Bouquets and butterflies, ladybugs and dragonflies--you'll find them all in these fresh, fanciful quilts! This delightful collection of garden-inspired projects combines simple patchwork, hand applique, and embroidery with the cheerful, bright colors of springtime.
At the age of forty-five and with no family history of breast cancer, author Tamara Kaye Severin received the staggering news that she had malignant tumors in both breasts. A busy wife and mother with a prospering career, she was used to being independent and doing it all herself. She soon learned, however, that that would not be the way for her to beat cancer. In her memoir, Pink Lemonade, Tamara shares the story of her three-year struggle to accept the things she cannot change (her health), change the things she can (her healthcare), and the wisdom to seek out the best treatment available, regardless of the difficulties she encountered along the way. Whats more, she overcame these serious health obstacles while raising a teenager. With a wry sense of humor, she reveals the details of her battle and provides insights for those facing a life-threatening disease and for the people who love them. Hers is a testament of Gods faithfulness and fortification. Reading her inspirational journey back to health, you can share in her victory, as life gives her lemonsand she stuffs them in her bra.
A quintessential woman’s book, Pink Lemonade chronicles a six-decade journey through the arts, using the steppingstones of poetry, drawing, short stories and essays to navigate difficult pathways. Along the way the author introduces us to some fascinating women, from shy Martha Brown, the Adams family laundress to Sister Stanisia, an accomplished artist/nun who doesn’t know where babies come from. Other characters potrayed are: Kara Winston, a young mother who finds the courage to return to college in an unlikely place; Ellie, an attractive, middle-aged divorcee undergoing sterilization; and Elizabeth, an older married women who is forced to let go of a loved one twice. Divided into six chapters illustrated by the author, Pink Lemonade offers hope to anyone struggling with unexpressed feelings of sadness, powerlessness or anger. Samantha Adams demonstrates through her own experiences how the arts, especially those with spiritual underpinnings, enabled her to transform life’s tragedies into triumphs.
When the geological survey aircraft ‘Yankey Whisky’ was shot down by terrorist in Papua New Guinea, its three man crew survived the crash but were captured by the Indonesian terrorist who had shot them down. Leader of the group, a Chinese National named General Chan put the airmen through a series of horrifying events. Later, they managed to escape with the help of Chan`s `lady friend’ and found a safe haven within the walls of a leper colony. A Russian surveillance ship, anchored off Papua send in a team of Geologists to plunder the air-crafts electronic Geological Survey Equipment, which was highly secret at that time, but General Chan gets there sooner and a skirmish between the two ends with the Yankey Whisky going up in flames. Back home in London, after a party given by a wealthy Arab oil baron, the daughter of Bob Sastry, Captain of the `Yankey Whisky’ suddenly goes missing. Mandy has been kidnapped and taken to the Middle Eastern Town of Marrakech, and it seems is headed for a life of horror inside an Arabian harem. Not for the faint hearted, The Upper Crust unfolds a story of horrific human suffering in graphic detail, yet always with a delicate touch of humor which helps the reader to stay calm through the storm. All is not lost, and an unusual ending is as always inevitable.
A masterful collection of short stories exposing the seamy undercurrents of small-town American life from Charles Jackson, celebrated author of The Lost Weekend. A selection of Jackson’s finest tales, The Sunnier Side and Other Stories explores the trials of adolescence in America during the tumultuous years of the early twentieth century. Set in the town of Arcadia in upstate New York, the stories in this collection address the unspoken issues—homosexuality, masturbation, alcoholism, to name a few—lurking just beneath the surface of the small-town ideal. The Sunnier Side showcases Jackson at the height of his storytelling powers, reaffirming his reputation as a boundary-pushing, irreverent writer years ahead of his time.