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It’s said that the first five years with someone is the hardest because you’re learning that person and it’s a different experience, but do the rules still apply when the whole relationship is based on a lie? Adrianna is the epitome of beauty and the love of Rock’s life. With a feisty attitude, a big personality, and even bigger hair to match, she’s every man’s dream, but only one man has her..., or so he thinks. Adrianna isn’t the person that everyone thinks she is, and the skeletons she is hiding in her closet would put a graveyard to shame. So what happens when a blast from her past knocks her perfect life off its axis and sends her world into chaos? Can she keep up her seemingly perfect reality, or will her life become an unending nightmare? After all the drama that Rock has endured throughout his life, he felt that his hardships and search for love were over, but when the woman that he plans to spend the rest of his life with turns out to be a complete stranger, can he continue to ride the wave with her in hopes that things will go back to the way they once were, or will all the secrets that Adrianna is harboring be too much? Take a ride with this pair as they try to get a grip on reality while battling deceit, new love interests, and enemies they never knew they had. Will they be able to put back together the pieces of their failing relationship, or will the drama and pain all be too much to handle?
With the truth of Adrianna’s marriage to Zilla out in the open, Adrianna’s perfect life is crumbling before her eyes. When Rock calls things off between them, she does her best to throw herself into her new career, and what better way to forget the two failed loves of your life than to find a new one? Consequence’s attraction for Adrianna is still as strong as ever, but not wanting to be entangled in her drama, he falls back and tries to focus on his son and getting out of the dope game all together, by taking lightweight boxing matches here and there, but when his crazy baby mama can’t let go of what they once had, she starts to bring more drama and heat into Quence’s life than he can handle. Will he be able to live his happily ever after, or will Tamika’s antics stop him from ever being truly happy? Heartbroken and angry at the world, Rock jumps back into the streets full time, and the only two things on his mind are killing Zilla and forgetting that Adrianna ever existed. But when all his activities in the streets start to bring unwanted attention his way, can he get out the game for good like he originally planned, or will it be too late to turn back? In the midst of all the drama and chaos unfolding in their lives, can the crew get the one thing they’ve been hoping for?
Hunted by his former comrades and labeled a traitor after he refuses to murder an innocent Afghan family, Mason Kane works to unravel a conspiracy that reaches all the way up to the highest levels of the government.
A semiautobiographical portrayal of upper-class adolescence that contains a groundbreaking examination of lesbianism in the young.
In 1996, Patterson Hood recruited friends and fellow musicians in Athens, Georgia, to form his dream band: a group with no set lineup that specialized in rowdy rock and roll. The Drive-By Truckers, as they named themselves, grew into one of the best and most consequential rock bands of the twenty-first century, a great live act whose songs deliver the truth and nuance rarely bestowed on Southerners, so often reduced to stereotypes. Where the Devil Don’t Stay tells the band’s unlikely story not chronologically but geographically. Seeing the Truckers’ albums as roadmaps through a landscape that is half-real, half-imagined, their fellow Southerner Stephen Deusner travels to the places the band’s members have lived in and written about. Tracking the band from Muscle Shoals, Alabama, to Richmond, Virginia, to the author’s hometown in McNairy County, Tennessee, Deusner explores the Truckers’ complex relationship to the South and the issues of class, race, history, and religion that run through their music. Drawing on new interviews with past and present band members, including Jason Isbell, Where the Devil Don’t Stay is more than the story of a great American band; it’s a reflection on the power of music and how it can frame and shape a larger culture.