Will mother and daughter find the answers they seek? The Powerful Series Conclusion From New York Times Best-Selling Author Beverly Lewis
Time in Iraq cost Michael Ritter some of his hearing and a friend whose death he feels responsible for.
One of Grimes' steadiest and most profitable clients over the years I had been Father Nicholas. The priest had engaged him frequently to take updated photographs of a woman named Liz Benton. She lived in Syracuse, New York with her ...
Lemley, Brad. “Why Is There Life?” Discover, November 1, 2000. 12. Crick, Francis, Life Itself: Its Original and Its Nature. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1981. Pg. 88. 13. Prigogine, Ilya, Gregoire Nicolis, and Agnes Babloyantz.
A chilling new novel about a girl who must delve into her past if she wants to live long enough to have a future when a series of murders that are eerily similar to the dark stories her brother used to tell start happening in her hometown.
With her intricate creation of an alien world, Ursula K. Le Guin compels us to reflect on our own recent history.
A ghost story of the most unusual kind, The Telling is a thrilling—and sometimes chilling—tale about two women, separated by almost two centuries, grappling with change and loss.
He calls it the Telling, but he has abandoned this gift to a life of solitude, unbelief, and despair until two detectives escort him to the county morgue where he finds his own body lying on the gurney.
A kaleidoscopic examination of the influence of one woman's childhood sexual abuse on her identity as a mother and woman.
Grace Byler's continuing search for the truth about her family takes her far from her Lancaster County home. Will she finally find the answers and healing she longs for?
The long-awaited new novel in the superb Hainish cycle 'Le Guin is a writer of phenomenal power' OBSERVER 'Her worlds have a magic sheen .
The Left Hand of DarknessSutty, an Observer from Earth for the interstellar Ekumen, has been assigned to a new world-a world in the grips of a stern monolithic state, the...
Interweaving the two narratives, Jo Baker brings these women, both struggling against their stations and their duties, vividly to life.