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Escape into the captivating world of Fate's Highway, where love transcends time and death cannot sever the bonds between soulmates. After a tragic car accident claims the lives of his wife June and two children, Dean Edmonds struggles to pull his life back together. Still haunted by vivid dreams of the family he lost; he finds solace in the compassionate care of his nurse Maggie. An unexpected romance blossoms. But just when Dean dares to hope for lasting happiness, a supernatural force threatens to tear his newfound joy apart. On a dark and stormy night, Dean's car careens off the highway once again. He survives, only to wake up in a reality where nine years have suddenly vanished - and June and his children are still alive. Plagued by fragmented memories and mounting confusion, Dean searches desperately for answers. Has he lost his mind or did he cross into an alternate world? Dean faces a heartrending choice: abandon the family fate robbed him of years ago, or sacrifice the new life and love he fought so hard to build from the wreckage. Fans of emotionally gripping time travel romances like The Time Traveler's Wife and Outlander will devour Fate's Highway. Immerse yourself in a poignant tale overflowing with nostalgia, sacrifice, and enduring love that endures beyond this world. Readers who have loved A Bridge Across the Ocean, The Last Letter from Your Lover, The Rose Garden, The Winter Sea, or Somewhere in Time will enjoy this moving story.
F. A. T. E. My Future After Traumatic Events is a powerful story about a man who went through a lot--from being dead at birth, to having cancer as a teenager, through his time as a soldier and beyond. Miguel De La Rocha has been very open about his experiences battling the Angel of Death and traumatic events, which has become an inspiration to always push through life and never give up. This book is a great read for people who like action-packed, dramatic and relatable autobiographies.
With two essays devoted to Wordsworth, The Fate of Translation reframes the discussion of Hesperian aesthetics initiated in Robert Eisenhauer's Mythic Paradigms, suggesting how the question of translation poses itself at the crossing of textual high- and low-roads: on the one hand, in the critical and scholarly debate concerning the relevance of Goethe's «Der Wandrer» (in the English version by William Taylor) to the primal/primary scene of autobiography and, on the other, in the reprojection of supernatural agency (numen) in the context of the Literature of Power. Confrontational deixis and a hermeneutic counterturn energize Wordsworth's self-assertive resensing of antiquity and modernity via satire, pastoral, and the sonnet. The third essay, ranging from Pindarizing texts by Cowley, Goethe, and Hölderlin to the films of Matthew Barney, shifts the focus to mimetic enthusiasms among translators and replicators of the «full fan-experience.» John Barth's intriguing analogy between metafiction and fractal geometry serves as the catalyst for a reading of texts by Thomas Browne and Friedrich Schlegel, a major painting by Philipp Otto Runge, and The Arabian Nights as malignly received by Poe. The arabesque and grotesque are seen as engaged in a problematics of passion at the utopian end of art, a consensualist paradigm akin to the Dionysian liberation of the subject/player/fan in baseball - one whose field of implication includes Nietzsche and contemporary novelists. Eisenhauer reads Padgett Powell's Edisto as a declamatory mini-epic divergent in its muthos from the tradition of the «American hieroglyphic». Edisto's fictive reinvention of the South suggests a revisiting of the Literature of Power as priviledged, emancipative counterfacticity of «other truth» congruent with the fictive worlds of Cable, Faulkner, and Günther Grass.
This book explores the understanding of freedom developed in the later novels of celebrated Canadian author, David Adams Richards. Many reviewers highlight two interconnected features in Richards novels: a seemingly rigid determinism of setting and sociodemographics, and a resulting hopelessness. In contrast, Richards describes the quest of human life and the purpose of his novels as a search for freedom. This book explores the account of freedom that is developed through the course of four of Richards’s works: The Friends of Meager Fortune, Mercy Among the Children, The Lost Highway, and Crimes Against My Brother. Following the Augustinian thread that informs Richards’s writing, we argue that rather than presenting an understanding of human life that is bleak or hopeless, Richards instead reveals an argument wherein one’s happiness and freedom is found in the midst of love.
The story begs the question of whether fate is a manmade concept, a product of the human imagination, or a reality. Whichever side the reader favors, the story of Carlos and Yasmin can make him a believer or not one at all. The question of what role this concept plays in the daily lives of the characters in the story, and beyond, hangs on feverishly throughout its theme. It in fact controls it and makes it inevitable that such question be answered. Carlos and Yasmin possessed the ingredients for a long-lasting love, one that could be truly exceptional, one that could never have been if not for fate, or perhaps one that never was because of it. An intriguing story.
For almost four decades, controversy has surrounded the tactical use of herbicides in Southeast Asia by the United States military. Few environmental or occupational health issues have received the sustained international attention that has been focused on Agent Orange, the major tactical herbicide deployed in Southern Vietnam. With the opening and establishment of normal relations between the United States and the Socialist Republic of Vietnam in 1995, the time has come for a thorough re-examination of the military use of Agent Orange and other "tactical herbicides" in Southern Vietnam, and the subsequent actions that have been taking place since their use in Vietnam. The United States Department of Defense has had the major role in all military operations involving the use of tactical herbicides, including that of Agent Orange. This included the Department's purchase, shipment and tactical use of herbicides in Vietnam, its role in the disposition of Agent Orange after Vietnam, its role in conducting long-term epidemiological investigations of the men of Operation RANCH HAND, and its sponsorship of ecological and environmental fate studies. This book was commissioned by The Office of the Deputy Under Secretary of Defense (Installations and Environment) with the intent of providing documentation of the knowledge on the history, use, disposition and environmental fate of Agent Orange and its associated dioxin.