the British Library's recently archived collection of Carter's private papers, journals, and letters to show how that radicalization happened and what it meant both for her worldview and for her writings. Through close textual analysis and a detailed study of her papers, Dimovitz analyzes the ways in which this second-wave feminist's explorations of sexuality merged with her investigations into surrealism and psychoanalysis, an engagement that ultimately led to the explosively surreal allegories of Carter's later, more complex, and more accomplished work. His study not only offers a new way to view Carter's oeuvre, but also makes the case for the importance of Angela Carter's vision in understanding the transformations in feminist thinking from the postwar to the postfeminist generation.
Pregnant and on the run from her abusive ex-husband, Angela is determined to make a fresh start. Leaving Earth behind, she journeys to a far-off world where she finds peace and safety living in a small mining settlement. Nearly a year later, Angela’s luck changes and her life is endangered when a deadly snowstorm sweeps down upon them. Sinfully seductive “freight dog’” Clint Banner, offers her and her newborn daughter warmth and shelter aboard his snowed-up and grounded cargo ship. Days pass as the storm rages on. Everything’s fine the first week. Trouble starts after that. What Angela and Clint are unprepared for is their mutual desire for more than just survival. Could Clint Banner hold the key to a future Angela has only dreamed of?
Kami Glass and friends battle sorcerers in order to save the sleepy town of Sorry-in-the-Vale while Kami struggles with her own emotions, caught between Ash, the boy who loves her, and Jared, the boy she loves.
"The "Genius"" by Theodore Dreiser is a book that mixes biography and fiction. Showing an all-too-familiar struggle of an artist's need to create and his need to express his sexuality in a way that he sees fit, the book has gripped readers for over a century.