Michigan horror author Rick McQuiston is back with his biggest collection of terrifying tales yet. 100 frightening stories guaranteed to keep you up at night.
A Vampire Will Not Rest Until He Satisfi es His Hunger . . . And what I, Reign, hungered for most of all was Olivia Gavin. I have never met a woman more beautiful, more tantalizing, and so I made her my bride. She promised me her heart and soul . . . in return, I plundered her flesh, and bound her to me for all eternity. Then, terrified of what I'd made her, she fled. Now she has returned, desperate for my help in saving her beloved nephew. But my assistance comes at a price: She must share my bed once more, for the feel of her soft skin, the heat of her kiss, excite me still. And I know she desires me, even as she resists her own heart. Yet, as we rediscover the passion that brought us together, an enemy waits to destroy us both . . .
This is a collection of lectures delivered by Alexander Whyte at St. George's Free Church in Edinburgh. The book explores the concept of character, drawing on the biblical idea of Jesus Christ as the express image of God, and the philosophical writings of Bishop Butler. Using the works of John Bunyan as examples, Whyte examines the moral character of various fictional characters, highlighting their virtues and vices.
The Somme Those happy pals who gaily marched to war, through their towns and villages of cheering flags, sharing thoughts of war’s adventures, in some foreign land, beneath ranging blue skies, above rolling green fields. Friendships grew on soldiering’s march, but with each rising dawn, grave rumours bled back, turning jokes and jibes into a laughter of unease, shadowing all in their wait to arms. This collection of poetry gives an insight into Bob’s avenues of thought. It gives a greater awareness of those who endured so much for us and paid the ultimate price. It also examines the youth of 65 years ago living in the ration days, of a life where there was mostly happiness, and of death caused by a clash of religion, politics and ideologies that shattered and threw the world into disarray. Bob shares his thoughts on this as he philosophises on the notion of time. Time being a word given by man on the earths’ turn and that now rules man. Time is often ignored by the young and sometimes feared by the old as the passing seasons wrinkle us all. If I Can Touch You With a Thought will appeal to those who enjoy poetry and are looking to reflect on their own lives.
Book 1 in a series of 20 books about life on a farm and although you would think the farm life was boring a lot more goes on in the mind then one might usually recognize
---ORDERS WILL SHIP ON NOVEMBER 30th.---Poems of Devotion is a collection of the finest recent poems in the devotional mode, which the editor examines in detail in the introductory essay. The seventy-seven poets collected here demonstrate the ongoing vi
If he had been with me everything would have been different... I wasn't with Finn on that August night. But I should've been. It was raining, of course. And he and Sylvie were arguing as he drove down the slick road. No one ever says what they were arguing about. Other people think it's not important. They do not know there is another story. The story that lurks between the facts. What they do not know—the cause of the argument—is crucial. So let me tell you...