At first glance, 27-year-old Dionni Stone, owner of Whateva You Like Entertainment seems to have what all black women desire: natural beauty, a successful business, and a beautiful black man on her side. But once again, Dionni finds the love of her life in a compromising situation. This is the final heart break. Dionni decides to concentrate on her business, and it's there she meets new client, Xavier "Zay" Grey, an investment banker that hires her to plan a surpise graduation party for his baby sister. Again, Dionni begins to think she might have found "the one" for her, but a devastating secret finds her world once again shaken--P. [4] of cover.
That fragile heart means everything to Imre--and he'll do anything to protect it.Even if it means distancing himself, when the years between them are a chasm Imre doesn't know how to cross.But can he resist the allure in cat-green eyes when ...
All Over Again
Not of the laughs: of the on-air marriages. ... to work with their wives, got to broadcast to the country that they were married, even if they didn't play married. ... Besides, I couldn't think of anything worse, my whole family on TV.
Kassel, Germany: Bärenreiter. Twain, M.A. (1876). A literary nightmare. Atlantic Monthly, 37, 167–170. Tyack, P.L., & Sayigh, L. S. (1997). Vocallearning in cetaceans. In C.T. Snowdon & M. Hausberger (Eds.), Social Influences on Vocal ...
... through California up the coast. I had that overpowering feeling of going home again, ...to San Francisco, that is. I haven't been there since sometime in the eighties. Oh, I also bought a new Buick leSa- bre to tow instead of that now ...
It Ain't Over 'Til It's Over Gary D. Chattman. He and his wife were in the casino, for at that time there was a small show, dancing, and food, each Saturday night. He was summoned—he got a call. He left his wife and heard, ...
2, 174; Tim Hitchcock and Robert Shoemaker, London Lives: Poverty, Crime, and the Making of the Modern City (Cambridge, 2016), 349; Peter Linebaugh, The London Hanged: Crime and Civil Society in the Eighteenth Century (London, 2006), ...
As the pages turn, her imagination takes flight and she discovers that the greatest storyteller of all might come from within. Pamela Zagarenski’s debut as an author reminds us that we each bring something different to the same book.
An encouraging look at the story of Naomi and Ruth that reminds readers to keep pressing forward in spite of the weight of their cares.
‘The year’s seasonal changes and festivities that are important in a little child’s life are imaginatively [described]. . . . The story ends with the happy realization that it will all come round ‘over and over’ again.’ —H.