The Gift of Marmidon

The Gift of Marmidon

Author: Tiffany Rhys

Publisher:

Published: 2021-08-10

Total Pages: 311

ISBN-13:

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(This is the 2nd Edition, and has 2,000 more words) A powerful force awakens. One that can change the course of history. Hidden behind the Pincer Mountains, Aeryn pictures a peaceful and fulfilling future. However, his preconceived plans for life are upended. The spirit of the world places a heavy burden on the only one that can save it all. Without his efforts, the world as he knows it will fall into darkness, a darkness that will destroy the balance of nature itself. Tensions are rising in Criysous as the people grow uneasy and the land reels with ominous foreboding in the air. The King searches for that which he cannot find. Princess Kaley Zarra wishes nothing more than for her father to be the loving man he once was. Her world shatters. Beneath it all, hidden in the darkness, an evil is rising and it's nothing that Aeryn or Kaley could have prepared for. War was just the beginning


Beyond the Shadow of Night

Beyond the Shadow of Night

Author: Ray Kingfisher

Publisher: Lake Union Publishing

Published: 2019-04

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781542041768

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In this epic tale of friendship and loss from the author of The Sugar Men, fate pushes childhood friends to opposite sides of a terrible war--but is forgiveness always possible? Ukraine, 1923. On a small farm, two boys are born within days of each other, both Ukrainian, one Jewish. Mykhail and Asher grow up inseparable, together finding friendship, adventure and escape from the harshness of Russian rule. But after Asher's family flees to Warsaw, their worlds are torn to shreds by the Second World War. The war brings cruelty to both boys. Although Asher finds love in Warsaw, the city is far from the haven his family sought; meanwhile Mykhail becomes a victim of the bitter struggle for Ukraine. But worse follows in the shape of the Treblinka death camp. There, both men must obey orders, and both find their morals compromised and their souls tortured. The inhuman horrors they witness cast long shadows. Many years later, their paths cross once more, and each man must confront the legacy of his actions. When the darkest of secrets can no longer be kept hidden, can their friendship survive the final reckoning?


The Sugar Men

The Sugar Men

Author: Ray Kingfisher

Publisher: Lake Union Publishing

Published: 2016-08-09

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781503936591

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"Sixty-four years ago, Susannah Morgan manage[d] to flee the horrors of the Holocaust. But the memories of that childhood ordeal have proven impossible to sweep away. For most of her new life spent settled in sleepy North Carolina, the flashbacks have been a lonely obsession, one she has hidden from her family, and about which her heart is torn .... As Susannah's time on earth draws to a close her innermost thoughts of those long-gone days become quesitons, ones that demand answers. Against the wishes of her children, Susannah returns to Germany and the scene of unspeakable crimes, and try to finally make peace with the ghosts of her past."--Page 4 of cover.


Three Purgatory Poems

Three Purgatory Poems

Author: Edward E Foster

Publisher: Medieval Institute Publications

Published: 2004-07-01

Total Pages: 313

ISBN-13: 1580444008

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Though our modern understanding of the medieval doctrine of Purgatory is generally shaped by its presentation by Dante in the Divine Comedy, there is a lengthy history of speculation about the nature of such a place of purgation. Through these fourteenth-century Middle English poems, readers can experience something of the controversies that surfaced and resurfaced even after Aquinas had articulated his doctrine of the Communion of Saints. The Gast of Gy, as Foster notes, puts a human face on the doctrine of Purgatory, not only in the amiable, logical, and patient person of the Gast of Gy himself, . . . but also in the careful and cautious dialogue between the Gast and the Pryor who questions him. Sir Owain and The Vision of Tundale present two accounts of the purgatorial journeys of living individuals who are offered a chance to see the torments they have brought upon themselves by their less-than-perfect lives along with the opportunity to return and amend those lives. All three poems were quite popular, as was the doctrine of Purgatory itself. And why not? As Foster notes in his general introduction, it the doctrine of Purgatory had everything: adventure and adversity, suffering and excitement, and, most importantly, a profound theological warning wrapped in the joyful solace of communion with the departed and hope for our own sinful selves.