The Invisible Foes She Encounters


Book Description

This heart warming story takes you through the roaring twenties and into the dirty thirties, then into the forties when this enchanted little girl was born, and later found out she had epilepsy, it shows you the struggles she had to over come, through the first seventeen years of her life. The strength she had to get through those invisible foes she encountered. And the will power she had to over come, the stepping stones in her way. This story is based on the authors life and she hopes it will inspire those with epilepsy to be able to have their dreams come true too, it shows the patience she had to beat the odds, and finally see her dearest wish come true. This story will at times make you cry, and other times make you want to laugh, at the things she did to over come her invisible foes. It shows you love she has for her parents and patience and understanding she learned with this awful sickness, the story will show you how she managed to beat the odds of having epilepsy for the rest of her life. It will show you how the world can look, when you are free of the Invisible foes.




Secretary of the Invisible


Book Description

How do individuals, who are part of a community, respond to the stranger as a stranger: i.e. without simply positioning this outsider in opposition to the community in which they are located? How may individuals receive something unknown and therefore surprising into their world without compromising it by identifying it in the terms of that world? In this study, Mike Marais traces the various ways in which Coetzee’s fiction, from Dusklands through to Slow Man, repeatedly poses such questions of hospitality. It is shown that the form of ethical action staged in Coetzee’s writing is grounded not in the individual’s willed and rational achievement, but in his or her invasion and possession by the strangeness of the stranger. This ethic of hospitality, Marais argues, has a strong aesthetic dimension: for Coetzee, the writer is inspired to write by being acted upon by a force from beyond the phenomenal world. The writer is a secretary of the invisible. She or he is responsible to and for the invisible. Marais maintains that this understanding of writing as an involuntary response to that which exceeds history is evident from the first in Coetzee’s fiction. In readings of the novels of the apartheid era, he traces this writer’s rueful, ironic awareness of the limited, even incidental, form of political engagement that may emanate from such an aesthetic. He then goes on to argue that if it is the writer’s obligation to render visible the invisible, writing must be a task that can never be completed. What is more, such writing is thus bound to be iterative in form. With this in mind, he traces the structural similarities between Coetzee’s writing of the apartheid period and his post-apartheid and Australian writing, arguing that the later texts are self-reflexively aware of their endlessly repetitive nature. These contentions are developed incrementally through close readings of the individual novels that focus on recurring metaphors of hospitality – visitor, the stranger, the house, the castaway, the invisible, the dream, and the child.




The Encounter


Book Description

With extra time on his hands at the end of an exhausting eight-day business trip, a successful middle-aged businessman, happily married for sixteen years to the woman of his dreams, does something he's never done before or even contemplated for reasons not entirely clear even to himself. He invites a prostitute to his hotel room. What he expected to be a brief, insignificant sexual liaison ends up turning his life upside down, embroiling him with a deranged Russian mobster determined to destroy his career, his financial security, the safety of his wife and two teenage daughters and his life. This is the story of Ron Steele a modern day Everyman, hard-working, responsible, devoted to his family who faces the ultimate price for a sudden, and uncharacteristically impulsive lapse in judgment. Overnight, Ron's protected, safe, and orderly life is thrown into turmoil. All that he's worked so hard and methodically to build and protect, his family, his career, his wealth, is suddenly on the brink of destruction unless, that is, he takes matters quickly into his own hands.




Invisible Enemies


Book Description

All the basic themes necessary to take the reader on a trek of discovery into New Testament deliverance ministry, illustrated with an abundance of testimonies.




Fighting Invisible Enemies


Book Description

Native Americans long resisted Western medicine—but had less power to resist the threat posed by Western diseases. And so, as the Office of Indian Affairs reluctantly entered the business of health and medicine, Native peoples reluctantly began to allow Western medicine into their communities. Fighting Invisible Enemies traces this transition among inhabitants of the Mission Indian Agency of Southern California from the late nineteenth through the mid-twentieth century. What historian Clifford E. Trafzer describes is not so much a transition from one practice to another as a gradual incorporation of Western medicine into Indian medical practices. Melding indigenous and medical history specific to Southern California, his book combines statistical information and documents from the federal government with the oral narratives of several tribes. Many of these oral histories—detailing traditional beliefs about disease causation, medical practices, and treatment—are unique to this work, the product of the author’s close and trusted relationships with tribal elders. Trafzer examines the years of interaction that transpired before Native people allowed elements of Western medicine and health care into their lives, homes, and communities. Among the factors he cites as impelling the change were settler-borne diseases, the negative effects of federal Indian policies, and the sincere desire of both Indians and agency doctors and nurses to combat the spread of disease. Here we see how, unlike many encounters between Indians and non-Indians in Southern California, this cooperative effort proved positive and constructive, resulting in fewer deaths from infectious diseases, especially tuberculosis. The first study of its kind, Trafzer’s work fills gaps in Native American, medical, and Southern California history. It informs our understanding of the working relationship between indigenous and Western medical traditions and practices as it continues to develop today.




Wiseman Review


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The Dublin Review


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Dublin review


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The Dublin Review


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Encounter Group


Book Description

Breathlessly action-packed and boasting a winning combination of thrills, humour and mysticism, the Destroyer is one of the bestselling series of all time.