Daughters of Jubilation


Book Description

From the award-winning author of The Truth of Right Now comes a “lyrical” (PopSugar), grounded fantasy in the vein of Dread Nation that follows a black teen as she finds her place among a family of women gifted with magical abilities. In the Jim Crow South, white supremacy reigns and tensions are high. But Evalene Deschamps has other things to worry about. She has two little sisters to look after, an overworked single mother, and a longtime crush who is finally making a move. On top of all that, Evvie’s magic abilities are growing stronger by the day. Her family calls it jubilation—a gift passed down from generations of black women since the time of slavery. And as Evvie’s talents waken, something dark comes loose and threatens to resurface… ​And when the demons of Evvie’s past finally shake free, she must embrace her mighty lineage, and summon the power that lies within her.




Jubilation Gap


Book Description

Trouble erupts in Jubilation with its twenty-seven saloons when Kansas is voted a dry state, and Iron Jack Fuller has his hands full with the violence and a schoolteacher from Illinois




Jubilation!


Book Description

Over 50 contemporary Jamaican poets reflect in complex, outspoken, mediative, humorous and outrageous ways on Jamaican independence from Britain and the years that followed.




Grace and Jubilation


Book Description

Jack Noble White, composer of "The First Song of Isaiah", our best-selling choral work of all time, presents a wonderful collection of organ pieces. Included in this collection are a variety of musical arrangements of familiar hymn tunes such as Amazing Grace * Picardy * Ode to Joy * Sine Nomine, plus two other pieces. The Jubilant Trumpet and An Iona Boat Song make wonderful service or recital pieces as well. Organists will turn to this collection time and again throughout the church year.




Jubilation Mass


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Jan Saudek


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The Truth of Right Now


Book Description

Two isolated teens struggle against their complicated lives to find a true connection in this “timely and timeless” (Kirkus Reviews, starred review) debut novel about first love and the wreckage of growing up. Lily is returning to her privileged Manhattan high school after a harrowing end to her sophomore year and it’s not pretty. She hates chemistry and her spiteful lab partner, her friends are either not speaking to her or suffocating her with concerned glances, and nothing seems to give her joy anymore. Worst of all, she can’t escape her own thoughts about what drove her away from everyone in the first place. Enter Dari (short for Dariomauritius), the artistic and mysterious transfer student, adept at cutting class. Not that he’d rather be at home with his domineering Trinidadian father. Dari is everything that Lily needs: bright, creative, honest, and unpredictable. And in a school where no one really stands out, Dari finds Lily’s sensitivity and openness magnetic. Their attraction ignites immediately, and for the first time in what feels like forever, Lily and Dari find happiness in each other. In twenty-first-century New York City, the fact that Lily is white and Dari is black shouldn’t matter that much, but nothing’s as simple as it seems. When tragedy becomes reality, can friendship survive even if romance cannot?




HELP! I am being fostered! JUBILATION! I am being ADOPTED!


Book Description

(2 Books in 1) Led on a journey of uncertainty, Peter continues takes you on a rollercoaster ride, through his own tumultuous and personal experiences. He shares the world of being a foster child; and going through the process of fostering from the 1970's and then adoption in the 1980's and beyond; he shares many perspectives and stories from his life, overcoming many obstacles. He tries to get to grips with understand the events of his early childhood and purpose of his life through various chapters: Hope, Patience, Love, Resilience, Peace, Inspiration etc. He still faces many decisions and emotional challenges head-on growing up; to which Peter must own, must face and also adapt. He bravely encompasses and demonstrates the meaning of being fostered and then choosing to be being adopted and as a result, is prepared for what lies ahead for his future. Life will always have ups and downs, but eventually he learns to smile in the face of adversity and mend a few hearts at the same time. Going through the foster process can be very challenging, but also very rewarding experience. Peter has now grown up, definitely much settled down character; who tries to be an inspiration to others as his skills, stories will testify and allow him to do so. This book may not be suitable for children under 12 years of age due to the nature of certain events recalled. Parental/ Guardian discretion is strongly advised.




Worth a Thousand Words (Jubilant Soul Book #2)


Book Description

Life has always gone Indigo Burns's way. She's smart, pretty, and talented, and she knows exactly what she wants. A photography internship at her hometown's local newspaper is the next step in her well-laid plans for her future. But her long-term goals are put to the test when her boyfriend Brian proposes--two years before he's supposed to and in front of all the guests at her college graduation party. Too concerned about his feelings to say no, she heartily agrees, but inside she's cringing. Indigo knows in her heart that she's not prepared to sacrifice her dreams to become Brian's wife--not before she has achieved any of them. Will she find the answers among family and friends in Jubilant, Texas? Or will the picture-perfect life she dreams of be left behind?




Jubilant Thicket


Book Description

Jonathan Williams founded The Jargon Society--a publisher dedicated to poetry, experimental fiction, photography and visionary folk art--and has championed the underdog, maverick and outsider in the arts for 50 years. He has also published over 100 of his own books, pamphlets and broadsides of poetry, essays and photography. Jubilant Thicket collects the best of his poetry and teems with the eccentric, strange and boundlessly authentic--neoclassical poems, social satire, musical suites and lyrics. There is spleen, salt and a delicious -sarcasm, as Williams finds inspiration in Mahler and Mojo Nixon, Blake and whimmydiddles. There is nobody quite like Jonathan Williams: "He is one of the few poets about whom it could be said, he has never bored a reader."--Contemporary Poets "Of all the Black Mountain poets (teachers and disciples alike), Jonathan Williams is the wittiest, the least constrained, the most joyous."--The New York Times "Jonathan Williams is himself a kind of polytechnic -institute, trained to write poems as spare, functional and alive as a blade of grass."--Guy Davenport, from The Geography of the Imagination "Indispensable! . . . We need him more than we know."--R. Buckminster Fuller Of the thousands of essays and reviews published about his work, Williams writes, "The best thing yet said about me came from an undergraduate at the University of Chicago. His letter ended: 'Thanks for writing all those kick-ass books.'" Jonathan Williams's most recent book is A Palpable Elysium: Portraits of Genius and Solitude (Godine). He founded The Jargon Society in 1951, a publisher that, according to The New York Times, "has come to occupy a special place in the cultural life as patron of the American imagination." He lives on Skywinding Farm in rural North Carolina.