The Priest & The Princess: The Bracelet: Book 1


Book Description

Ryker Harrison is an investigator hot on the trail of high-end luxury counterfeiters of jewelry. He engineers a chance meeting with Tiara, the wife of the counterfeiter, but when he meets her, he is overcome by feelings that he has to protect her from her husband, an insanely jealous psychopathic killer named Sasha. Ryker realizes that his meeting with Tiara has forever blurred the distinction between work, and the affairs of the heart, and he realizes that they forged a connection, so strong, and so powerful, that it could get them both killed. His hunch is proved correct. He shows Tiara that her purse has a transmitter in it, broadcasting her every move. Yet, she insists on taking her children away from her husband in a final act of defiance. A Navy SEAL that went to seminary school, Ryker has to make use of all his talents and abilities in counterinsurgency if he is to keep his new love interest alive. But could she truly trust him, and he her, in enough time to avert disaster?




The Priest & The Princess: 2 Birds, 1 Stone: Book 6


Book Description

When Ryker met Tiara a connection, a spark, ignited between them that is erupting into blazing hot emotions all around them. Tiara is concerned about keeping her marriage intact, but her husband Sasha sees the world in only absolutes - Black, or White. Ryker is on the trail of Tiara, watching to keep her safe while she is in Sasha's vengeful hands. Gold bullion coins, the biggest stash in recent history, have been grabbed by Sasha, and his counterfeiting days are over. He has the Gold, unique, one-of-a-kind coins, and believes that he can entice Tiara's love again. But Tiara has been down that road many times with him, and proves more headstrong that he gives her credit for. Spurned, Sasha devises a set-up that will implicate Tiara, but when Ryker is discovered, Sasha decides the time has come to tidy up the loose ends - and get rid of Tiara and Ryker with one foul swoop.




Birdees and the Bracelet of the Five Gods


Book Description

A historical fantasy based on real rulers, prophecies, spells, battles, and a real villain whose name was obliterated from the ancient papyruses . . . Death is the end, but life goes on. And the past shouldn’t be messed with . . . Birdees is obsessed with her ancestors’ history—ancient Egyptian history. After her mother’s tragic death, her obsession grows more and more powerful. She rejects her ordinary, boring life and her mind keeps living within the pages of the history books, fascinated by the mystery and magic of the past . . . But she will soon realize that the reason for her obsession is an ancient legacy left for her from thousands of years before. A burden she holds in her hand for years, unbeknownst to her, that will bring her pain, suffering, and the death of her beloved ones. Yet she must protect her legacy with her life. It should never fall into the hands of the evil priest, Jed Didy, but must be passed to the rightful owners for the sake of survival . . .







Irish Materialisms


Book Description

Irish Materialisms: The Nonhuman and the Making of Colonial Ireland, 1690-1830, is the first book to apply recent trends in new materialist criticism to Ireland. It radically shifts familiar colonial stereotypes of the feminized, racialized cottier according to the Irish peasantry's subversive entanglement with nonhuman materiality. Each of the chapters engages a focused case study of an everyday object in colonial Ireland (coins, flax, spinning wheels, mud, and pigs) to examine how each object's unique materiality contributed to the colonial ideology of British paternalism and afforded creative Irish expression. The main argument of Irish Materialisms is its methodology: of reading literature through the agency of materiality and nonhuman narrative in order to gain a more egalitarian and varied understanding of colonial experience. Irish Materialisms proves that new materialism holds powerful postcolonial potential. Through an intimate understanding of the materiality Irish peasants handled on a daily basis, this book presents a new portrait of Irish character that reflects greater empowerment, resistance, and expression in the oppressed Irish than has been previously recognized.




The Expositor's Bible: The Second Book of Kings


Book Description

This book contains a detailed analysis of the second book of Kings in the Bible. It is divided into several chapters, each of which focuses on a particular aspect of the narrative. The first chapter discusses the reign of Ahaziah ben-Ahab of Israel, including his weakness as a king, the relations between Judah and Israel, and the revolt of Moab. The subsequent chapters cover topics such as the ascension of Elijah, the miracles of Elisha, the story of Naaman, and the revolt of Jehu. The book focuses on the historical, cultural, and religious significance of the events described in the book of Kings.










Online Game: Becoming God


Book Description

Three years before his rebirth, when the game "God of Conferred" opened, the former king of the game was just a small follower who followed the Second Miss into the game.




The Heart of Princess Osra


Book Description

Then he bent in his saddle and went on in a hurried urgent whisper: “I love her better than my life, Stephen—better than heaven; and my faith and word are pledged to her; and last night I was to have fled with her—for I knew better than to face the old Lion—but Osra found her making preparations and we were discovered. Then Osra was scornful, and the King mad, and Rudolf laughed; and when they talked of what was to be done to her, Osra came in with her laughing suggestion. It caught the King's angry fancy, and he swore that it should be so. And, since the Archbishop is away, he has bidden the Bishop of Modenstein be at the palace at twelve to-day, and you will be brought there also, and you will be married to her. But, by heavens, I'll have your blood if you are!” With this sudden outbreak of fury the Prince ended. Yet a moment later, he put out his hand to the smith, saying: “It's not your fault, man.”...FROM THE BOOKS.