For years Sheridan (Danni) Yates has felt like she had to take on the world alone. The beautiful loner moves from city to city, always holding back and never allowing herself to fit in. Hunter Roberts senses something special about Danni shortly after she moves to his quaint hometown. Like him, she keeps to herself and lives quietly. Is it possible she's battling ghosts of her past, as he does? The two enjoy the time they spend together. Hunter doesn't push her to talk about her past, and Danni, in turn, doesn’t ask about his scars. Their feelings for one another are deepening by the day. Together, they feel they can face anything. There’s the Rub. Can Danni and Hunter open up to one another and share the secrets that haunt them? Or will fear destroy their chance at real happiness?
What if Spike Lee were making silent movies in early Hollywood? After seeing "The Birth of a Nation," what would he do if he came face to face with its director, D. W. Griffith? In 1916, Jimmy Johnson, a grandson of slaves, knows exactly what he would do – and it ain't pretty. But more importantly, he wants to see his family whole again. He remembers fondly when he, his father, his mother, and younger brother all performed happily in vaudeville. Then came the night when his mother suddenly and mysteriously disappeared. Nightmares of that awful event have led Jimmy – a boy at the time – on a twenty-year search for her. Why did she leave? And why won't his father talk about it?Raised by their domineering father, Jimmy and his brother grow up as part of a successful vaudeville dance trio. However, Jimmy has long wanted to do something else with his life. After a half-hearted performance on stage, twenty-year-old Jimmy tells his father that he can't be in the act anymore. His father doesn't cotton to rebellion and, in his wrath, throws his first born out, disowning him.Jimmy drifts around the country alone, scared and unsure of his future. Mechanically inclined and good with tools, he ends up in Hollywood where he becomes enthralled with the magic of moving pictures. When he finds a job fixing movie cameras, he has a front row seat to the burgeoning silent movie industry.Life takes on sudden purpose after Jimmy watches Griffith's racist epic. Outraged, he sets himself to make a moving picture that doesn't perpetuate stereotypes of his race. Along the way, Jimmy gets help from his new love, a young woman named Anita, as well as pioneer Negro film actors, Noble Johnson and Madame Sult-te-wan.When Jimmy's father and brother come to Los Angeles for their West Coast vaudeville premiere at the same time his mother is working only a few miles from Jimmy – for Griffith, no less! – the family's unplanned reunion explodes in re-opening long festering wounds. Can Jimmy finally bind these wounds and make his family whole again?
It is calamitous for mankind, when we live without compassion for one another. When the basket of sympathy leaks out the streams of unity. There is the rub. The cross of our disunity. need for borders and intolerance. AiyeKo-ooto, weaves 50 poems dipped in 5 movements in this emotive worded anthology. Every song, every bar, every note; rings for agape love and compassion. In tearful drops we strain, look over your shoulders, what we have lost, living the way we do. Sitting in the rain, we mourn, the departure of those we claim to love, but cared not for enough. Feeling thumping beats; we stumble, across the reality of togetherness and need for our human bonds. But there is no honor among thieves, then we are strangers here. We accuse, abuse and confuse, our destinations. We see only the good after the clock has rung midnight! Why asks Aiyeko-ooto in these ticklish poems- Why do we part rather than peer? Yet, nobody knows why I cry, for the troubles of another.
In God and the New Atheism, a world expert on science and theology gives clear, concise, and compelling answers to the charges against religion laid out in recent best-selling books by Richard Dawkins (The God Delusion), Sam Harris (The End of Faith), and Christopher Hitchens (God Is Not Great). For some, these "new atheists" appear to say extremely well what they believe to be wrong with religion. But, as John Haught shows, the treatment of religion in these books is riddled with logical inconsistencies, shallow misconceptions, and crude generalizations. Can God really be dismissed as a mere delusion? Is faith really the enemy of reason? And does religion really poison everything? God and the New Atheism offers a much-needed antidote to the extremist claims of scientific fundamentalism. This provocative and accessible little book will enable readers to see through the rhetorical fog of this recent phenomenon and come to a clearer understanding of the issues at stake in this crucial debate.
After losing the woman of his dreams, lawyer Leo Brice becomes a junior death row advocate and gets obsessed with the question of the afterlife after immersing himself in the esoteric world of a born-again condemned man in Georgia.