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"Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (1825-1911) was the most important and the most popular black feminist abolitionist writer and activist of the nineteenth century. A Brighter Day Coming, the most comprehensive collection of her works, includes all the poems from Harper's extant original volumes, plus many that have never been collected and one that was discovered in manuscript; speeches; and a selection of prose, including excerpts from the novel Iola Leroy and the serialized novel Fancy Etchings, and a generous group of letters ..."--Back cover.
The Coming Day documents life at the edges of American society in ways that are both personal and universal in human experience. In this collection, poems stand at the crossroads of anthropology, theology, history, and ethnic identity to address issues of violence, poverty, immigrants’ rights, family life, drug addiction, cultural diversity, and the struggle and hope of those too long ignored. The craft in these poems keenly documents life across the vast landscape of the United States and parts of Latin America to effectively make the world of forgotten people comprehensible. Recinos’ collection seeks to give voice to the invisible people of the Americas born on God’s day off.
A Study Guide and a Teacher’s Manual Gospel Principles was written both as a personal study guide and as a teacher’s manual. As you study it, seeking the Spirit of the Lord, you can grow in your understanding and testimony of God the Father, Jesus Christand His Atonement, and the Restoration of the gospel. You can find answers to life’s questions, gain an assurance of your purpose and self-worth, and face personal and family challenges with faith.
We know Christ is coming, and the time to prepare is nearly past. Since the days of Adam, mankind has looked forward to the Second Coming of Christ. Discover the ancient American prophecies from the Jaredites, Nephites, Aztecs, Cherokee, and more that clearly depict our modern calamities. In fascinating detail, these accounts make it clear that the end of our world is upon us and a new millennium is about to begin.
The new book in the Francis and Gordon Jones mysteries set in 1950’s Norfolk. A witty spoof of the classic boy’s detective stories. Following on from 'The Voice of Doom' (ISBN: 97817893285)
It was a very cold winter in northwest China when a little beggar girl who could neither hear nor speak followed a rag-tag line of children into a large white tent. She fixed her eyes on the woman who was speaking and the bright colored pictures she showed. Gwa-gwa, whose name means Little Lonely could not know that one of those pictures was to change her life. Gwa-gwa is a real person; the missionaries are real, as are many of the details of the story. When at last she comes to a real home on Christmas Day, a day she afterward called her coming day, Gwa-gwa found some answers to the questions she couldnt even ask. What did the picture mean? Who was the Baby? And what did it have to do with her?
A new day is dawning for mankind. This new day will be filled with darkness for some but light for others. As this light is revealed; more of Gods of glory will be appearing in the earth. A New Day Is Dawning will teach you not only how to live out the special purpose God has for you in the last time but also how to remove problems and hindrances in your life that may be holding you back from experiencing all of Gods goodness towards you.
A system of rituals and pathworkings focusing upon the gods and goddesses of Ancient Egypt. This book explores the myths of the Ennead - nine deities revered in the city of Heliopolis, including Osiris, Isis, Nephthys and Set, among others.
Summoning iconic outlaws and rebels such as Johnny Appleseed, Casanova, and Bonnie and Clyde, the poems in this collection seek to alter and turn back the mass mediated tendency to find "the great awakening in a/car; nirvana in a hamburger,/a genie in a tube/of toothpaste." The poems direct this discontent with the real world, not into another call for action or mere complaint, but into a performance that enacts the very change it seeks. This is the point where poems become rituals of countercultural resistance played out in prayers and offerings to mother ocean and the White Goddess, or as magic spells to actualize the Ancient Egyptian's "coming day": a new dawn that awaits the weary traveler through the long night of the dead. The long poem that leads the volume, Thus Glad for Nightmares, uses a scatalogical fantasy to playfully criticize the manufacturing of the American dystopia. The generous selection of shorter works that follow continues the silly-serious satire in conceits that involve Geronimo as a drag king taking over television to replay Custers Last Stand; Blackbeard emparting hobo wisdom over a campfire tea break; crowds of rioting hobos, the rise of the primordial Babylonian goddess Tiamat, and a giant beaver raging like King Lear. Funny, angry, ridiculous, mocking and outrageous by turns, these spells satirize the conventions of sexuality, business, television, family, property, violence, materialism, and rebellion in ways that are sure to delight even those who claim they dont like poetry.