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Billionaire Max Hamilton thought he was finally starting to find contentment, more than two years after losing his wife Mia in a tragic drowning accident. He'd been reunited with a sister he hadn't realized existed. Finally he had family again, a reprieve from the pain and loneliness that had haunted him since his devastating loss. Yeah...he was as happy as a man could be, considering he had lost the other half of his soul and most of his heart when fate had torn his wife away from him. Or so he believed...until the day he rescued a mysterious woman in the park, a female who somehow had managed to reignite a part of him that he thought was long dead... Suddenly, Max's protective, dominant, possessive male instincts flare to life, leaving him at a loss as to how lightning could possibly strike twice in one lifetime. Is he truly being given another chance at real happiness, or would it be dangled in front of him, only to be taken away once again? Find out by reading The Billionaire's Salvation, Book 3 in The New York Times Bestselling series, The Billionaire's Obsession. This is a complete contemporary erotic romance novel with no cliffhangers!
The secret of extreme wealth creation The Outsider's Edge reveals the one common denominator the world's richest self-made people share. Studying the lives of 17 world-famous billionaires, author and researcher Brent Taylor discovered that their one shared experience is that of the outsider. From Bill Gates to Richard Branson to Warren Buffett, being different from their peers, and proud of it, has served as prime motivation for many of the world's most spectacularly successful people. Turning the conventional wisdom about wealth on its head, The Outsider's Edge reveals the true value and importance of being different. Brent Taylor (Australia) is a professional researcher who has worked for more than 20 years as a market researcher to government and corporations.
Many people as what the truth are. Don’t look at it as man’s knowledge. There is a high power that is the truth, and it goes beyond us. There is also a power that claims to be the high power. That’s a hidden or camouflaged lie. Knowing and being a doer of the truth can be a wonderful journey to follow; it’s even free! That high power paid a price for us, so we can become a member of that but from free- will it will disconnect us from the claim to be power. Our price to pay, and it is for ever and ever. Also, unconditional love and forgiveness plays a role for us. Also, unconditional love and forgiveness plays a role for us. Then we are an asset to the high power, and we receive blessings.
Finally, at last, Ira tells it as it is; in his latest book, In the Name of Jesus. This book is a tutorial on the gospel according to substitution, and it answers all your questions. Perhaps, Ira is right? Perhaps, present-day Christianity is in serious trouble theologically? What if Christian leadership is not in the truth? What if Christian pulpits are preaching every Sunday a theology that is not really in the name of Jesus? Every Christian should make this book essential reading. It is easy to understand, and it offers overwhelming scriptural evidence of its correctness. As Ira puts it; "This book is Christianity 101!"
If that man calls her one more time... So what if Gabe Campos is a model-dating billionaire who gets Keisha Jacobs hotter than a Ferrari's engine on the straightaway? He keeps pushing her to sell her family's furniture business, but she'll never give in—not unless she wants to give her father a second heart attack. All Gabe should be thinking about is how he'll finally get revenge on the man who killed his father. But when he meets the man's daughter, Keisha, instead of focusing on destroying Jacobs Fine Furnishings, he can't get her warm-whisky voice out of his mind. Forced by a snow storm to spend the night together, their passion ignites. The next day, however, it's back to business. The only way Keisha can save her family is to win a bet with the billionaire. But neither realized their hearts are part of the bargain...
In contrast to consumerism, which encourages shallow relationships, McCarthy explains how the love of God fosters a deep attachment to the world, and that a right ordering of desires will lead Christians to an enjoyment of life that require less "stuff."
Life of US (U.S.) is addressed to those who love children and are seeking God's guidance. The author encourages readers to explore whether some governments are taking US on the road to Hell, where God's children are left wanting. Children in need of a better life are left to die unnecessary deaths; they watch their parents lose jobs, and they see them losing their houses. We watch our neighbors go to jail and live in another form of Hell on Earth. If you believe this suffering needs to be eliminated, Life of US (U.S.) will introduce you to important concepts. God has a plan. What is it and how do we get started?
Sexy, single…and loaded! Get caught up in a world of luxury and love with three hot billionaires in the Lusty Billionaire's Bundle! Includes The Billionaire's Contract Bride by Carol Marinelli, The Billionaire's Pregnant Mistress by Lucy Monroe, and The Billionaire Boss's Bride by Cathy Williams.
In Indirect Subjects, Matthew H. Brown analyzes the content of the prolific Nigerian film industry's mostly direct-to-video movies alongside local practices of production and circulation to show how screen media play spatial roles in global power relations. Scrutinizing the deep structural and aesthetic relationship between Nollywood, as the industry is known, and Nigerian state television, Brown tracks how several Nollywood films, in ways similar to both state television programs and colonial cinema productions, invite local spectators to experience liberal capitalism not only as a form of exploitation but as a set of expectations about the future. This mode of address, which Brown refers to as “periliberalism,” sustains global power imbalances by locating viewers within liberalism but distancing them from its processes and benefits. Locating the wellspring of this hypocrisy in the British Empire's practice of indirect rule, Brown contends that culture industries like Nollywood can sustain capitalism by isolating ordinary African people, whose labor and consumption fuel it, from its exclusive privileges.