The publisher is William R. Parks: www.wrparks.com Prayers From The Heart is a tender, heartwarming devotional with inspiring scriptures and true stories. It is a living witness of what God can do if given a chance. You will find encouragement on each page to seek God above all else. The strong spiritual emphasis will challenge you to turn to God for daily direction and experience his love and grace.Prayers From The Heart is an unforgettable testament of triumph over tragedy. It has all the right ingredients to keep you feeling encouraged long after the pages of this delightful devotion have been read.The author, Sherry Tarlton, teamed up with her teenage granddaughter, Haley Tarlton, to write this amazing devotional based on their life experiences. It will bless the hearts of all ages who read this remarkable devotional.
My entire life, I have been one of those girls who falls head first into love with every bad boy, no-good-for-me, asshole that's willing to give me the time of day. By twenty-eight, I couldn't even count the number of times I'd fallen in love and landed on my face. So many times, that I'd probably never be able to find all the pieces of my shattered heart again. I gave up trying and began dating the "right type" of guy, the "safe" type of guy, but it ended like a sad joke that left no one laughing. Especially not my sister Steph, who had been bugging me to try a relationship like hers. A BDSM type of relationship. The acronym alone scared me spitless. I didn't think I could ever be strong enough to give my submission to anyone, let alone the stranger that Steph's Dom wanted to set me up on a blind date with. Until they sprung a double date on me and I found that the stranger wasn't a stranger at all. Could Reed Daniels be the right Doctor/Daddy Dom to stitch my heart back together?
Trust is great, but contracts are legally binding. Living and working in Paris, two friends - one American and one Canadian - experience the city far more than they could have on vacation. A month in France takes them to ancient Roman temples, expansive parks, elegant cathedrals, the jungles of Africa and the streets of Montmartre. They play the parts of vestal virgins, working girls, Rodin statues, woodland fairies, staid librarians, Norse princesses, angels and devils. In between eating too much bread and cheese, experiencing great works of art in celebrated museums, and working in dark studios and sparkling lakes, they marvel at the architecture and watch the sun set over the Seine. They see almost everything on their lists. They go to the popular tourist sights on grand boulevards and explore hidden neighborhoods tucked behind winding back alleys. They venture to the outer edges of the city where most visitors never go and take a few side trips outside of Paris to places millions of people go. They eat in Michelin starred restaurants, tiny sidewalk caf s, anonymous sandwich shops, basement taverns and their own apartment kitchen. They meet a variety of locals, other foreigners working in France and people just passing through. They ride a lot of trains, a few cars, a scooter or two, and even drive a little themselves. Yet they barely scratch the surface. Personal relationships and guiding principles are sacrificed to do everything and almost nothing. Months, and even years, are not enough to dig deep into the heart of Paris. They will never know La Ville Lumi re as intimately as it knows them in such a short time.
There's a symbol for every friendship, something that reminds one friend of the other and always will. For some friends, it's hearts or infinity signs. For other's its wine corks or anchors. Once a friendship forms a symbol, it's hard to look at the item without thinking of the other person, for the rest of your life. For David, three leaf clovers would always remind him of his bond with his best friend Jade. He'd given her one the day they met, seven years ago, when she'd been crying in their High school's courtyard. Since then he has fought his Dominant urges to turn her into his little play thing and locked her up, strictly in the friend zone. Jade is a stubborn but sweet little brat, that always pushes against David's control without even knowing he wants her in more ways than she could imagine. When Jade gets the symbol of their friendship tattooed on her ass and tells the tattoo artist that it's a symbol of luck and of love, David decides it's past time to smash the walls and show Jade how good life could really be if she joined him in his bed and his heart, as his little submissive instead of his bratty best friend.
Is it wedding bells for confirmed bachelor Skyler Foxe? The rocky road to marriage keeps the high school English teacher on edge, yet his football-coach-fianc , Keith Fletcher, seems far too cool by half. Still, as the nuptials draw near, strange things seem to be plaguing Skyler. Small things that seem like little accidents and coincidences. Until he receives a mysterious package that leads him to the inescapable conclusion that someone may be trying to kill him. Keith and Skyler's gang of friends put their heads together to investigate. And then the wedding day comes off without a hitch, and Keith and Skyler go off on their surprise honeymoon for a weekend cruise. But Sidney and the SFC discover that Skyler is still in danger and secretly follow. Rather than ruin Skyler's one-and-only honeymoon, they hitch a ride. Can Sidney, Jamie, Rodolfo, Dave, and Philip keep out of sight of the happy couple and at the same time catch a killer before the cruise ends in murder? It's the Scooby Gang to the rescue What could possibly go wrong?
When high school senior Tally and her twin brother Max head off on a weeklong exchange trip to Israel over their winter break, Tally thinks it will be a good distraction for Max; he might be trying to hide it, but Tally knows he’s still struggling in the wake of a car crash that injured him and killed the driver, who was driving drunk on the way home from a party. Maybe this will help him get back on track and apply to college the way he and Tally always planned. But as the group travels across the country, Tally realizes her plan might not be working, and that her brother might not be the only one struggling with a major life turning point. And when a new relationship gets complicated in the face of her own anxiety spirals and questions about her sexual identity, and she faces complex questions about the country’s history and her place in the Jewish diaspora, she finds herself grappling with even bigger thoughts about what’s next once they get home. Debut author Haley Neil offers a relatable and deeply felt story about identity on the cusp of adulthood.