Daybreak Woman

Daybreak Woman

Author: Jane Lamm Carroll

Publisher:

Published: 2020-09

Total Pages: 240

ISBN-13: 9781681341668

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A woman's remarkable life provides a new perspective on a century of turbulent change.


NIV, DayBreak Verses for Women

NIV, DayBreak Verses for Women

Author: Lawrence O. Richards

Publisher: Zondervan

Published: 2012-12-25

Total Pages: 82

ISBN-13: 031042156X

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Look no further for God’s promises in your times of need. This DayBreak Verses for Women ebook has topically arranged Scripture verses from the NIV Bible to help you when you most need it. For every season of life, God has promises that offer direction, peace, wisdom, and perspective. The DayBreak Book series is a collection of 5 ebooks, each offering unique prayers or promises from NIV Scripture. Topically arranged, each book is categorized into sections for quick, easy searching.


Daybreak

Daybreak

Author: Maureen Brady

Publisher: Simon and Schuster

Published: 2013-05-01

Total Pages: 395

ISBN-13: 1616495065

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These 366 daily affirmations and meditations extend support and wisdom to women who have survived childhood sexual abuse. Unknown number of women have suffered sexual abuse in childhood. Acknowledging the abuse after years of silence and secrecy and beginning a healing journey require support and encouragement. Long after the abuse has ended, negative internal messages can invade and linger. Daybreak's positive statements intercept self-defeating messages, guiding readers toward new and healthy ways of thinking, feeling, and behaving. These affirmations and thoughtful meditations cover topics such as intimacy, fear, play, sharing secrets, and anger. Read daily or by subject, Daybreak brings the experience of sexual abuse into the light where hope resides and change and healing are possible. Women survivors of other types of abuse and men survivors of abuse may also find benefit from these readings.


Daybreak

Daybreak

Author: Claire Malroux

Publisher: New York Review of Books

Published: 2020-11-17

Total Pages: 233

ISBN-13: 1681375028

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A bilingual collection of poetry, from elegies to poem memoirs, by a revered French master. For more than four decades Claire Malroux has blazed a unique path in contemporary French poetry. She is influenced by such French poets as Mallarmé and Yves Bonnefoy, but her work also bears the mark, and this is unusual in France, of Anglophone poets like Emily Dickinson, Elizabeth Bishop, and Derek Walcott. A prominent translator of poetry from English into French, Malroux is one of those rare poets whose work is informed by a day-to-day intimacy with a second language in its greatest variations and subtleties. Her poems move between an intense but philosophical and abstract interiority and an acute engagement with the material world. This bilingual selection by the award-winning poet and translator Marilyn Hacker presents Malroux’s oeuvre, from her early lyric poems to an excerpt from A Long-Gone Sun—a poem-memoir of life in southern France before and during World War II—to new and uncollected poems, including an elegiac sequence written after the death of her life partner, the writer Pierre Silvain.


Daybreak; A Romance of an Old World

Daybreak; A Romance of an Old World

Author: James Cowan

Publisher: DigiCat

Published: 2022-09-04

Total Pages: 317

ISBN-13:

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DigiCat Publishing presents to you this special edition of "Daybreak; A Romance of an Old World" by James Cowan. DigiCat Publishing considers every written word to be a legacy of humankind. Every DigiCat book has been carefully reproduced for republishing in a new modern format. The books are available in print, as well as ebooks. DigiCat hopes you will treat this work with the acknowledgment and passion it deserves as a classic of world literature.


Daybreak of Freedom

Daybreak of Freedom

Author: Stewart Burns

Publisher: Univ of North Carolina Press

Published: 2012-01-01

Total Pages: 392

ISBN-13: 0807882917

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The Montgomery bus boycott was a formative moment in twentieth-century history: a harbinger of the African American freedom movement, a springboard for the leadership of Martin Luther King Jr., and a crucial step in the struggle to realize the American dream of liberty and equality for all. In Daybreak of Freedom, Stewart Burns presents a groundbreaking documentary history of the boycott. Using an extraordinary array of more than one hundred original documents, he crafts a compelling and comprehensive account of this celebrated year-long protest of racial segregation. Daybreak of Freedom reverberates with the voices of those closest to the bus boycott, ranging from King and his inner circle, to Jo Ann Robinson and other women leaders who started the protest, to the maids, cooks, and other 'foot soldiers' who carried out the struggle. With a deft narrative hand and editorial touch, Burns weaves their testimony into a riveting story that shows how events in Montgomery pushed the entire nation to keep faith with its stated principles.


After Daybreak

After Daybreak

Author: Ben Shephard

Publisher: Schocken

Published: 2007-12-18

Total Pages: 348

ISBN-13: 0307424634

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“I find it hard even now to get into focus all these horrors, my mind is really quite incapable of taking in everything I saw because it was all so completely foreign to everything I had previously believed or thought possible.” British Major Ben Barnett’s words echoed the sentiments shared by medical students, Allied soldiers, members of the clergy, ambulance drivers, and relief workers who found themselves utterly unprepared to comprehend, much less tend to, the indescribable trauma of those who survived at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. The liberation of Bergen-Belsen by the British in April 1945 was a defining point in history: the moment the world finally became inescapably aware of the Holocaust. But what happened after Belsen was liberated is still a matter of dispute. Was it an epic of medical heroism or the culmination of thirteen years of indifference to the fate of Europe’s Jews? This startling investigation by acclaimed documentary filmmaker and historian Ben Shephard draws on an extraordinary range of materials–contemporary diaries, military documents, and survivors’ testimonies–to reconstruct six weeks at Belsen beginning on April 15, 1945, and reveals what actually caused the post-liberation deaths of nearly 14,000 concentration camp inmates who might otherwise have lived. Why did it take almost two weeks to organize a proper medical response? Why were the medical teams sent to Belsen so poorly equipped? Why, when specialists did arrive, did they get so much of the medicine plain wrong? For the first time, Shephard explores the humanitarian and medical issues surrounding the liberation of the camp and provides a detailed, illuminating account that is far more complex than had been previously revealed. This gripping book confronts the terrifying aftermath of war with questions that still haunt us today.