Unfurling the Heart


Book Description

McGearhart weaves a tale of a woman enchanted with love, a man obsessed with adventure, and how love's persuasion makes dreams come true.




Unfurling


Book Description

Can an unexpected turn of events, including a mystery, guide you towards a sense of purpose in your life? Mandira Sharma (Mandy) is a recent medical graduate, feeling extremely jubilant that she will no longer have to study diligently for exams and can now start earning. She is not passionate about her residency in internal medicine and feels devoid of a general sense of purpose in life. Currently, her happiness revolves around making new friends and spending time with them, be it at her place of work or outdoor venues. Her general sense of isolation and disinterest in her medicine residency accentuates when her two close friends go overseas, and someone she loves and cares deeply about decides to part ways. Trying to cope with the current painful scenario - she navigates through her daily routine devoid of zest or enthusiasm. During an endocrinology key opinion leader profiling assignment, Mandy meets Latika, a psychology Master's student. A friendship develops between the two ladies, stemming from shared interests. Latika invites Mandy to attend a workshop titled "What's Your Attachment Style," which piques Mandy's interest. However, tragedy strikes again, when during a desolate blackout at the workshop venue, two attendees find Latika's body floating in a pool on the premises. Inspector Geetika and her team launch an investigation into the crime's motive and modus operandi, and the cohort of meeting attendees, including Mandy, come under the lens of suspicion. Mandy confronts the grief of yet another loss. She decides to endeavor to assist the inspector in unraveling the solution to the mystery and bringing her friend's killer to justice. The plot of this novel is an amalgam of elements of friendship, love, mystery, suspense, and the unfurling of finding solace and fulfillment in a purpose or goal.




Handbook of Diseases of Banana, Abaca and Enset


Book Description

This handbook contains 13 chapters covering banana (Musa and Ensete) diseases caused by various groups of causal agents and disorders caused by unknown and known factors. Topics discussed include fungal diseases of the foliage, root, corm, pseudostem, fruit (pre- and postharvest), as well as diseases caused by bacteria and phytoplasmas, viruses and nematode pathogens. Information is given on their economic impact, distribution, symptoms, disease cycle and epidemiology, host reaction, and control. Non-infectious disorders, mineral deficiencies, injuries caused by adverse climate and extreme weather, chemical injuries and genetic abnormalities are also described. Topic on quarantine and the safe movement of Musa germplasm is also given. This book, like the last, is for all 'banana doctors' around the world. It is hoped that it serves as a useful field and laboratory guide plus a source of information to all those investigating problems of the banana, abacá and enset crops.




Transfigurations


Book Description

These books are about listening. It addresses the wisdom already within you. It was there before you were born, and it will be there after you leave. It is beyond the distractions of the body, conflicts with the emotions, and the contradictions of the mind. It is about who you are and listening to who you are. It is to help you find your own direct knowledge with your energy and the truth in creating abundance and balance in your life. It is about the stillness of your soul and all its inner harmonies, which are your spiritual expression. It brings forth your innocence, truth, blessings, miracles, consecration, grace, and living love. You are a creative being whose keys to emergence lies deep within. This emergence is beyond space and time, and it plays as your inner verse. You are poetry of being. It is time for you to claim it and to love yourself and all the other sources within you. It is your soul awareness.




Claiming the Heart


Book Description

As the Texas and Pacific Railroad expands across the wide-open frontier, a spirited young woman finds a triumphant love amidst the tracks and tumult. Original.




Songs of a Southern Land


Book Description




When the Heart Waits


Book Description

The bestselling author's inspiring autobiographical account of personal pain, spiritual awakening, and divine grace. "Inspiring. Sue Monk Kidd is a direct literary descendant of Carson McCullers."—Baltimore Sun "Grounded in personal experience and bolstered with classic spiritual disciplines and Scripture, this book offers an alternative to fast-fix spirituality."—Bookstore Journal Blending her own experiences with an intimate grasp of spirituality, Sue Monk Kidd relates the passionate and moving tale of her spiritual crisis, when life seemed to have lost meaning and her longing for a hasty escape from the pain yielded to a discipline of "active waiting." Full of wisdom, poise, and grace, Kidd’s words will encourage us along our spiritual journey, toward becoming who we truly are.




