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The three major religions of the world clash in Professor Christopher Stone's college classroom, and the clash escalates into murder.
Harry Weatherholtz battles lingering animosity toward his father who viciously murdered his mother some sixty years prior. His avowed enemy, Hurley Cutshaw, claims that Harry's father-who supposedly died the first year in prison-is alive and living somewhere in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia. He is requesting a visit with his son.
This book offers biblical direction for anyone who is suffering. Anguish and joy are fellow passengers on life's journey. Don't waste purpose by capitulating to the pain and disappointment. Live with expectancy that Christ will bring purpose from your suffering. Each chapter concludes with points of discussion designed for dialog.
Dr. Gary Carter hypothesizes that Christ's blood was free of abnormalities. He tests this hypothesis when he is called to authenticate an ancient cross, purported to be that of Christ's crucifixion. This claim gets the attention of vying televangelists who desire this cross as a gimmick to shore up their ratings--and purses. Situations turn ugly.
A black boy's death spotlights the Civil Rights-era South. The author's limpid prose lyrically evokes the Shenandoah Valley landscape and the small-town life it nurtures without sugarcoating the racial injustices that permeate it. He paints a nuanced portrait of Southern culture as it begins, slowly and painfully, to shake off the fetters of hate
Nancy York accepts the assignment to a one-room school. The clannish ways of the people soon collide with her ideas. Some of the children have blue skin. Nancy tries to change the attitude of unfounded rejection associated with this disease. The strongest sensation is the pain that's associated with love when she meets the enigmatic Wesley Taggart
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