The Dominion of Love


Book Description

Many commentators and users of the Bible have, over the centuries and up to the present day, used the Bible to argue that animals have no rights, that they were put on this earth for our use, and that we have no obligations to them. In his cogent, honest, and fully researched and referenced work, The Dominion of Love, Norm Phelps attempts to encourage all who revere the Bible as holy scripture to open their hearts to the suffering that we inflict upon our nonhuman neighbors. He shows that the right of animals not to be imprisoned, harmed, and killed for our benefit flows naturally from the Bible's message of love and compassion and argues that this is the message of the Bible's most important passages dealing with our relationship to animals. He further responds to the defenses of animal exploitation that are often made based on the Bible. Beautifully written, The Dominion of Love is an essential addition to a growing body of literature that argues for a compassionate and non-exploitative reading of Holy Scripture.




The Newchurchman


Book Description




Boy Toy


Book Description

Tate McNaughton. 24 years old. Gorgeous. An artist independenly wealthy and the heir to a huge fortune. He's way too hot for my own good and seems intent on doing everything he can to seduce me. But he's my boss's son, and because of that, he's off-limits. Work and career have always been my priority. I'm a driven ambitious employee at his father's corporation, on the way up, hoping to break that executive glass ceiling. I've moved across the country to take the job in the Western Division. Work is my life. Then I discover that we'll be staying together at the family's enormous beach house on the sunny coast of California for a week while I wait for a place of my own. He surfs every day, spends time in the hot tub, and parades around in nothing but a towel. Can I resist him? Do I want to?




Romance and the Erotics of Property


Book Description

Romance and the Erotics of Property examines contemporary popular romance from a number of different points of view, probing for codes and subtexts that sometimes exploit and sometimes contradict its surface tale of romantic attraction, frustration, longing, and fulfillment. Cohn argues that a full understanding of the contemporary romance requires an investigation of its literary and historical sources and analogues. Three principal sources are examined in the context of women's history in bourgeois society. Pride and Prejudice, Jane Erye, and Gone With the Wind demonstrate the development of romance fiction's themes, yet in all three the central love story is complicated by issues of property, the sign of male power. Jan Cohn further considers the development of the genre n the fictions of Harriet Lewis and May Agnes Fleming, prolific and popular American romance writers of the late nineteenth century who developed the role of the villain, thereby bringing into focus the sexual and economic struggles faced by the heroine. Romance and the Erotics of Property sets romance fiction against a historic and literary background, arguing that contemporary romance disguises as tales of love the subversive fantasies of female appropriation and male property and power.




The Romantic Reformation


Book Description

First book to examine the Romantic poets' engagement with the religious debates that dominated the period.
















Man Bun


Book Description

Introducing Man Bun, Book 2 in the Boyfriend Series Duology by USA Today Best-selling author S. E. Lund featuring a workaholic older woman and a hunky rich younger man, the son of her boss, and most definitely off limits.