The Call / Welcome to the Dance


Book Description

The Call, themed stories bringing you the other side of that most innocent thing, a call and Welcome To The Dance, more themed stories on many aspects of that most delightful of pastimes, dancing. The stories show the risks you take when making a call or simply dancing... it opens the doors to all manner of strange beings, happenings, coincidences, blood baths and death. Thirteen's authors have taken these themes and wrought seriously evil stories for your entertainment. Enjoy...




Dancing Molecules


Book Description

Dancing Molecules is poetry to inspire a love affair with the self. This intimate collection will lead the reader inwards to discover the source of his or her own divine music. This book is an invitation to listen to this ectatic music, to join the sacred dance of connection, and to invite others to dance along.




The Book of Love


Book Description

....The year of a strange man living by the sea with his beloved wife who is "falling..".. ...To save her O. does many things, but mostly confronts his unconscious anima "Pandora..".. ....This war with his own self, him already a "King" ends in another Parallel, and the evocation of a being like Ted Hughes' "Crow..".. Stanley MARTIN is a theorist and ex-media teacher, and expert on "myth.."..




Welcome to Thorndale


Book Description

Cuddle up with the cosy, RNA Joan Hessayon Award shortlisted, The Cottage of New Beginnings, the first in the Welcome to Thorndale series. Included in this collection with the other three books; The Garden of Little Rose, A Summer of Second Chances and A Country Village Christmas. The Cottage of New Beginnings: When Annie returns to Thorndale, the village where she spent much of her childhood, she’s looking for a new start. All she wants to do is fix up the cottage her godmother left her, and fix up her broken heart. After clashing with local hero, Jon, Annie can’t help but wonder if coming back to Thorndale was a mistake. The village has clearly changed and the last thing she needs is more drama. But avoiding the distractingly handsome Jon is proving impossible, especially when Thorndale seems to be conspiring to throw them together... The Garden of Little Rose: At a hen party on the remote Scottish island of Alana, Flora is dared to ask a handsome stranger to be her plus-one for the wedding. When the gorgeous Mac accepts her invite, she assumes he’s joking and thinks nothing more of it... Until he turns up at the church on the wedding day. But Mac has an agenda. He wants to hire her skills as a horticulturist to restore the gardens at Róisín House, his home back on Alana. Flora knows she should refuse – Mac has ‘heartbreaker’ written all over him – but she can’t resist uncovering the tragic truth behind the garden at Róisín, and getting to know Mac in the process. A Summer of Second Chances: Daisy likes routine. She goes to work, makes dinner for her son, then loses herself for an hour or two in her sewing. She’s not looking for change, until Ben crashes – literally – into her life. Ben is training for a triathlon, working himself to the limit in an attempt to forget a recent trauma. Daisy wants to help, but even as they become closer with every week that passes, he pushes her away whenever things threaten to get serious. Can Ben open himself up to love again? And with Daisy’s life in the Yorkshire Dales and Ben’s in New York, can they have a future together even if he does? A Country Village Christmas: Olivia doesn’t have time for Christmas or for romance – she’s got a demanding career and has been burned before when it comes to love. This year, she’s spending the festive season in her dad’s old house, packing it up now that he’s moved out. The last thing Olivia expects is for a surprise guest to show up – Tom, the man who literally ran from her after an evening of mutual flirtation. But he has nowhere else to go and Olivia is determined to help him find his way again. As heavy snow keeps them inside the cottage, will their enforced confinement spark romance once again – or will it push them further apart? These heartwarming village love stories are perfect for fans of Julie Houston, Victoria Walters and Trisha Ashley. Praise for Suzanne Snow ‘Utterly charming, with interesting and compelling characters... I found myself slowing down to savour both Snow’s writing and the delicious tension. Highly recommend.’ Jenni Keer, author of The Hopes and Dreams of Lucy Baker ‘A clean, sweet, wholesome, lighthearted story.’ Lilac Mills, author of The Tanglewood Tea Shop ‘Delightful. The characters are charming and the plot is captivating. I highly recommend this sweet, quick read.’⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Reader review ‘A lovely, gentle romance. Highly recommended.’ ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Reader review ‘Warm, comforting, heartwarming and funny. It’s got everything I look for in a romance novel.’ ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Reader review




Glen Echo Park


Book Description




Welcome to Your Designer Planet!


Book Description

We now live in the time of the Gaian hierophant. This is the one who reveals and shows us how to relate to the sacred aspects of Gaia, our planet. Who is this hierophant? Each of us, when we join the campaign with Gaia against the desecration of our natural environment. But first we have to discover what the Earth really is. The Earth's thousands of sacred sites hold a secret: they are functional parts of the planet's geomantic body, consciousness nodes in the Earth's subtle body. Each veils a Light temple, each once known widely and remembered in myth, and Welcome to Your Designer Planet! documents 165 different kinds. The Earth is not an accident of the cosmos, but was designed specifically for humans as an extended Mystery temple primed to support and enhance our greater awareness. And the designers intended that humans help maintain it. Want to help the ecosystem and modulate global warming and climate change? Plug yourself into the Earth's Light grid through your nearest sacred site and start helping. Earth Mysteries researcher Richard Leviton presents a working model of the Earth's geomantic reality based on 24 years of research. The world's myths are the doorway into this fantastic domain of the Earth's visionary geography, showing us where to go and what to do and even what kinds of spiritual beings to expect to see. The future of the Earth is in our hands. Here are some pages from its design manual showing us how to fine-tune our wonderful host planet.




A Hero's Welcome


Book Description

American soldiers who returned from the war in Vietnam were not always treated kindly or with understanding. For Culver, his memory of the love he and Mabel shared before he went to war was a painful reminder of how his life was changed by being in Vietnam. A Hero’s Welcome, in the words of leading Vietnam War literature critic David Willson, “has got baseball, summer camp, college dorm life, and war. It’s got everything. This is an all-American novel.” It’s about how one veteran rediscovered America and about how America treated those it sent to fight an unpopular war. “A classic of the American war in Vietnam War. A brilliant novel of love gone wrong. Naparsteck makes the 1960’s come alive.” —David Willson, co-editor of Vietnam War Literature: An Annotated Bibliography; Willson [please note: he has two l’s in his name] is widely considered one of the nation’s leading experts on Vietnam War literature). Date: February 2000 Martin Naparsteck’s writing is “knee deep in particulars, with the power of close-focus psychological observation.” —Veronica Geng, Mississippi Review, Fall 1964 Naparsteck’s writing “takes risks and survives, indeed prospers because of its honesty….As readers and human beings we all too seldom reflect on truth until we’ve the fortune to read authors like the one here.” —novelist Colin Hester, Diamond Sutra, 1997 “Quirky, playful, and original, the work of Martin Naparsteck is not easily forgotten.” —Janet Hutchings, editor of Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine, July 1996




The Review


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Review


Book Description




Youth Alternatives, Youth Awareness Press


Book Description

The Youth Alternatives and Youth Awareness Press tabloid newspapers were published in Tucson, Arizona through the Tucson YWCA, under the direction of Robert E. Zucker from 1978-1981. The newspaper was staffed by high school students and adult advisors and published through various local, states and federal grants and funding sources.