It is 1925. Ossian Cain-a widowed black doctor with a teen daughter, a new wife and baby, and a dentist brother-buys a home in a white neighborhood in a northern industrial city. On their second night, the Cains are threatened by a mob that calls for lync
What was the mark of Cain? The answers set before us in this sensitive study by art historian Ruth Mellinkoff are sometimes poignant, frequently surprising.
A spine-chilling companion to Long Lankin, here is the story of a wronged witch’s revenge, spanning generations and crossing the shadowy line between life and death.
The Mark of Cain makes available for the first time the accumulated psychoanalytic understanding of the psychopathic mind.
When he sees who's bellied up to the bar, though, he reaches for his cell phone to call the police. It's Lucas Cain, the man who killed Mark's brother three years ago.
Copyright © 2011 by Lindsey Barraclough Cover design by James Fraser. Photograph copyright © 2012 by Christophe Dessaigne/Trevillion Images All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, transmitted, or stored in an ...
Most agents of state crimes felt innocent. Von Kellenbach proposes the story of the mark of Cain as a counter narrative.
These are big questions, and in The Drawing of the Mark of Cain they are addressed head-on.
This book offers a new framework for reading the Bible as a work of reason.
The publication of the King James version of the Bible, translated between 1603 and 1611, coincided with an extraordinary flowering of English literature and is universally acknowledged as the greatest...
Vol. 10. London: British Library, 2002, 177–2O3. Schorsch, Jonathan. Jews and Blacks in the Early Modern World. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2004. Schorsch, Jonathan. Swimming the Christian Atlantic: Judeoconversos, ...