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Violet Jackson believed she no longer had to live in fear. Years have passed since her childhood stalker terrorized her and her anxiety attacks were nothing more than a bad memory. Until her friend is murdered in Violet's apartment. Now the panic is back and her glamorous NYC life crumbles around her. Seeking solace in the one place she always felt safe, Violet returns to the small Amish community of Hunters Ridge, to the solitude and security of her family's country estate. But nowhere is completely safe, and Violet must realize danger lurks in small towns too...Bad boy Theo Cooper is back in Hunters Ridge. He got the discipline he needed in the army and a dose of reality when his dad became sick. Now Theo is home to try and salvage the family lumberyard business-in addition to being a father to a young son. He never expected that Violet would offer to help figure out the accounting problems caused by his father's sudden absence. And he certainly never expected she'd forgive how badly their young love had gone on Prom night. But something is different about Violet...she's changed since high school, she's more reserved, quiet. Scared. But of what-or of who?As weeks pass, it becomes clear Violet's accidents aren't so accidental. Someone is out to hurt the woman he's growing to love, and Theo will risk everything, including his closely guarded heart, to protect her. But will he be in time to save her?
One of the world's most beautiful endangered species, butterflies are as lucrative as gorillas, pandas, and rhinos on the black market. In this cutthroat $200 million business, no one was more successful—or posed a greater ecological danger—than Yoshi Kojima, the kingpin of butterfly smugglers. In Winged Obsession, author Jessica Speart tells the riveting true story of rookie U.S. Fish and Wildlife Agent Ed Newcomer's determined crusade to halt the career of a brazen and ingenious criminal with an almost supernatural sixth sense for survival. But the story doesn't end there. Speart chronicles her own attempts, while researching the book, to befriend Kojima before betraying him—unaware that the cagey smuggler had his own plans to make the writer a player in his illegal butterfly trade.
Some love stories are… soul stories Dr. Radhika Sharma is what girls of today aspire to become – educated, financially independent and a woman of substance. But within, she is a broken person who is yet to come to terms with her past, her first love Raen’s sudden death. In comes a nine-year-old patient under her treatment, who is not only infatuated with her, but also keeps asking her non-stop questions. One of those questions leads her to open Raen’s personal diary. By the time she finishes reading the diary, Radhika finds an uncanny similarity between Raen and the young patient. She finds herself in the middle of an unusual situation. One after another, shocking truths emerge, which push her to question if an unexplained attraction is the missing link between souls. A Thing Beyond Forever is a pristine love story which digs deep into human emotions and explores the complexity of it in a soul-stirring manner.
#1 WASHINGTON POST BESTSELLER • “Jonathan Kellerman’s novels are an obsession; once started it is hard to quit.”—Orlando Sentinel Tanya Bigelow was a solemn little girl when Dr. Alex Delaware successfully treated her obsessive-compulsive symptoms. Now, at nineteen, Tanya returns with a curious request: that Delaware investigate her aunt’s deathbed confession of murder. While Delaware doubts that Patty Bigelow was capable of such a horrific act, he agrees to look into the matter. Armed with only the vaguest details, Delaware and LAPD detective Milo Stugris retrace Patty’s and Tanya’s nomadic and increasingly puzzling life. Then a very real murder tears open a terrifying tunnel into the past, where secrets—and bodies—are buried. As the tension mounts, Delaware and Sturgis uncover a tangled history of desperation, vengeance, and death—a legacy of evil that refuses to die. Praise for Obsession “The characters are rich, the story’s well-plotted and you won’t stop reading.”—Boston Herald “Filled with Kellerman’s psychological insight and action-packed drama.”—Toronto Sun
He never needed anyone...until he met her. When an Amish youth is killed in a suspicious hunting accident, Deputy Caitlin Flagler suspects his death is tied to the "Doomsday Preppers" group that has settled in Hunters Ridge. In digging for the answers, she meets Austin Young, a newcomer who seems to have more secrets than the elusive head of the sprawling compound. Caitlin's relentless pursuit of the truth puts her in the crosshairs of a violent extremist. Austin must find a way to protect her and preserve his cover. When romantic sparks fly, Caitlin must decide if she can trust her heart... and the handsome outsider.
