If My Family Lived in the Ocean


Book Description

A little girl with a wild imagination explores what her life would look like if she and her family lived in the ocean. She decides a warm body of water would be best, and she pictures her mom and dad and brother and sister as creatures in the sea inhabiting a coral reef. Through colorful illustrations, this picture book for children offers vivid insight into the brilliant and multifaceted underwater world. From manta rays to grouper to bottle-nosed dolphins, If My Family Lived in the Ocean shows an array of creatures and features of the deep blue sea.




The Memory of Taste


Book Description

A playful collection of over 85 Vietnamese and Viet American dishes and immersive travel photography from Top Chef alum Tu David Phu that blends the Oakland native’s modern culinary style with the food wisdom from his refugee family. “Stripped of Oriental exoticism, this is a cookbook infused with the intense flavors of refugee kitchens and the inauthentic authenticity of the diaspora.”—Viet Thanh Nguyen, author of Pulitzer Prize winner The Sympathizer Tu David Phu trained in the nation’s top restaurants only to realize the culinary lessons that truly impacted him were those passed on by his parents, refugees from Phú Quôc. In his hometown of Oakland, California, his parents taught him hard-won lessons in frugality, food-covery cooking, and practical gill-to-fin eating. Centered around Tu’s childhood memories in the diverse Bay Area and family stories of life on Phú Quốc island, The Memory of Taste explores the Phu family’s ability to thrive and adapt from one coastal community to another. With tried-and-true tips like how to butcher a fish, tastebud-tingling flavor combinations, and stunning photographs, Tu guides both novice and experienced chefs alike in his take on Viet cooking, including: • Staples in every Vietnamese kitchen like Cơm Tấm (Broken Rice), Dán Sả (Lemongrass Paste), and Nước Mắm Cham (Everyday Fish Sauce) • Seafood dishes that utilize the less “desired” parts like Huyết Cá Tái Chanh (Tuna Bloodline Tartare), Canh Chua Đầu Cá Hồi (Hot Pot-style Salmon Head Sour Soup), and Xương Cá Hồi Ghiên Giòn (Fried Fish Frames) • Fine-dining dishes from Tu’s pop-up days like Gỏi Cuốn Cá Cornets, Mì Xào Tỏi Nấm Cục (Truffled Garlic Noodles), and Bánh Canh Carbonara • Adapted recipes from new traditions like Bánh Ít Trần (Sticky Rice Dumplings), Cơm Cua Hấp (Dungeness Crab Donburi), and Phở Vịt Nướng (Roasted Duck Phở) The Memory of Taste is Tu’s story of returning to his roots and finding long-hidden culinary treasure. In his debut cookbook, Tu offers readers a chance to enjoy the bounty of his parents’ lessons, just as he has.




Trash Fish


Book Description

Trash Fish is the story of a boy who gives himself over to his obsession with fish as an escape from the trials of growing up. Time and again, as his life unfolds to reveal his failings and foibles to those around him, he returns to the fish, which cast him a lifeline of their own. Laugh–out–loud funny yet sardonically raw to the bone, Keeler tells a whole whirlpool of a story—the women, the Peace Corps, the teaching jobs, the marriage and children, and, of course, the rod and reel. Eventually, however, his serene fishing life becomes contaminated with real–world influences: a polite society of angling purists insists that he choose between flies and bait, while his alter ego (and nemesis) begins to use fishing as an excuse to cheat on his wife. Ultimately, Keeler's fisherman must acknowledge that he can't escape down the river bend, and that in order to experience true love, he must accept the complexities within himself and within the people on land around him.




Fallen


Book Description

When Xavier entered Ocean's life he turned her world upside down. His love for her was like nothing she'd ever felt and took her to places she never knew existed. But what Ocean battled with in the beginning was Xavier's ties to the underworld and it seems that despite his promises and the love that Xavier has for Ocean he still can't leave his bad boy ways behind him.Time passes but Jenson's love for Ocean never fades. He places his life at risk vowing to keep her safe. Despite his love for his brother, Jenson can't seem to keep his mind and eyes off the one girl that brotherly love won't allow him to have.As if it is a curse for the brother's, Hamza is also battling a love that he never should have allowed himself to yearn for. The one girl that he wants more than life itself is the one girl that will do any and everything within her power to see him dead.




