Almost Invincible


Book Description

"Mary Shelley began Frankenstein in a thunderstorm in 1814, when she was eighteen. By then, she had living for two years in a scandalous relationship with the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley, who was married with children. The novel was conceived in a contest with him and Lord Byron to tell ghost stories"--Cover.




Underdogs


Book Description

Three weeks have passed since the events of Underdogs. The British population continues its imprisonment in Nicholas Grant's giant walled Citadels, under the watchful eye of innumerable cloned soldiers. The heroes of Oakenfold Special School remain their last chance of freedom. As a result of their last mission, Grant has been forced to speed up his plans for Great Britain and beyond. Ewan, Kate, McCormick and the rest of the Underdogs must face the horrors of his new research, knowing that it raises the stakes as high as they will go. Failing this battle will not merely result in losing soldiers and friends, but in losing the war entirely. According to the odds, the Underdogs are near-certain to fail. But they have spent their whole lives being underestimated and did not survive this long by respecting the odds.




The Oölogist


Book Description




Thicker Than Water


Book Description

Thicker than Water is the story of a little girls journey from an eastern Kentucky farm to motherhood in the heart of Texas. Raised in a big family, number six of seven children, she learns to face her fears and finds a place in her hardworking family. Determined not to disappoint her daddy, she develops a plan for coping with the farm animals, the dark, and the things that lurked beyond. Being a crybaby was not an option. Her plan became an attitude that worked well through childhood, marriage, motherhood, and loss. But when it came to the ever lurking possibility of diabetes, the coping mechanism became a copping out mechanism. Even the diagnosis of gestational diabetes before the birth of her third son was not enough to deter an Ill just worry about that later attitude. Overcoming bad habits was slow and painful. Damage was done in efforts to lose weight and control her disease. After years of struggle, she finds success by realizing who she is in Christ and learning that she could go to her Heavenly Father with anything. She finally discovers asking for help does not equate to being weak or being a crybaby. Through her weakness, she becomes strong.



















Judge of Jean-Jacques - Dialogues


Book Description

Rousseau's complete work, unified in English for the first time, premiers with an original translation of his Dialogues