Are you ready to step into the romantic and erotic reality of four beautiful women? G-Spot Romance tells the story of Alexis (the romantic tomboy), Carrie (the femme seductress), Jackie (the strong aggressor), and Summer (the alluring exotic dancer) as they lure their love interests with their sexuality, sex appeal, mind, soul and heart as they face challenges related to age gaps, gender, and more. The romantically erotic novel explores the blossoming of unlikely friendships and romances. Tiffany Sapphire seduces readers into the world of female sexuality, attraction, self-discovery, and the magical fate of falling in love. The characters will also unapologetically dive into and discuss many common topics and questions that are often part of queer debate and discussion such as: Do we really need labels such as femme? Why are some women only interested in aggressive, more dominant lesbians? And one of the most controversial topics: Why it is NOT hateful or discriminatory for lesbians to only date other lesbians.
"G'Noo the Baby Roo's First Christmas" was first conceived of as a holiday bedtime story for my children. There is even an audio recording of the original story which I made for them back in the late 1990's. Eventually, it evolved into a stage play intended for young audiences. "G'Noo" is a short children's play about a young kangaroo, known as a "joey", who sees humans celebrating Christmas by exchanging presents but isn't quite sure what to make of it. Eventually, G'Noo asks her parents about the holiday but they aren't quite sure what it's all about, either. The play focuses on what would happen if there were no human around to teach animals what Christmas is all about. How would these animals interpret a "Christmas" beyond its religious significance? However you celebrate the holiday season, please enjoy your time with "G'Noo the Baby Roo" and may all your holidays bring you nothing but joy.
A junky-manic in a panic moves to New Orleans to live in his car. Then decides to go hop freight trains from his bad habits, bringing with him... two smart friends, a video camera, and a notebook. Inside this book safe is the story of his personal journey, and the movie he made about the art of train hopping.
"Ay, ay, all say she loved him, and, being a favourite with the queen, she got her to ask the king to accede to the knight's suit; and no wonder, he is as proper a man as eyes can want to look on-tall and stately, and they say brave. His father and grandfather both were Edward's men, and held their castle for us; his father was a great friend of the Black Prince, and he, too, took a wife from England. Since then things have not gone well with us in France, and they say that our lord has had difficulty in keeping clear of the quarrels that are always going on out there between the great French lords; and, seeing that we have but little power in Artois, he has to hold himself discreetly, and to keep aloof as far as he can from the strife there, and bide his time until the king sends an army to win back his own again. But I doubt not that, although our lady's wishes and the queen's favour may have gone some way with him, the king thought more of the advantage of keeping this French noble, -whose fathers have always been faithful vassals of the crown, and who was himself English on his mother's side, -faithful to us, ready for the time when the royal banner will flutter in the wind again, and blood will flow as it did at Cressy and Poitier