Greener Pastures Calling


Book Description

A new country, a great job, and a "good Kiwi bloke". Life couldn't be better... Until it gets worse. Newly emigrated to New Zealand, equine veterinarian Lena wants a "good Kiwi bloke", but they’re elusive as their nocturnal namesake. Her history with men is not, shall we say, salubrious. Nigel’s avoiding females, unless they’re cows, horses, or his mother. After his first marriage, he won’t be responsible for anyone else’s life ever again. Sparks fly when they meet, but not that first time, over the dirty instruments in a filthy cowshed. They’re made for each other... until Nigel remembers where he first saw her. And then the questions start. BOOK TWO IN THE ONCE UPON A VET SCHOOL: PRACTICE TIME SERIES Books by Lizzi Tremayne: Unpretentious, eminently readable Contemporary and Historical Fiction... by a horse vet! AWARDS FOR THE AUTHOR With Lizzi's first novel, A Long Trail Rolling, she was: Winner 2016 True West Best Western Romance, Finalist 2013 RWNZ Great Beginnings; Winner 2014 RWNZ Pacific Hearts Award; Winner 2015 RWNZ Koru Award for Best First Novel plus third in Koru Long Novel section; and finalist in the 2015 Best Indie Book Award. The Once Upon a Vet School Overall Series Drama and humor abound as Lena pursues her childhood dream of becoming an equine vet—and beyond—in this unique series of six independent sequences: ~Junior Years~High School Days~College Nights~Vet School 24/7~Practice Time~ Currently Available The Stories of the Once Upon a Vet School Series ~Vet School 24/7~ Fifty Miles at a Breath (III) Horses bring them together and their future looks rosy—it's the present they can't handle. Lena Takes a Foal (IV) She needs help... he needs to stay away... ~Practice Time~ Greener Pastures Calling (II) A new country, a great job, and a good Kiwi bloke. Life couldn't be better. Until it gets worse




Green Pastures


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Greener Pastures


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This is a collection of short stories which address topics ranging from siblings finding others that they never knew they had to the illegal immigrant finding work. The characters and the events are imagined, but the theme is generally the same-someone seeking what s/he imagined is a better way of life. The stories do not offer an excuse for illegal immigration, but they do try to capture the pain and the price for being in this place at this time, however the means by which one got here.










The Green Pastures


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Screenplay




Green Pastures, Quiet Waters: Refreshing Moments from the Psalms


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Our days are busy and our lives are filled with an endless barrage of 'must's,' 'should's,' and 'have to's.' While our hearts long for a mere moment of beauty, peace, and rest, we often wonder if there is truly a place to find green pastures and quiet waters. In the third book of his Wisdom Trilogy, Pastor Ray Pritchard takes us far away from the clamor of the everyday, not by removing us from our situations, but by putting them in the proper context of God's Word. Spend a few moments meditating on the Word of God in Green Pastures, Quiet Waters. In these 100 daily readings from the Psalms, Pastor Pritchard skillfully weaves entertaining stories and words of great thinkers with the inerrant Word of God. Each reading includes a key verse, a meditation on that verse, a prayer of response, and three meditation questions.God promises peace and rest to those who seek Him and trust Him for the outcome of their situations. You, too, can find Green Pastures, Quiet Waters.




The American Legion Weekly


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Green Pastures and Still Waters for the Flock of God


Book Description

[Publisher's note: This written statement was penned over a 100 years ago.] The following was written nearly six years ago It was only after much hesitation and prayer, that, at the repeated requests of some esteemed Christians, and after a careful revision, I have resolved to commit these notes to print. I confide in the well-known forbearance of my dear fellow Christians in this country, as to the imperfections of expression. The twenty-third Psalm has been so interwoven with the whole of my Christian course (of more than 26 years), and our gracious Shepherd has, from this precious portion of His Pasture, whenever I turned to it, so often blessed my soul, that I could resist no longer the desire to communicate to others what He has been pleased to give to me. The dispensational side of our Psalm I have only occasionally touched upon, as the chief object of it is the feeding of the soul on Christ. Consequently even the great Christian principles of truth, foreshadowed and embedded in this Psalm, are considered, only as far as they concern the flock of God; for instance, the question of worship at the Lord's Table, where we feed upon His death, when "We sing of the Shepherd that died, That died for the sake of the flock." For, however important a place the Church, as such, may occupy at that blessed Table of our Lord, and in His counsels, yet this portion of divine truth would be out of place in our Psalm. May God keep us from growing into cool and enlightened churchmen, to the neglect of the pastoring of the flock, for whom the Good Shepherd died.