The Temple at the End of the Universe


Book Description

A journalistic memoir by a lapsed evangelical Christian that examines how the ecological crisis is shifting the ground of religious faith. Our species is leaving scars on the earth that will last for millennia. How has religious ideology helped bring humanity to the brink of catastrophe? What new expressions of faith might help us respond with grace, self-sacrifice, and love? What will spark our compassion, transcend our divisions, and spur us to action? Josiah Neufeld explores how the interlocking crises of climate change have shifted the ground of religious faith on a quest that is both philosophical and deeply personal. As the son of Christian missionaries based in Burkina Faso, Neufeld grew up aware of his privilege in an unjust world. His faith gave way to skepticism as he realized the fundamental injustice underpinning evangelical Christianity: only a minority would be saved, and the rest would be damned. He was left, though, with an understanding of how people’s actions are influenced by spiritual motives and religious convictions, and of how a framework of faith can counter one’s sense of personal powerlessness. The Temple at the End of the Universe is the rallying cry for a new spiritual paradigm for the Anthropocene.




Cruising World


Book Description




The Archipelago of Us


Book Description

Five years after first living in the Indian Ocean Territories, Reneé Pettitt-Schipp finds herself returning, haunted by memories of the asylum seekers she taught there in Australia' s detention system. Why do the islands still have a hold on her? Why are her memories such troubled ones? And why can she not let go?Closer to Indonesia than Australia, Christmas Island and Cocos (Keeling) Islands are out of sight and out of mind to most Australians, but they are the sites of some of our frontier wars, the places where our identity is laid bare in all its flawed complexity &– and the places where there is time and space enough to ask: can we be better than this?A travel narrative, a memoir and a thought-provoking look at Australia' s complicated history with Christmas and Cocos (Keeling) Islands and the asylum seekers detained there.




Cin d'Rella and the Water of Life


Book Description

When Cin lost her father, she thought her world had been torn apart. Little did she know it was just the beginning of her story… Being the sole heir to the d’Rella family fortune placed a target on Cin’s back that she wasn’t prepared to deal with at the age of ten. Luckily for her, she had a mysterious godfather looking out for her best interests who whisked her away from her selfish step-family and helped Cin discover her true destiny as a Thorn within the formidable Circle of the Rose. Thorns are an elite fighting force trained at an early age to protect Briar Rose and search for a way to awaken her from a seemingly eternal slumber. The city of Briardale has been cut off from the rest of the world for a hundred years by a spell no one seems to be able to break. Only by finding a cure to awaken Briar Rose will the city be released from the magical curse and its citizens allowed to rejoin the world of Faloria. Her mission is clear until a chance encounter with the dashing Coltan Prince turns her world upside down. For decades, his family has been sabotaging the Thorns’ efforts to awaken Briar Rose. Although Cin knows Coltan is the enemy, she is inexplicably charmed by him. When Coltan goes to the Thorns with information about the whereabouts of the fabled Water of Life, Cin must decide if she can trust a man she has been taught to hate.







SIS’TER


Book Description

In her autobiography, Rosetta Chatman Davis describes her di cult life growing up in the Fifties and Sixties on a farm in Greeleyville, South Carolina. Rosetta gives detailed family history from slavery to freedom, and through the Depression and World War II. Many of their experiences will bring you to tears. is is not just another “Down South” story, but a success story of a Black family who prayed and persevered through the injustice of sharecropping, ‘Jim Crow’ laws, predjudiceness and tough times. All they had to depend upon was their faith in God and their ability to work hard. Rosetta was born prematurely in 1947 and was not expected to live, but God had other plans and a purpose for her life. At age ten Rosetta and her siblings, were forced to worked alongside their parents in the elds, planting and harvesting cotton and tobacco. Rosetta’s God-fearing parents demanded that she and her siblings take advantage of the education that was available to them; and each one enjoyed successful lives and careers after leaving South Carolina and moving to New York City and Connecticut and New Jersey. Rosetta graduated from high school in Greeleyville South Carolina in 1965. After moving to New York City, she attended Hunter Secretarial School and later studied Early Childhood Development at Lehman College in Bronx, New York. She has enjoyed a successful career of Federal Government service working for the United States District Court and the Veteran’s Administration. Rosetta’s passion and calling is studying God’s word and teaching young children. Rosetta has been teaching the Bible to children and adults for over forty years. Rosetta is currently teaching in the Children’s Ministry Department at Church of the Revelation in Bronx, New York, and serves as leader of the Intercessory Prayer Ministry.