Danger seems to follow him. Love is out of reach. Tim didn't know why the world was going crazy, but it was. He knew he had to keep the fact that he was a Shifter secret as long as he could. The police and the now even the military were rounding them up and hauling them off, and no one seemed to know what was going on. But when he finds a young woman who needs his help, he finds his other instincts getting the best of him! Collect all the Shifter Babies of America series and enjoy a nice little one-sitting story!
This is my story. The stories in this book really happened. None of the stories were spiced up to make them sound better. Some stories are funny, some sad, some will make you cry, and some of them will make you say “Wow”. It tells about how God took control of my life, and how he helped me deal with certain situations as a South Carolina State Trooper.
"An essential book for all Grace Paley fans Grace Paley is best known for her inimitable short stories, but she was also an enormously talented essayist and poet. A Grace Paley Reader collects the best of Paley's writing, showcasing her breadth of work and her extraordinary insight and empathy. With an introduction by George Saunders and an afterword by the writer's daughter, Nora Paley, A Grace Paley Reader is sure to become an instant classic."--
Six years into their marriage, Judith and Greg Scott decided to have a child; they were blessed with the birth of beautiful Emily. But their euphoria was short lived when their child was diagnosed with a rare and disabling condition: Partial Trisomy 13. Emily, they were told, would never walk, talk or read. From this tragic beginning unfolds the astonishing, life-altering journey of Out Came the Sun. Emily struggles to learn life's simple tasks, lagging far behind her peers. And the strains on her parents' marriage nearly cause it to come apart at the seams. But when Emily starts exceeding her doctor's expectations, Judith realizes that she too can overcome adversity by opening her life to more love and more children. This riveting, beautiful memoir demonstrates that extraordinary fortitude requires to take misfortune and valiantly turn it into triumph.
Psychology and Law offers the definitive perspective on the practical application of psychological research to the law. Authors Curt R. Bartol and Anne M. Bartol emphasize the various roles psychologists and other mental health professionals can play throughout the text. Insight is offered into the application of psychology in criminal and non-criminal matters. Topics such as family law, insanity, police interrogation, jury selection and decision making, involuntary civil commitment, and various civil capacities are included. This comprehensive text examines complex material in detail and explains it in an easy-to-read way. The authors emphasize the major contributions psychological research has made to the law, and encourage critical analysis through examples of court cases, high-profile current events, and research. “The writing is concise and student-friendly. . . . The text incorporates contemporary cases and information and maintains a good balance between the important issues in psychology and law.” —Barbara Abbott, New England College
The Congressional Record is the official record of the proceedings and debates of the United States Congress. It is published daily when Congress is in session. The Congressional Record began publication in 1873. Debates for sessions prior to 1873 are recorded in The Debates and Proceedings in the Congress of the United States (1789-1824), the Register of Debates in Congress (1824-1837), and the Congressional Globe (1833-1873)
"How should we improve the state of South Carolina?" That invitingly open-ended question served as the basis for the first annual South Carolina High School Writing Contest as the call went out in fall 2013 to juniors and seniors across the Palmetto State, encouraging them to take a stance through good, thought-provoking writing. The nearly five hundred responses that resulted were as impressive in quality as they were in quantity. Young writers sounded off on issues of race relations, environmental conservation, economic imbalance, opportunities of infrastructure, substance and physical abuse, and the maladies of education. Most wrote on issues of education rooted in their own burgeoning awareness of its gifts and limitations in their lives. From that pool of contestants, twenty-three finalists rose to the top to have their initial entries and subsequent writing on a favorite book or place judged by best-selling author Pat Conroy. The insightful and often revelatory responses from those finalists—including the first, second, and third place winners by grade—are collected here in Writing South Carolina. In heartfelt essays, poems, short stories, and drama, these diverse writers lay bare their attitudes and impressions of South Carolina as they have experienced it and as they hope to reshape it. The resulting anthology is a compelling portrait of the Palmetto State's potential as advocated by some of its best and brightest young writers. Editor Steven Lynn provides an introduction and contest judge Pat Conroy provides a foreword to the collection. Senior Winners / Walter B. Edgar Award • First Place: Rowan Miller, Aiken, Aiken High School, "Different Worlds" (essay) • Second Place: Katherine Frain, Mount Pleasant, Wando High School, "Place of Refuge" (poem) • Third Place: Allison Able, Saluda, Saluda High School, "Song of Silence" (essay) • Honorable Mention: Drake Shadwell, Dalzell, Wilson Hall, Untitled (play) • Honorable Mention: Jordhane Stanley, Seabrook Island, South Carolina Virtual School, Untitled (essay) Junior Winners / Dorothy S. Williams Award • First Place: Hallie Chametzky, Columbia, Dreher High School, "Change in Simple Arithmetic" (poem) • Second Place: Zoe Abedon, Sullivan's Island, Charleston County School of the Arts, "To Overcome" (poem) • Third Place: Madison Seabrook, Charleston County School of the Arts, "A Novel Prospect" (poem) • Honorable Mention: Suzanne Jackson, Charleston, Charleston County School of the Arts, "Local since Forever" (essay) • Honorable Mention: Rebecca Walker, Spartanburg, Dorman High School, Untitled (essay)