In Salt Lick Holler, Kentucky, three women healing from past hurts aren't looking for love, but love comes looking for them. Lovejoy Spencer is so determined to keep her sister from making the same mistakes she did, she almost misses her own last Chance. Hattie Thales is accepting her lot in life, while Logan Chance longs for adventure. He leaves the ranch in Reliable, California, unaware he's launching God's plan for both lives. Daisy Thales thinks she'd rather go it alone until God sends the last Chance bachelor, a rancher who has a quiet way with her son and with her heart.
Kentucky Chances
Can Daisy lay aside her pride and embrace God's provision--for her family and her heart? Or will she miss her Chance of a lifetime?
Beating The Odds: 82 Years At The Kentucky Derby is an Autobiography of a man who has attended 82 consecutive Kentucky Derbies and the ensuing unique lifestyle that accompanied this feat.
Lovejoy Spencer, widowed and wounded by the worst marriage can offer, is trying to protect her sister from the same mistakes.
The student responsesgivethe instructor an opportunitytomention that hypotheses should be testableandthat a research ... ThePersonality Profiles Students receive a set of six personality profiles based on personality traits that ...
Johnson's regal bearing, courtly manner, and mellifluous voice radiated integrity to judges and juries alike. It is uncertain whether Johnson knew, before agreeing to represent GCM and Chesley, that the KBA had already subpoenaed their ...
Contemporary romances set in Kentucky about second chances with happily-ever-after endings.
John Patrick attained an international reputation with his Teahouse of the August Moon (1953), winner of the Pulitzer ... Mason's Shiloh and Other Stories (1982) won the Ernest Hemingway Foundation Award and the PEN/Faulkner Award.
Now back in print, this classic book illuminates the varied work and world of the twentieth-century lawyer with elegance and humor.
implicating a risk of neglect; although this interpretation may be sound in some cases, it does not obviate the necessity of intent for neglect or abuse. K.S. v. Commonwealth, 2018 Ky. App. LEXIS 224 (Ky. Ct. App. Aug. 17, 2018).