Love Letters from My Deathbed


Book Description

A Saltire Prize Nominee: “Witty, wise and on occasion laugh aloud funny. . . . A tonic for all those concerned with living more fully while we can.” —Andrew Greig, award-winning author of Whirligig Something strange is going on in Fairfax, California. Joe Johnson is on the hunt for people who are dying; Morag has just been diagnosed with something terminal by someone who may or may not be a legitimate doctor; and the Snelling twins are harboring a secret. What ties these people together? Just who is Consuela? And what on earth does she have to do with it all? Love Letters from My Deathbed is a funny and life-affirming novel about the courage to love in the face of death, from award-winning author Cynthia Rogerson, author of Stepping Out and a winner of the V. S. Pritchett Prize. A Sunday Herald and Scotland on Sunday Favorite Book of the Year “Wonderfully eccentric . . . achingly funny and deeply touching.” —Laura Hird “Immediately engrossing, totally engaging.” —Janet Paisley “A master of fresh and sparky comic writing.” —The Guardian on I Love You, Goodbye




Heart's Flower


Book Description

Shinkei (1406-75), one of the most brilliant poets of medieval Japan, is a pivotal figure in the development of renga (linked poetry) as a serious art. In an age when anyone who wished to signal his denial of mundane concerns or make his way in the world with relative freedom donned the robes of a monk, Shinkei stood out by being a practicing cleric with a temple in Kyoto, the Japanese capital. His priestly duties and his devotion to Buddhist ideals are directly reflected in the intensely pure, lyrical longing for transcendence that is the most notable quality of his sensibility. Shinkei's life and work also provide a vivid portrayal of a tumultuous period of Japanese history that was one of the defining moments of its culture, when Zen Buddhism began to directly influence the arts. The book is in two parts. The first part is a literary biography based primarily on Shinkei's own writings - his critical essays, waka sequences, hokku collections, and commentaries - supplemented by various external sources. What emerges is the compelling portrait of a man who bore witness to the tragic anarchy of his times while clinging to the ideal of poetic practice as a mode of being and access to Buddhist enlightenment. Shinkei became embroiled in the factional struggles preceding the Onin War (1467-77) and died a refugee in what is now Kanagawa. The second part consists of annotated translations of Shinkei's most representative poetry: (1) selected hokku (opening verse of a sequence) and tsukeku (linked pairs of verses), along with Muromachi-period commentaries on them; (2) two 100-verse renga sequences - the first a solo composition from 1467, and the second a collaboration with Sogi and other poet-priests and samurai from 1468; and (3) a selection of one hundred waka poems highlighting Shinkei's most characteristic mode of ineffable remoteness. Throughout, the author's annotations seek to define and clarify the unique genre called "linked poetry."




Land of the Cranes (Scholastic Gold)


Book Description

From the prolific author of The Moon Within comes the heart-wrenchingly beautiful story in verse of a young Latinx girl who learns to hold on to hope and love even in the darkest of places: a family detention center for migrants and refugees. Nine-year-old Betita knows she is a crane. Papi has told her the story, even before her family fled to Los Angeles to seek refuge from cartel wars in Mexico. The Aztecs came from a place called Aztlan, what is now the Southwest US, called the land of the cranes. They left Aztlan to establish their great city in the center of the universe-Tenochtitlan, modern-day Mexico City. It was prophesized that their people would one day return to live among the cranes in their promised land. Papi tells Betita that they are cranes that have come home.Then one day, Betita's beloved father is arrested by Immigration Customs Enforcement (ICE) and deported to Mexico. Betita and her pregnant mother are left behind on their own, but soon they too are detained and must learn to survive in a family detention camp outside of Los Angeles. Even in cruel and inhumane conditions, Betita finds heart in her own poetry and in the community she and her mother find in the camp. The voices of her fellow asylum seekers fly above the hatred keeping them caged, but each day threatens to tear them down lower than they ever thought they could be. Will Betita and her family ever be whole again?