Irene and Another Form of Torture of Her Own Conscience


Book Description

And in this episodeagain and again and again and againwe are going between others to face at one paranormal to the superlative relative for all the life of all the days and around the world, leading by its supernatural and its mystery of the universe. Of course. Of course! Thats all, of course! The emotional disorder psychosomatic or, to better express it, causing the psychic emoi. Its really all a spooky story as one: the writer, Isaac Mampuya Samba, alone likes recounting it.




Irene and an Other Form of Torture of Her Own Conscience


Book Description

Alberto Rodriguez was mercilessly harming a certain lady named Valery Gled, wife of Lancry Redler, to save his honor while rocking by this fact quite deplorable, by this abominable gesture. And that, in rather sad and rather lamentable situations, the life of an innocent coupleor to express it differently, by doing so much harm, both directly and indirectly, to Mrs. Valery Gled and to her husband, MSieur Lancry Redler, and without forgetting their two children whom they had at the time been in charge, who had seen this way, tearing their parents apart. But here it isparanormally speaking, the Mystic Bandidos (the paranormal bandits) would settle the account of this Alberto Rodriguez. It should be pointed out that the police several times alerted, was not at all (then really, she was not at all, at all), of size to be able to get their hands on them.




Irene Lucindaçio, the Daughter of Jupiter and Aphrodite


Book Description

Let us listen to Irene Lucindaio express herself on this subject: And again, alas! I was going to defray the chronicles of evil! In any case, I am Irene Lucindaio. I am bad luck to people. To know that, already, already, already, already, and already, I had introduced (during days of Friday the 13th) the formidable idea of the Suicidero Form, the Suicideros form, through the sad form, by the nostalgia form, and the melancholy form, in a peaceful family of thirteen persons (the Loureno familythe offspring and their parents); thirteen people, in fact, completely suicidal themselves, so to speak, decimated. And the recourse to this macabre idea, it was because of whom? It was because of me, Irene Lucindaio. But really: What rubbish that I am me? So I must be ashamed to be able to look at myself in a mirror! Thus, this Venus called Irene Lucindaio would captivate all eyes, all the attention, and (it goes without saying) all comments. And again, alas! She was going to defray the chronicles of evil; consequently, for her, gossiping gossip and the feeling of living in the depths of the abyss had become indisputable. Hence, for her, it was absolutely necessary to go away. For her, she would actually have no other alternative as a solution than that of leaving, leaving, leaving, and leaving; going far away; very far; far, far away; very, very far from her birthplace. She would go to London. Only here, her son Ernesto, where he would have stayed with his grandparents, would have become the toy of all; whats more, every night he would have horrible nightmares, with multiple names that he would remember. And so, every morning, he would wake up in the wrong way. And what to do in front of this situation?




Survival and Penalty of the Slave Trade from Gabon Until the Congo in 1840–1880


Book Description

In this Volume III, we will continue the second part of the book (that is to say, Repression and the Impact of the Treaty on Ogooue, Loango, Congo and Surrounding Societies) that we have already begun in Volume II. We will try to carefully consider the suppression of this inhuman trading on the shores of Gabon, who were under French sovereignty. In Gabon, as elsewhere in Loango and especially in Congo, the slave buying and selling was sometimes in disguised forms. It is carried in the domestic qualification between the coast of Africa and Brazil and the blacks who were subsequently sold as slaves mercilessly. However, a tolerance granted to boarding the blacks as such (that is to say, by way of domestic, whatever their numbers elsewhere, and especially their species) was, therefore, not regarded as any other than the implicit tolerance of the slave trader, which, of course, was not slow to manifest itself openly. The still was transported under the qualification free emigrants (with employment contracts), considerable quantities of Negroes. We were brought in the new world. All these operations raised a great outcry from international opinion. First, without really giving the impression to tackle this or that nation who practiced these operations, we made people understand that the mortality raging in the boats, making this covert deals too high. After, it openly attacked the nations who were involved in these practices.




