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Kalen Trinneer is trapped in a conflict that threatens the lives of everyone on the planet Taidor. To avoid suspicion, he must assist the U-Zone army and deny his true loyalties. Learning of a terrible threat to the Ea-Zone, Kalen is determined to escape so that he can alert them to the danger. His plans are thwarted when he is forced to marry a woman that he doesn't love. Torn between his commitments in the U-Zone and his loyalty to the Ea-Zone, Kalen has to find a way to warn the Ea-Zone before everything he values is destroyed.
-Do you find yourself unable to move forward in life? -Do you need help overcoming repeated setbacks? -Are you ready to face some core truths about yourself? -Do want to cultivate the leader's heart in you? Be courageous and delve into over 100 self-discovery questions to challenge and motivate you to go deeper and get to the heart of what may be holding you back from personal and professional success and freedom. Amplify your leadership quotient and expand your influence through self-examination. Examining your behavior, thoughts and feelings will help you identify patterns in your life and give you insights into areas in need of spiritual, mental, emotional, or physical transformation.
Main Street Mondays was developed to help poets, writers and people that want to write, get back to it. Many of the poems in this collection were created, spontaneously, during our sessions. Using photos, word prompts, live art sessions, visual imagery, and music, Erika Blackmon, the creator of Main St. Mondays, skillfully guided participants into reviving their muses and creating original pieces of poetry and prose. This collection is a small sampling of the work created by the participants.
The Scotch-Irish in America was first delivered as an address to the American Antiquarian Society in 1895 and later published by Charles Hamilton of Worcester, Massachusetts, in the same year. This well-annotated essay provides a clear and informative overview of the history of the Scotch-Irish in north America and includes a useful bibliography of works consulted. As interesting as the address itself is the Appendix, which contains an exchange of rather tetchy correspondence between the author, Samuel Swett Green (a prominent figure in the founding of the American public library system), and Thomas Hamilton Murray, in various newspapers, including the Boston Pilot. Among other matters, Hamilton took issue with the term "Scotch-Irish". Green's address offers a great introduction to the subject, but, twenty years later Henry Jones Ford, a professor at Princeton, was to publish a much more comprehensive history under the same title - The Scotch-Irish in America (ISBN 978-1910375495).
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