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FROM ITS CREATION BY GOD TO ITS PERFECT SIZE, DETAILS ARE REVEALED ABOUT THE MOON'S UNIQUE CONNECTION TO THE SEASON'S TIDES, ANIMAL LIFECYCLES, AND ROLE AS EARTH'S PROTECTIVE SHIELD. WELL-KNOWN AND HIGHLY RESPECTED CREATION SCIENTISTS DON DEYOUNG AND JOHN WHITCOMB SHARE THEIR KNOWLEDGE IN AN EASY-TO-COMPREHEND FORMAT. NEWLY REVISED AND EXPANDED, THE BOOK IS A DEFINITIVE WORK ON EARTH'S CLOSEST NEIGHBOR AND ITS CONTINUING FASCINATION AMONG EXPLORERS AND RESEARCHERS.
Rancher Adam Sloan is more than meets the eye. As the heir to his Pack, the sexy werewolf's biggest challenge is keeping his kin's true nature under wraps. But a group of jaguar shifters threatens to reveal the pack, blasting into town killing humans in plain sight. And when he smells one at the local diner, his standing orders are to take her out. Lana Turpin doesn't realize she's a moving target. Raised in the foster system, she only knows that she blacks out during the new moon and wakes up without remembering a thing. But now she's being tracked by some strange organization that wants her back—even though she's never stepped foot inside their compound. And the stranger across the diner is watching her like an enemy. It should be a simple mission for Adam, but when he touches the frustratingly beautiful Lana, his inner wolf howls...mate. Now, the two must find and stop the people who hunt her...and Adam must keep his own family from killing the only woman he will ever love. Each book in the Moon series is a standalone, full-length story that can be enjoyed out of order. Reading Order: Book #1 Moonlight Book #2 Hunter's Moon Book #3 Blood Moon Book #4 Harvest Moon Book #5 Ice Moon Book #6 Blue Moon Book #7 Wolf Moon Book #8 New Moon
Let us all lose ourselves in the depths of the night and be engulfed in the love and mysteries that reveal themselves through the moon. An anthology holding the beautiful pieces of writers and poets from all over the world, compiled by writer and editor Via B Hoffmann from Mauritius. The idea behind this book was to bring together newbie as well as experienced writers together in one place and strengthen the writing community.
Introduction / Lois Potter and Joshua Calhoun -- Part I: Medieval -- Origins and others -- Robin Hood: the earliest contexts / Stephen Knight -- The outlaw's song of Trailbaston, the Green man, and the facial machine / Stuart Kane -- Reynardine and Robin Hood: echoes of an outlaw legend in folk balladry / Stephen D. Winick -- Picturing Robin Hood in early print and performance: 1500-1590 / John Marshall -- Image and society -- "Merry" and "Greenwood": a history of some meanings / Helen Phillips -- The late medieval Robin Hood: good yeomanry and bad performances / Kimberly A. Thompson -- "From the Castle Hill they came with violence": the Edinburgh Robin Hood riots of 1561 / Michael Wheare -- Part II: Post medieval -- Image and word -- The work of Robin Hood art in an age of mechanical reproduction / Henry Griffy -- Robin Hood's home away from home: Howard Pyle and his art students / Jill May -- Word and image -- "There was something about that spoke of other things than rags and tatters": Howard Pyle and the language of Robin Hood / Alan T. Gaylord -- The play's the thing: Tom Sawyer re-enacts Robin Hood / Patricia Lee Yongue -- "A song of freedom": Geoffrey Trease's Bows against the barons / Michael R. Evans -- Picturing Marian: illustrations of Maid Marian in juvenile fiction / Sherron Lux -- Image and performance -- Male cross-dressing in Kabuki: Benten the thief / Yoshiko Uéno -- Figures of "Robin Hood" in the Chinese cultural imaginary / Jianguo Chen -- The images of Robin Hood and Don Juan in George Bernard Shaw's Man and superman / Judy B. McInnis -- To steal from the rich and give to the poor: Reginald de Koven's Robin Hood / Orly Leah Krasner -- Recovering Reginald de Koven's and Harry Bache Smith's "Lost" operetta Maid Marian / Lorraine Kochanske Stock.
Agrarian Revolt in a Mexican Village deals with a Taráscan Indian village in southwestern Mexico which, between 1920 and 1926, played a precedent-setting role in agrarian reform. As he describes forty years in the history of this small pueblo, Paul Friedrich raises general questions about local politics and agrarian reform that are basic to our understanding of radical change in peasant societies around the world. Of particular interest is his detailed study of the colorful, violent, and psychologically complex leader, Primo Tapia, whose biography bears on the theoretical issues of the "political middleman" and the relation between individual motivation and socioeconomic change. Friedrich's evidence includes massive interviewing, personal letters, observations as an anthropological participant (e.g., in fiesta ritual), analysis of the politics and other village culture during 1955-56, comparison with other Taráscan villages, historical and prehistoric background materials, and research in legal and government agrarian archives.
As the heir to the human-intolerant Fae Dark Court, Prince Akyran is expected to marry a woman of the Fae, or at least of the fairy brethren, and, as far as his people and family are concerned, that woman should be Ecaeris of the noble Reyneris family. Ecaeris and Akyran have been inseparable since childhood. Ecaeris, a powerful necromancer mage, is Akyran’s most trusted warrior, and his best friend. Although she longs for it to be otherwise, Akyran has never looked at her with desire. When Akyran’s folly is brought to light, Ecaeris’ heart is broken. But she is not a simpering princess who takes being spurned for another on the chin. She’s a warrior mage with a skeleton army, and she knows that the best cure for a broken heart is the battlefield. Can Ecaeris forgive Akyran’s folly and fight with him to save their world from a new and dangerous enemy?
The Realm of Faerie meets Toy Story in the second installment of a larger than life saga involving a village of vinyl trolls who are livelier than their humans realize. The trolls attempt to rescue two of their own from a vengeful enchantment set up by a faery with inimical intentions who emerges from their past. Some other inhabitants of faerie help the trolls as they dodge the odds of being caught, by humans or their more unsavory enemy. Some surprising lessons are learned, some great feats undertaken by those who doubt and those who've never known doubt. Kinship and camaraderie rule, and the trolls persevere against the odds by holding the heart's wisdom as their most unerring guide. Not just for children, this book will delight all who enjoy magical "what-ifs".