Survival and Repression of the Slave Trade from Gabon Until Congo in 1840–1880


Book Description

An author in the scale of a value as the years pass, not a descendant but rather a value perpetually rising and wanted in several countries, Isaac Mampuya Samba is a feather having a safe haven and value as gold. Such a revelation always on the internet, Isaac Mampuya Samba (IMS or IM) is becoming downright a brand factory (or, rather, a showcase) for the sale of or to sell all that we want (cell phones, iPhones, iPads, iOSs, smart connectors, jailbreaks, etc.) and the works of some other people who annoy not to display the reference of Isaac Mampuya Samba (IMS or IM). The proof? See the numerical current odds of his books published before to realize it by oneself. Here, we are so going to see that. The first men who tried to substitute the human flesh trader by exporting African products were found to be first the English and then the French. But it must be said that these abolitionists had great difficulty convincing the coastal tribes. The result was that this mutation (in the interests of economic liberalism)the meeting of African societies where the traffic is providing the manufactured goods in exchange of the captives that were brought into the new world or the products of the African hunting and gatheringhad many difficulties to achieve.




Fefu and Her Friends


Book Description

One of Off-Broadway's best-loved plays, originally directed by the author. The audience follows the lives of eight women. For this play, Maria Irene Fornes received one of her nine Obie awards. "A wonderful, important play." Susan Sontag "Fornes is America's truest poet of the theater." Erika Munk "An extraordinary play of uncommon insight and wit." Los Angeles Herald Examiner "One of the most powerful plays written about the mysteries and shared hallucinations of the female experience." L A Weekly "Though written in 1977, the message of FEFU AND HER FRIENDS remains ever the same: women don't know what to do with feminism. Or rather, they don't know what to do with themselves. It's a strange, unsettling play, not least because the strong women characters are at a loss with each other and with themselves. Without a man to center around, they disintegrate into cattiness and then madness. Fefu is probably deranged to begin with. She 'pretends' to shoot her husband with a gun that may or may not be loaded. She likes men better than women and in fact finds women 'loathsome.' Fefu and her friends are a group of society women, circa 1935. They're bored and affected in the manner of wealthy women who have too much free time. The play begins with plans for a charity benefit being planned at Fefu's New England estate. During the second part, four different scenes play simultaneously in four different rooms. The audience is led around to each in no particular order. In the final act, the women turn giggly, then bitchy, and then everything takes a tragic turn. Though not a realistic play neither is it strictly allegorical...at the heart of the play [is] 'a provocative statement about women to this day.' Fornes's self-loathing, self-doubting women only gradually come to understand the glossy surface and the dark underbelly that is the dual reality of their lives. It's thought-provoking but challenging, not for those who enjoy escapism in their theatre." Jenny Sandman, CurtainUp"




Irene Iddesleigh


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The Well-Balanced World Changer


Book Description

What happens when idealism and reality crash into each other (and you)? If you have ever passionately invested yourself in living your faith, championing a cause, or representing some noble ideal, you’ve probably experienced a faceoff between idealism and reality. Society often recognizes its deficits—poverty, crime, divisiveness, anxiety, excess—yet it rarely celebrates the rise of people who want to change those shortcomings. Still, many of us chip away at the world as it is, believing that a better world is possible. While in that place where we work to see good come about, we meet resistance almost daily: between dreams and disappointment, between wholeness and dysfunction, between past and future. This can lead to frustration, bitterness, disillusionment, loneliness, and exhaustion. It can lead to people abandoning the church, faith, and God. . . or just becoming more passive, less passionate versions of their former faith-charged selves. Don’t give in! This book is your survival guide. You can champion your cause and your faith, even in a broken and dysfunctional world. Stay in the race and take this guide along as source of fuel, rest, and encouragement along the way.




The revenge of cholesterol


Book Description

Amanda is a prestigious researcher in cardiovascular health who struggles to stay afloat in the sea of egos and economic interests that protects the greatest scientific deception of all time. The day she fails in her efforts to muzzle the booing of her conscience and loses her job, she hears an unusual siren’s call from Cariño, a fishing village up on the north of Spain. As the dismissed doctor responds, she entangles the destinies of a dozen souls that will be turned upside down... or, perhaps, straightened out.




Irene


Book Description