A Spiritual Romantic Comedy born from the authors vision to combine spirituality, romantic comedy with a good dose of personal experience, Gorilla with Cellulite is the first in its genre. Its a journey of self development of a young modern woman (Kate), who is feeling deflated and unhappy about her current life situation. Hesitantly, she turns to spirituality as the last attempt to find happiness. She begins to read a book about the laws of metaphysics and keeps a journal in her Mac to track her progress. Poor self-image, low self-esteem leads her into the arms of deceit and sorrow. Can spirituality really save her? Will she ever find love?
We live in an age of obsession. Not only are we hopelessly devoted to our work, strangely addicted to our favorite television shows, and desperately impassioned about our cars, we admire obsession in others: we demand that lovers be infatuated with one another in films, we respond to the passion of single-minded musicians, we cheer on driven athletes. To be obsessive is to be American; to be obsessive is to be modern. But obsession is not only a phenomenon of modern existence: it is a medical category—both a pathology and a goal. Behind this paradox lies a fascinating history, which Lennard J. Davis tells in Obsession. Beginning with the roots of the disease in demonic possession and its secular successors, Davis traces the evolution of obsessive behavior from a social and religious fact of life into a medical and psychiatric problem. From obsessive aspects of professional specialization to obsessive compulsive disorder and nymphomania, no variety of obsession eludes Davis’s graceful analysis.
What You See Is What You Hear develops a unique model of analysis that helps students and advanced scholars alike to look at audiovisual texts from a fresh perspective. Adopting an engaging writing style, the author draws an accessible picture of the field, offering several analytical tools, historical background, and numerous case studies. Divided into five main sections, the monograph covers problems of definitions, history, and most of all analysis. The first part raises the main problems related to audiovisuality, including taxonomical and historical questions. The second part provides the bases for the understanding of audiovisual creative communication as a whole, introducing a novel theoretical model for its analysis. The next three part focus elaborate on the model in all its constituents and with plenty of case studies taken from the field of cinema, TV, music videos, advertising and other forms of audiovisuality. Methodologically, the book is informed by different paradigms of film and media studies, multimodality studies, structuralism, narratology, “auteur theory” in the broad sense, communication studies, semiotics, and the so-called “Numanities.” What You See Is What You Hear enables readers to better understand how to analyze the structure and content of diverse audiovisual texts, to discuss their different idioms, and to approach them with curiosity and critical spirit.
Videogame, player, text examines the playing and playful subject through a series of analytical essays focused on particular videogames and playing experiences. With essays from a range of internationally renowned game scholars, the major aim of this collection is to show how it is that videogames communicate their meanings and provide their pleasures. Each essay focuses on specific examples of gameplay dynamics to tease out the specificities of videogames as a new form of interaction between text and digital technology for the purposes of entertainment. That modes of engagement with the videogame text are many and varied, and construct the playing subject in different ways, provides the central theme of Videogame,player, text. Online play, clan membership, competitive or co-operative play, player modification of game texts, and the solo play of a single player are each addressed through individual analyses of the gameplay experiences produced by, for example, The Sims, Grand Theft Auto, Prince of Persia, Doom, Quake, World of Warcraft, StreetFighter and Civilisation.
They can't forgive. And they'll never forget. Growing up Amish never prepared Eve Reist for the scrutiny of being in the public eye. As a rising star on a TV station in Buffalo, she's had to deal with her share of fanatics. When she learns her mother is ill, Eve takes a much-needed vacation and returns to her childhood home in Hunters Ridge. Dylan Kimble, an Englischer, never thought he'd stay in quiet Hunters Ridge. But after his twin brother's tragic death, he gives up his dreams of becoming a lawyer and settles into his job as a deputy in town. He's determined to be there for his young nephews. When Eve's return to Hunters Ridge sparks anger from someone in her past, she has to rely on her old friend Dylan to protect her. The pair had forged an unlikely friendship years ago over their love of movies which they shared at the small theater in town. As tensions grow and old conflicts ignite, Eve and Dylan grow closer. But will someone's desperate need to seek revenge end the couple's new beginning? PLAIN REVENGE is the gripping fourth book in the Hunters Ridge series of Amish romantic suspense. New readers can enjoy this book as a stand-alone novel, while readers of the series will appreciate cameos by characters from the first three books as more mayhem befalls the quaint little town of Hunters Ridge.