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This book is to inspire young teens how to become successful. Teach them to know the children who are sent by the Devil. It helps them to pay attention to the words that comes out of a person mouth whether it’s evil or good. Mostly important they must obey the righteous instructions in this book to become successful.
Real life is messier than the movies. A bold, thought-provoking novel from the exceptionally talented, Steven Camden.
TAPE is an outstanding debut. Told with crackling prose, shimmering with humour and deeply moving, it will haunt anyone who reads it...
To most living in Woodbury, Camden didn't seem much of a mystery. With the violence, drugs, and gangs running amuck, what else could there be to know? To all living in Camden, Woodbury was an enigma that always seemed right out of reach to them. But Ashton, daughter of failing Broadway-wannabe director Anthony Feldman, seems to never really be on the bandwagon to write Camden off as a dysfunctional dystopia. Especially when she goes to the only school that sits on the border of these two different worlds. When she sees a boy who speaks in an almost-endless riddle that seems to encapsulate all of Camden's mystery into one body, she gets led right into the enigma. Vincent Ortega is the same rough-and-tumble, unfortunate namesake and tragic spitting image of his father. He is a real gangbanger in the making, or so they all think. He has always preferred to melt into the background. That is, after all, what you had to do when you have an abusive father. All he wants is to keep himself, his sisters, and his mother off the streets and out of the deadly grips of someone like his father. When he meets a girl who seems hell-bent on figuring him out, without ever figuring herself out first, he truly sees how similar Camden and Woodbury really are.
When Lydia's translation skills land her in the middle of a secret war, who can she trust when her life--and heart--are in jeopardy?
A day by day account of a woman traveling alone across the country in one direction or the other and what she saw or encountered along the way. Getting in the car and "hitting the highway" is something the author has always loved to do. This book contains personal trip logs of cross country trips from 1996 to the present time and includes a few side trips. The near-accidents, funny signs, how she amused and entertained herself on long boring stretches of highway, some of the places she ate, motels she stayed in, and even the thoughts she had make interesting reading, especially for an "armchair traveler". Traveling through storms or zigzagging between Interstate highways to avoid them and other decisions she made on the road are things any traveler can relate to. Going out of the way in order to travel through country areas never seen before, along roads never previously driven or being on some backroad for awhile were things she did not hesitate to do when the urge came to leave the current route. Fast foods, fast lanes, and fast airplanes yet a leisurely pace prevailed when there was something of interest that required "slowing down" and taking a second look or changing to a different route. An "armchair traveler" will find her trip logs to be both interesting and entertaining.
Since the early 1900s, when the first moving images flickered on the screens of storefront nickelodeons, going to the movies has been an integral part of life across America. By the 1950s, there were over 230 theaters in southern New Jersey, ranging from lavish palaces like the 2,000-seat Stanley in Camden to modest venues like the 350-seat Little in Haddonfield. Today, sadly, less than a dozen remain standing, and most of those are now used for other commercial purposes. Only the Broadway in Pitman continues to operate as the last of the original motion-picture palaces. South Jersey Movie Houses is a pictorial tour of the theaters that once raised their curtains to audiences across the southern part of the state. It offers a nostalgic look at their neon marquees and silver screens, bringing back memories of Saturday matinees, 3-D glasses, and movie date nights.
"When it came to the family company, Lacey Kincaid would prove to her hidebound father that she could play with the big boys. She rode into Northbridge, Montana, to get her way with the mighty Camden conglomerate-and was shocked to find herself up against easygoing rancher Seth Camden. Suddenly she couldn't stay out of flirt mode-how her father would crow if he saw her falling for the opposition! More cowboy than CEO, Seth Camden was content to tend the farms in his family's corporate empire. The pleasure was all his as he showed workaholic Lacey how to relax...until things began to feel so serious, he couldn't tell if it was alarm bells or wedding bells he heard ringing from his near future..."--P. [4] of cover.