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The Sylvia Riddle is an epic poem set in medieval Scotland. The story maintains a Christian theme throughout as good battles evil. As the story develops, a hero emerges. He learns that the beautiful Princess Sylvia MacBee has been hexed by an evil wizard (Satan). The hex requires that Sylvia cannot marry unless her suitor successfully answers a riddle. An incorrect answer to the riddle has a fatal consequence. Eighty men have died attempting to answer the riddle, and there are no more suitors in Realm MacBee willing to risk death. As the story unfolds, the hero, Knight Jude MacPhitt also learns that not only must he answer the marital riddle to save Sylvia from marrying Grooson, Satan's horrific son, but he must answer an additional riddle for each of the seven deadly sins. His woeful journey takes him to the depths of Hell. The Sylvia Riddle is filled with challenges, excitement, and love while dealing with many moral conundrums.
Do you often feel that your prayers reach no farther than the ceiling? Christianity Alive! with Prayer Power! shines light on communication with God. Join author Frances Knight as she explains Christianity and Prayer Power. With amazing correlation of scripture, she weaves Biblical principles of Christianity throughout the Lord's Model Prayer with impressive testimonies. This Textbook for LIFE shows how you can BE and DO more than you ever thought possible, and it has answers for serious problems. You will learn: • How you can know God personally as 'Father.' • How Jesus paved the way by paying for your sins. • How the Holy Spirit will empower and lead you through the maze of life that is complicated by the evil one. • How to forgive yourself, and others...how to overcome temptation. • In Him, you can be a Victor! And, you will get a glimpse of Glory! • Whether you are a novice or a scholar, this book will provide personal inspiration and is a great source for sermons and Bible Study lessons. Past publishing editor, Leonard LeSourd, wrote, 'I kept your book by my nightstand....' 'Frances wrote the most interesting and complete book on prayer that I have ever read anywhere, at anytime, by any author, even while working on my doctorate.' —Rev. Gene Horton, Th.D. Frances has been a Ladies Bible Teacher at the First Baptist Church in Rio Hondo, Texas, for forty-one years. Also, she has conducted many seminars; and, taught prayer principles on more than sixty TBN 'Praise the Lord' programs from the KLUJ Channel #44 station. Frances and her devoted husband, Bob, have been married for fifty-seven years and live in Harlingen, Texas.
Throughout the twentieth century, even the harshest prison systems in the United States were rather porous. Incarcerated people were regularly released from prison for Christmas holidays; the wives of incarcerated men could visit for seventy-two hours relatively unsupervised; and governors routinely commuted the sentences of people convicted of murder. By the 1990s, these practices had become rarer as politicians and the media—in contrast to corrections officials—described the public as potential victims who required constant protection against the threat of violence. In A Wall Is Just a Wall Reiko Hillyer focuses on gubernatorial clemency, furlough, and conjugal visits to examine the origins and decline of practices that allowed incarcerated people to transcend prison boundaries. Illuminating prisoners’ lived experiences as they suffered, critiqued, survived, and resisted changing penal practices, she shows that the current impermeability of the prison is a recent, uneven, and contested phenomenon. By tracking the “thickening” of prison walls, Hillyer historicizes changing ideas of risk, the growing bipartisan acceptance of permanent exile and fixing the convicted at the moment of their crime as a form of punishment, and prisoners’ efforts to resist.
In his new book, Raymond Smullyan, grand vizier of the logic puzzle, joins Scheherazade, a charming young woman of “fantastic logical ingenuity,” to give us 1001 hours of brain-teasing fun. Scheherazade, we find, has gotten back into hot water with the king, and is once more in danger of losing her head at down. But, thinking quickly, she tempts the king to stay her execution by posing him the most delightfully devious mathematical and logic puzzle ever invented. They keep him guessing for many more nights until the fatal hour has passed, and she keeps her head. The Riddle of Scheherazade includes several wonderful old chestnuts and many fiendishly original puzzles, 225 in all. There are logic tricks and number games, metapuzzles (puzzles about puzzles), liar/truth-teller exercises, Gödelian brian twisters, baffling paradoxes, and an excursion, under Scheherazade’s expert guidance, into an amusing new field invented by Smullyan, called “coercive” logic, in which the answer to a problem can actually change the fate of the puzzler! An absolute must for all puzzle fans—from the middle-school whiz to the sophisticated mathematician or computer scientist.
The Cracks Between What We Are and What We Are Supposed to Be forms an extended consideration not only of Harryette Mullen’s own work, methods, and interests as a poet, but also of issues of central importance to African American poetry and language, women’s voices, and the future of poetry. Together, these essays and interviews highlight the impulses and influences that drive Mullen’s work as a poet and thinker, and suggest unique possibilities for the future of poetic language and its role as an instrument of identity and power.