Gaby's Penance


Book Description

Years after her parish priest imposed an unusual penance, a penance she has at last fulfilled, Gabrielle Chevalier returns from Paris to her home in Quebec aware that while the Church may have forgiven her, she has not forgiven herself.




Gabrielle and Arawn's Penance


Book Description

Coming of Age Portal Fiction Adventure Series - USA Today Bestselling Science Fantasy Author Gabrielle had faced death before... But she hadn't faced this. Gabrielle is thrown into the middle of Germany during World War II. But it's not the Nazis she's after. When Gabrielle learns that Arawn is pulling the strings, she becomes the hunter. Determined to finally take down the god of the underworld, Gabrielle teams up with some of the world's most dangerous killers. Is Gabrielle strong enough to battle a god? Or will death finally catch up to her? *** Keywords: fantasy books, fantasy, fantasy stories, paranormal fantasy books, fantasy series, series books, portal book, portal stories, portal story, mythology, paranormal fantasy books, gods and goddesses, strong women, Bestselling Young Adult Fantasy Series, Coming-of-age, Science Fantasy, Action Adventure, Portal Fantasy, books for teens, books for girls, YA reader, best book, time travel books, time travel series, nazi germany, world war II, world war 2




Veiled Desires


Book Description

Ingrid Bergman's engaging screen performance as Sister Mary Benedict in The Bells of St. Mary's made the film nun a star and her character a shining standard of comparison. She represented the religious life as the happy and rewarding choice of a modern woman who had a "complete understanding" of both erotic and spiritual desire. How did this vibrant and mature nun figure come to be viewed as girlish and naive? Why have she and her cinematic sisters in postwar popular film so often been stereotyped or selectively analyzed, so seldom been seen as women and religious? In Veiled Desires--a unique full-length, in-depth study of nuns in film--Maureen Sabine explores these questions in a groundbreaking interdisciplinary study covering more than sixty years of cinema. She looks at an impressive breadth of films in which the nun features as an ardent lead character, including The Bells of St. Mary's (1945), Black Narcissus (1947), Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison (1957), Sea Wife (1957), The Nun's Story (1959), The Sound of Music (1965), Change of Habit (1969), In This House of Brede (1975), Agnes of God (1985), Dead Man Walking (1995), and Doubt (2008). Veiled Desires considers how the beautiful and charismatic stars who play chaste nuns, from Ingrid Bergman and Audrey Hepburn to Susan Sarandon and Meryl Streep, call attention to desires that the veil concealed and the habit was thought to stifle. In a theologically and psychoanalytically informed argument, Sabine responds to the critics who have pigeonholed the film nun as the obedient daughter and religious handmaiden of a patriarchal church, and the respectful audience who revered her as an icon of spiritual perfection. She provides a framework for a more complex and holistic picture of nuns on screen by showing how the films dramatize these women's Christian call to serve, sacrifice, and dedicate themselves to God, and their erotic desire for intimacy, agency, achievement, and fulfillment.




Reconciliation(s)


Book Description

Reconciliation(s) considers the definition of the concept of reconciliation itself, focusing on the definitional dialogue that arises from the attempts to situate reconciliation within a theoretical and analytical framework. Contributing authors champion competing definitions, but all agree that it plays an important role in building relationships of trust and cohesion. The essays in this book also consider the nature and utility of reconciliation in a number of contexts, evaluating both its function and efficacy.




T.P.'s Weekly


Book Description




Gabrielle of the Lagoon


Book Description

A riveting romance novel by Arnold Safroni Middleton set in the Solomon Isles of the South Sea. Hillary is a ship's apprentice running away from his former crew. He flees to Papua New Guinea where he hopes to enjoy the uneventful life of a tropical paradise. That is until he meets Gabrielle Everard, a young woman of mixed race who lives with her father, a former sailor himself. Hillary is smitten with her and would do anything to be with her. That is all threatened when a series of events leads to Gabrielle being kidnapped by a shady figure called Rajah Koo Macah. It is up to Hillary to rescue Gabrielle...




François Ozon


Book Description

Available in paperback for the first time, this is a full-length study of the films of François Ozon, director of such diverse films as 8 femmes, Swimming Pool, 5x2 and Les amants criminels. Andrew Asibong’s passionate and critical analysis focuses on the extent to which Ozon’s seemingly light touch never ceases to engage with the fundamentally weighty issue of existential transformation, a transformation that affects both his protagonists and his audiences. A central question emerges: what is at stake, cinematically, ethically and politically, in Ozon’s alternatively utopian and cynical flirtation with the construction and deconstruction of contemporary social relations. Revealing Ozon as a highly adept ‘fan’ of a whole range of thought, literature and cinema, Asibong places the precocious French auteur in an intellectual yet highly accessible critical framework, allowing Ozon’s importance for a thoroughly postmodern filmgoing generation to be given the attention it deserves.




Not Speaking


Book Description

Families are places of love, care, and fun; also of anger, anxiety, and quarrels. Not Speaking tells the story of a Greek matriarch, Rena, and her English children in post-war London and the present. It begins with Rena’s move out of a flat in St John’s Wood owned by her son Nicky Clarke, and the family disagreement that erupted. Moving through the London slums of Blackfriars, Greece under Nazi occupation, the Old Kent Road, Elephant and Castle, and the world of Mayfair hairdressing, this is a tale of enrichment and fame, infidelity and its consequences. And in the end, it has a message: every family is unique and all families are the same. * 'Wonderfully evocative – funny, illuminating and moving.' Jenny Uglow




Strategies of Resistance in the Dramatic Texts of North African Women


Book Description

This study presents the first broad analysis of Maghrebian women's dramatic literature undertaken in English. The book considers sixty-five plays and works of performance art by they twenty-eight women dramatists from the Maghreb.




The Literary Vision of Gabrielle Roy


Book Description