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  • Book cover of Passing Glances

    Who exactly — them or me — first came up with the idea, I'm not certain. No matter. The Institute for Southern Studies staff asked if I would take out six months to travel the South as a reporter for the Institute's then-new syndicated weekly column, Facing South. Captive to Southern fondness for poking about the region and to that larger American myth about freedom deriving from travel, I claimed the job before any list of applicants could be gotten up. A new van was purchased and fitted out with a bed, typing stand, CB and regular AM-FM radio, specially cut mosquito netting, and a fan. The Institute's charge dictated that I'd see the rural South, not too much of the Interstate/urbanized South. Places like Ville Platte, Louisiana; Ink, Arkansas; Ripley, Mississippi; Pickens, South Carolina; and Fincastle, Virginia. The blessings of this constraint came vividly to mind when my path intersected an Interstate cloverleaf in Georgia — typically crammed with service stations, motels and fast food franchises. Over the door of one eatery hung a banner proclaiming "Join the Fun — Eat and Run." All told, I logged nearly 28,000 miles between May and October, 7977. I kept an eye out for the little things. Graffiti, for example. In the rest room of a Charlottesville, Virginia, vegetarian restaurant I found: "Mother made me a homosexual." Below, in another's writing, "Fantastic! If I bought her the yarn, would she make me one?" Or signs, like one on a New Orleans building: Straight Business College. And listened for larger themes, not at all certain I could hear them — but knowing that these, too, were a Southern tradition going back at least to the days of Fannie Kemble's Journal of a Residence on a Georgia Plantation in 1838-1839, the powerful attack on slavery, and William Byrd 's History of the Dividing Line Betwixt Virginia and North Carolina, the travel log some assert first described "the good ol' boy."

  • Book cover of To Pay the Ferryman
    Pat Black

     · 2025

    A cold case in the city of the dead. D.I. Lomond is a devoted family man. A good detective. When the body of a young woman involved in the worlds of art and adult streaming is found in the River Clyde, Lomond believes there may be echoes of a cold case from the start of his career: an unsolved death on a rural Scottish estate in the 1990s. Then, a Swedish feminist activist, who also has a connection to Lomond's past, arrives in the city to protest against the failure of the police to find the killer. The victims all seem to be drawn from the world of art and business. Is the cold case the answer, or just part of the key, and could the killer be about to get dangerously close to Lomond and his family?

  • Book cover of Platform One
    Pat Black

     · 2000

    This assessment and review pack is designed to assess children's learning at the end of each half term. The activities provided are linked directly to the Key Learning Objectives outlined in the Framework for Teaching Mathematics and the new NNS guidelines for assessment and review lessons.

  • Book cover of Diverticular Disease

    Diverticular disease first became recognised at the beginning of the 20th century and although the incidence of the disease is not known, it is considered to be a disease of the older person. This book looks at a disease that is known as a Western world disease, often called by surgeons a 'cinderella disease' as they often feel that there is little to offer the patient with uncomplicated diverticular disease. The book endeavours to give the healthcare professional a holistic view of the care and pattern of diverticular disease, and chapters may be used as stand alone chapters for those wishing to know more about stoma care, alternative treatments or food management. This book is essential reading for healthcare professionals involved in the care of patients with this disease.

  • Book cover of The Crystal Beads, Lalka's Journey

    "A Star of David or a rosary? In 1939 Poland, a young Jewish girl must reject one of these and accept the other without understanding why. The girl's mother is forced to make a heartbreaking sacrifice to keep her daughter safe"--Provided by publisher.

  • Book cover of Lemons on a Plate
    Pat Black

     · 2018

    The poverty-stricken vagabond Barron Desulfer, addicted to drugs and alcohol and once a professor and renowned writer, decides to turn his life around. By chance, he meets up with an ex military Colonel, Ken, who is looking for someone to write his autobiography; this opportunity becomes the only hope that the desperate Barron needs to bring him up from the poorness in which he lives. Barron, suffering from progressive memory loss, has kept a daily journal for over thirty years. He begins interviewing the Colonel. As the month's pass and the project moves forward, Barron stumbles onto a diary that belongs to the Colonel. What he finds in it will forever change the path in which he is on; hope will be stripped away. Or will it? A former ghostwriter for some of the world's acclaimed novelists, author Pat Black has intentionally shied away from modern writing and traditional grammar standards, as he reaches the reader by way of an altered-state voice to create a truly unique first-of-four series.

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  • Book cover of All the Broken Angels

    "Get ready for a guided tour back in time with an endearing family as your gracious hosts.... This decades-in-the-making historical journey begins in 1958 with one of the most intriguing opening lines yet." -Indies Today, 5-star review

  • Book cover of Ernest Lived

    "Ernest Lived ... and other Historical Fiction Short Stories" by JK LarkinAre You in The Market For a Bold, Daring, and Innovative New Collection of Wonderfully Unique Historical Fiction Stories?Ernest Lived ...and other Historical Fiction Short Stories is a new anthology under The Red Penguin Collection that aims to celebrate the classic genre with over a dozen new entries. Travel across North America in the 1950s by train, sneak around the pyramids of Giza while they were first under construction, fight against the axis in the second world war-so many adventures await!Featuring the works of the following writers:Steven AlcottSkye BallantynePat Black-GouldR. J. ErbacherChristina HoagDiane KaneDavid LangeDebbie De LouiseValerie OrmondVaughn RosteWilliam John RostronSwati SinghJasmine TrittenMinoti VaishnavSarah Young

  • Book cover of Words to Music