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It's SoCal meets southern charm! This satisfying story is a choice bit of mystery with a side of horror and lightened with a touch of humor. Grace White inherits a stake in her extended family's elegant life of art and architecture. In return, she bears the burden of safekeeping dangerous artifacts with supernatural powers, and dealing with the sinister past of a distant ancestor.Along the way, she meets ordinary people who test their martial arts skills against the undead, attempt to thwart psychopaths who want to wreak havoc on the world, and still find time to match the color of the petit fours to the delicate shade of wisteria of the debutante's gowns.
The first rule for survival when you're a child soldier carrying an AK-47 is kill or be killed. But after you look at the blood of your first victim, you realize two things: one, you hate yourself. And two, there is no turning back. When Scott discovers a pouch of stones clasped in the bony fingers of a skeleton in an African cave, the magic of the ancients is released and he and his nemesis, Bruce, are whisked to Uganda. There they meet Charlie, a former child soldier who has escaped from Joseph Kony's Lord's Resistance Army. When Charlie is recaptured, the two teenagers set out on a daring rescue to save him and the children in a nearby village. Immersed in the insane evil of this rebel army, Scott and Bruce find themselves on a dangerous adventure beyond anything they could have ever imagined.
Charlie looked at Fire, then to the burning logs, and back to her again. Finally, he spoke. "If you were taken by the LRA, why can you not say it just?" Fire glanced at Charlie and sighed. "Because when you are a girl, there is more to lose." Charlie has much to fear since escaping the Lord's Resistance Army. If recaptured by Joseph Kony, he faces torture and death at the hands of his fellow soldiers. If he returns to his own village, many will seek revenge at the end of a hangman's rope for killing and maiming his own people. But it is the ajiji he fears most-the haunting flashbacks and tormented nightmares of the evil deeds he has committed. When he meets Fire, the village witch doctor, Charlie sets out on a journey where he must learn to face the sun and leave the shadows of his past behind him. But many secrets can't be revealed. And Fire, a beautiful young girl who has recently escaped from the LRA, holds the darkest secret of them all. "Arrows, Bones and Stones compellingly reveals the struggle faced by those trying to overcome childhood trauma. For youth abducted and forced to fight as child soldiers, escape is not the end of the story, but just the beginning. The shadow of their past haunts them, and the physical scars and psychological wounds cut deep. But even in the darkest hour, there is always the promise of new light. Yes, this is a story of despair, guilt, and shame, but it's also one of resilience and hope." - Patrick Reed, Director/Producer, Fight Like Soldiers, Die Like Children "In this second installment in the trilogy, Charlie, Fire and Sam, provide us with the necessary human contexts to the plight of girl child soldiers but also the harsh reality of losing a loved one at a young age. The gripping tale reminds us that even in the midst of inhumanity, we all have the ability to be hopeful, and have the will to survive. An incredibly well written book! I can't wait for the next one." -Michel Chikwanine, former child soldier and author of Child Soldier: When Boys and Girls are Used in War
Bruce shrugged. "Beats me. But I don't think it matters whether you have a bow and arrow or a bazooka. I mean, it helps-that's for sure-but I think it's more of a choice thing. The soldiers chose to run away 'cause they were more concerned 'bout saving their own lives. That lady chose not to run 'cause she knew she couldn't live with herself if she did. I know people say you gotta have guts to do these things, but I don't think so. I think you just gotta live your life so you don't have any regrets." For twenty-three years, Joseph Kony, leader of the Lord's Resistance Army, abducted more than sixty thousand children, forcing them to be soldiers in his war against the Ugandan government, to kill or be killed. It's time for this evil to end. But how? Forgiveness or revenge? Peace or hate? Flowers or stones? Healing can't begin when there's so much pain. Broken people can't mend shattered lives. In the last book of the Stones Trilogy, Charlie and Eseza set out to right the wrongs committed against them and their people. In the process, they discover that goodness can come from the most unlikely people, in the most unlikely places, and in the most unlikely times. "Donna White's latest novel has the ability to change people, much like the magical stones referenced in her title: turning despair into hope; and finding strength even among the most vulnerable. The final revelation that peace is stronger than war is a much needed message for our troubled times, and a fitting conclusion to her compelling trilogy." Patrick Reed, Director/Producer, Fight Like Soldiers, Die Like Children
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