Eternal Vow

Eternal Vow

Author: Julie A. D'Arcy

Publisher: The Wild Rose Press Inc

Published: 2024-09-11

Total Pages: 178

ISBN-13: 1509257128

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Vincent, a young nobleman, on leaving his mistress’s Townhouse one cold night in the 1700’s is attacked by a vampiress in search of a mate. Years later, he is cursed by a Cheyenne Shaman, with the ability to feel emotion. He escapes his maker’s deadly embrace, although she still tracks him, and reemerges into society decades later only to meet with the very woman who could destroy him, in more ways than one. Detective Elara Gale hates vampires after her childhood boyfriend is murdered and she sees a black cloaked figure fleeing the scene. So, when she discovers the man, she is already half in love with is no other than the vampire she is hunting, her loyalties are torn between her desire for Vincent’s touch and her duty to the law. They are swept back to the past by an unusual hypnotist and an arrest gone wrong in an attempt to stop Epatha from turning Vincent into a vampire. And save his mortal soul…


Down the Ages: Journey of a Healer

Down the Ages: Journey of a Healer

Author: Doris Schatz

Publisher: Wheatmark, Inc.

Published: 2013-11-08

Total Pages: 162

ISBN-13: 1627870369

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Doris Schatz spent much of her adult life reading up on the occult, attending psychic development groups, and discovering her own spiritual gifts. But nothing prepared her for Gerhard Kluegl, a man she met after he saved the life of a dying friend. Gerhard is a healer -- the leading aura surgeon in Europe. Repairing the physical damage from past-life experiences, he helps patients who have gotten no relief from Western medicine. Some of the recoveries Gerhard has enabled are nothing short of miraculous: replacing ovaries that have been surgically removedrepairing heart musclesremoving tonsilsstraightening spines… and much more In Down the Ages: Journey of a Healer, Doris introduces Gerhard Kluegl to an American audience for the first time. His story sheds light on the unseen forces that so often go unacknowledged in today's society.


Goze

Goze

Author: Gerald Groemer

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2016-03-21

Total Pages: 337

ISBN-13: 0190259051

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In a tradition extending from the medieval era to the early twentieth century, visually disabled Japanese women known as goze toured the countryside as professional singers. An integral part of rural musical culture, the goze sang unique narratives of their own making and a significant repertory of popular ballads and short songs. Goze activities peaked in the nineteenth century, and some women continued to tour well into the middle of the twentieth. The last active goze lived until 2005. In Goze: Women, Musical Performance, and Visual Disability in Traditional Japan, Gerald Groemer examines the way of life, institutions, and songs of these itinerant performers. Groemer shows that the solidarity and success goze achieved with the rural public through narrative and music was based on the convergence of the goze's desire for a degree of social and economic autonomy with the audience's wish to mitigate the cultural deprivation it so often experienced. Goze recognized audiences as a stimulus for developing repertories and careers; the public in turn recognized goze as masterful artisans who acted as powerful agents of widespread cultural development. As the first full-length scholarly work on goze in English, this book is an invaluable resource to scholars and students of Japanese culture, Japanese music, ethnomusicology, and disability studies worldwide.