The Boogie Man


Book Description

How come controlling, abusive people find their way into my life? How do I heal from Post Traumatic Stress? How do I protect my children from sexual predators? How do I get free from pain, shame and guilt? How do I heal from childhood sexual abuse? Is the Boogie Man real? There are answers to these questions and many more in The Boogie Man. I told my children that 'The Boogie Man' didn't exist; I was wrong! He is real and he lives in the shadows only to come out when no one else is around to witness him. Our kids love and trust him while at the same time are being violated by him. The Boogie Man exposes the strategies used by sexual abusers to manipulate our innocent sons and daughters right under our parental noses. Kate uses her professional skills and knowledge peppered with her own personal experience to show the reader how to understand the "grooming" process better. She clearly explains how a sexual abuser skillfully and insidiously approaches a child, while simultaneously grooming the parents. She uses her own personal story of childhood abuse to show how it had an affect on many of her decisions in life, including being manipulated into a marriage to a pedophile. Her courageous healing journey clearly shows the reader that healing is possible and there is a powerful future ahead. She provides practical suggestions, clear explanations and hope to the survivor of child sexual abuse.




DANCING WITH THE BOOGIE MAN


Book Description

Returning after a ten year absence Colin Murphy finds his family is the same dysfunctional group of characters he originally left behind. One important piece of the puzzle is missing and that is Edwin Murphy, the family patriarch - the Boogie Man. It's his funeral that brings the family together for one memorable week and his legacy that leaves them all in shambles.




Sam and the Boogie Man


Book Description

Sam and the boogie man is a wonderful tale of a little boy that conquers his fears of the boogie man in his closet. Sam begins the story sleeping with his parents in their over crowded bed. As the story continues, Sam tries several ideas to rid his closet of the boogie man. After all esle fails, Sam uses music to cause the bogie man to boogie away. The whole family will enjoy this funnny and enpowering story.




I'm Your Boogie Man - A Tale Of Sardis County


Book Description

Someone…or some thing…is killing people across Sardis County. Sheriff Billy Napier and Deputy Alan Blake are trying their best to find the killer before someone else falls victim to the “Sardis Slasher”. The problem with finding the killer? No clues are left behind for the forensics team to evaluate. Katie Montgomery Blake and her aunt, Margo Sardis, are trying to help, but are also coming up empty. Carol Grace Montgomery and Mary Smalls have made a discovery, too…and that discovery ramps up the magic in Sardis County! And some newcomers to Sardis County offer their help in finding the killer, but they have a secret. Does the secret have anything to do with the father of Phoebe Smalls Napier’s children? Or is it just more magic? Find out in T. M. Bilderback’s fourth all-out, slam-bang Sardis County thriller – I’m Your Boogie Man – A Tale Of Sardis County!




The Boogie Man's Birthday


Book Description

The Boogie Man’s Birthday is a good story about people coming together and trying to stop evil from coming back. Author Eric D. Williams loves writing supernatural stories about witches and ghosts. He came up with the idea of The Boogie Man’s Birthday while reading the last book in the Bible.




Boogie Man


Book Description

Acclaimed writer Charles Shaar Murray's Boogie Man is the authorized and authoritative biography of an extraordinary musician. Murray was given unparalleled access to Hooker, and he lets the man from Clarksdale, Mississippi, tell his own story. "Everything you read on album covers is not true, and every album reads different," he told Murray. Murray helps Hooker set the record straight, disentangling the myths and legends from truths so rock-ribbed that we understand, as if for the first time, why they have provided the source for a lifetime of unforgettable sound. Murray weaves together Hooker's life and music to reveal their indissoluble bonds. Yet Boogie Man is far more than merely an accomplished and brilliant biography of one man; it gives an account of an entire art form. Grounded in a time and place in American culture, the blues are universal, and in the hands of the greatest practitioners its power resides in the miracle of using despair to transcend it. "The preacher's mantle," Murray tells us, "passes to the bluesman." This bluesman traveled a hard road out of the American South, from obscurity to adulation and back-and back again. John Lee Hooker has seen it all and sung it all, and his music is both a living legacy and an American treasure. Here is the book that does him and his music full justice.




