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FROM POPULAR AUTHOR OF LGBTQ SHIFTER ROMANCE, MEGAN LINDEN Leading Me Home was a treat to read. ~ Boy Meets Boy Reviews This is the kind of story that made me fall in love with romance novels to begin with. ~ Redz World It gave me everything I could want in a book. ~ MM Good Book Reviews Harrington Hills: Part One &– a box set 1 - Leading Me Home Pretending to date the guy he has a crush on? Kevin's sure he's heading for a disaster. A broken heart, at least. 2 - Building a Home Dating a younger guy wasn't anywhere in Zack's plans, but can he ignore the instincts of his wolf? 3 - Coming Back Home He thought his mate would never come back. He was wrong. When you're in Harrington Pack, you'll never be alone. And if you don't have a mate...you may just find him. Harrington Hills is a small town seemingly glued to a large forest from two sides. It's also a home for the Harrington Pack—an old, established pack that's now ruled by two women in a long-term, committed relationship. Since the Alpha and the Beta are in a same-sex relationship, the pack is very welcoming to LGBTQ+ members. From the Alpha's Son, the heir of the pack, to the newest wolf in town—everyone has a chance to find their mate in Harrington Hills under a watchful eye of well-meaning community.
James Harrington (1611-1677) was a pioneer in applying the methods of Machiavelli and other civic humanists to English political society and its landed structure. In the century after his death, his ideas were adapted to become an important ingredient in the vocabulary of both English and American political opposition to the methods of Hanoverian parliamentary monarchy. This work includes all of his prose works on political subjects as well as Oceana, his best-known work. The critical introduction attempts to revalue the evidence concerning Harrington's life and writings, to locate them in the context of Civil War, Commonwealth and Puritan thinking and to trace the development of Harringtonian and neo-Harringtonian ideology during subsequent generations.
In this tender, funny, and sharp memoir-in-essays, the author of Amateur Hour examines marriage, divorce, and the ways love, loss & longing shape a life. Six weeks after she and her husband announced their divorce, Kimberly Harrington began work on a book that she thought would be about divorce, full of dark humor and a not-small amount of annoyance. After all, on the heels of planning to dissolve a twenty-year marriage, they had chosen to still live together in the same house with their kids. Over the course of two years of what was supposed to be a temporary period of transition, she sifted through how she had formed her ideas about relationships, sex, marriage, and divorce. And she dug back into the history of her marriage—how she and her future ex-husband had met, what it felt like to be madly in love, how they changed, the impact that having children had on their relationship, and what they still owed each other. But You Seemed So Happy is an honest, intimate biography of a marriage, from its heady, idealistic, and easy beginnings to its slowly coming apart, and finally to its evolution into something completely unexpected. As she probes what it means when everyone assumes you’re happy as long as you’re still married, Harrington skewers the casual way we make life-altering decisions when we’re young. Ultimately, this moving and funny memoir-in-essays is an irreverent act of forgiveness—of ourselves, our partners, and the relationships that have run their course but will always hold a permanent place in our lives. “An honest, tender, and often hilarious book on the end of a modern marriage. No matter your relationship status, But You Seemed So Happy begs the question, What are we all doing here? I laughed, I cried, I found myself in the pages over and over again.” —Kate Baer, New York Times–bestselling author of What Kind of Woman: Poems “Intimate and raw yet meticulously scrubbed of the slightest tinge of self-pity, Harrington explores the pain and intricacies of a marriage and its dissolution with a ruthless, unflinching honest and gallows humor that makes you feel like you buried a body with her.” —Emily Flake, cartoonist for The New Yorker
Containing all decisions of general interest decided in the courts of last resort of the several states [1869-1887].