The Practice of Folklore


Book Description

Winner of the 2020 Chicago Folklore Prize CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title for 2020 Despite predictions that commercial mass culture would displace customs of the past, traditions firmly abound, often characterized as folklore. In The Practice of Folklore: Essays toward a Theory of Tradition, author Simon J. Bronner works with theories of cultural practice to explain the social and psychological need for tradition in everyday life. Bronner proposes a distinctive “praxic” perspective that will answer the pressing philosophical as well as psychological question of why people enjoy repeating themselves. The significance of the keyword practice, he asserts, is the embodiment of a tension between repetition and variation in human behavior. Thinking with practice, particularly in a digital world, forces redefinitions of folklore and a reorientation toward interpreting everyday life. More than performance or enactment in social theory, practice connects localized culture with the vernacular idea that “this is the way we do things around here.” Practice refers to the way those things are analyzed as part of, rather than apart from, theory, thus inviting the study of studying. “The way we do things” invokes the social basis of “doing” in practice as cultural and instrumental. Building on previous studies of tradition in relation to creativity, Bronner presents an overview of practice theory and the ways it might be used in folklore and folklife studies. Demonstrating the application of this theory in folkloristic studies, Bronner offers four provocative case studies of psychocultural meanings that arise from traditional frames of action and address issues of our times: referring to the boogieman; connecting “wild child” beliefs to school shootings; deciphering the offensive chants of sports fans; and explicating male bravado in bawdy singing. Turning his analysis to the analysts of tradition, Bronner uses practice theory to evaluate the agenda of folklorists in shaping perceptions of tradition-centered “folk societies” such as the Amish. He further unpacks the culturally based rationale of public folklore programming. He interprets the evolving idea of folk museums in a digital world and assesses how the folklorists' terms and actions affect how people think about tradition.




The Melody Man


Book Description

Joe Davis (1896–1978), the focus of The Melody Man, enjoyed a fifty-year career in the music industry, which covered nearly every aspect of the business. He hustled sheet music in the 1920s; copyrighted compositions by artists as diverse as Fats Waller, Carson Robison, Otis Blackwell, and Rudy Vallee; oversaw hundreds of recording sessions; and operated several record companies beginning in the 1940s. Davis also worked fearlessly to help ensure that black recording artists and song writers gained equal treatment for their work. Much more than a biography, this book is an investigation of the role played by music publishers during much of the twentieth century. Joe Davis was not a music “great,” but he was one of those individuals who enabled “greats” to emerge. A musician, manager, and publisher, his long career reveals much about the nature of the music industry and offers insight into how the industry changed from the 1920s to the 1970s. By the summer of 1924, when Davis was handling the “race talent” for Ajax records, he had already worked in the music business for most of a decade, and there were more than five decades of musical career ahead of him. The fact that his fascinating life has gone so long underappreciated is remedied by the publication of this book. Originally published in England in 1990 as Never Sell a Copyright: Joe Davis and His Role in the New York Music Scene, 1916–1978, this book was never released in the United States and only made available in a very limited print run in England. The author, noted blues scholar and folklorist Bruce Bastin, has worked with fellow music scholar Kip Lornell to completely update, condense, and improve the book for this first-ever American edition.




Memory Closet


Book Description

Something so terrible happened to Anne Mitchell when she was 11-years-old that her mind erased the whole first decade of her life. Now, 25 years later, she goes home to find her past. She doesn't know that the price of remembering could be her sanity. Or her life.




Studying God's Word


Book Description

In this series, the books of the Bible are taught in chronological order (from Genesis to Acts) rather than in the order they appear in the Bible, so students can comprehend the flow of Bible history. Each workbook contains helpful exercise questions and map work as well. Teacher manuals for Books C-H are available. Book G covers the Gospels. Grade 6.