Kirjojen hintavertailu. Mukana 12 390 323 kirjaa ja 12 kauppaa.

Kirjahaku

Etsi kirjoja tekijän nimen, kirjan nimen tai ISBN:n perusteella.

1000 tulosta hakusanalla S. M

Cat's Paws and Curses: A paranormal cozy mystery holiday whodunnit
When Lucy organizes a holiday knitting circle, it's good fun, until someone's murdered...And the culprit must be one of the knitters...Knitting an ugly Christmas jumper at Cardinal Woolsey's knitting shop in Oxford is supposed to be relaxing. Until a knitter keels over. It's soon clear to amateur sleuth Lucy that murder's in the air and the culprit is one of the knitters. This is a fun take on a classic closed room mystery. Of course, no room is ever closed when vampires live downstairs. But are the undead knitters to blame? Or is there more to this Oxford knitting circle than lumpy Santas and light-up reindeer? This holiday whodunnit is more fun than an ugly Christmas jumper. The story is part of the Vampire Knitting Club series, though it can be read on its own. It's full of good clean fun, mysterious goings-on and holiday cheer.
Wommack's Life Lessons Learned: Reflections in a Mirror

Wommack's Life Lessons Learned: Reflections in a Mirror

David R. Wommack

David R. Wommack Publishing
2013
nidottu
Life Lessons Learned crystalizes the lessons learned during the 66-year lifetime of David R. Wommack. His professional career has spanned 7 realms -- public and private accounting; sales & marketing of computer systems, software, & multimedia; restauranteur; financial consulting; an artist of expressionist portraits and figures; and now an author and writer. He has lived in the United States, Vietnam, Indonesia, Singapore and the Philippines -- and traveled to all the world's continents except Antarctica. Along the way he married, and he and his wife of 32 years adopted and raised a daughter.Mr. Wommack writes in a pithy, staccato style that grabs and resonates in the mind. Pointed reminders of both the hard and glorious lessons learned. His style is delightfully succinct, humorous and without the trappings of literary pomposity.Join in learning from his life conclusions, liberally sprinkled with tons of personal anecdotes.
She's the One Who Thinks Too Much

She's the One Who Thinks Too Much

S. R. Cronin

CINNABAR PRESS
2020
nidottu
Do you know what your problem is? Ryalgar knows hers. People have been telling this over-educated 13th-century woman for years. So when an equally intellectual prince decides he loves her, it looks like everyone was wrong and her dreams have come true. Except, this prince is obligated to marry another. He is leading the army training to defend their tiny realm against an expected Mongol invasion. And he is considering sacrificing Ryalgar's home nichna by abandoning its rich farmlands to their foes. If only he wasn't such a nice guy. Another woman would ..... Ryalgar has no idea what another would do. All she knows is she has a multitude of university intellectuals and a family of tough farmers behind her, and a newfound connection with the witches in the forest. Why not devise her own strategy to keep the invaders from destroying her home? Then she can figure out what to do about this problem prince. It's just the sort of thing that happens when a woman thinks too much.
She's the One Who Cares Too Much

She's the One Who Cares Too Much

S. R. Cronin

Cinnabarpress
2021
nidottu
Do you know what your problem is?Coral knows hers. People have been telling this tenderhearted 13th-century woman for years. So when a heroic army officer proposes, she decides she's stronger than people realize and her dreams have come true.Except, the perfect man turns out to be less than ideal. And she's gotten pregnant. And her homeland is gripped with fear of a pending Mongol invasion and she cries about everything now that she's with child. When a friend suggests the ever-caring Coral possesses a power well beyond what anyone imagines, Coral's sister decides this formidable talent is what the realm needs. Can Coral raise a baby, placate an absent military husband who thinks he's stopping the invasion, and help her sister save her homeland? This is just the sort of problem encountered by a woman who cares too much.
Tolkien's Modern Reading: Middle-Earth Beyond the Middle Ages
Tolkien's Modern Reading addresses the claim that Tolkien "read very little modern fiction, and took no serious notice of it." This claim, made by one of his first biographers, has led to the widely accepted view that Tolkien was dismissive of modern culture, and that The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings are fundamentally medieval and nostalgic in their inspiration. In fact, as Holly Ordway demonstrates in this major corrective, Tolkien enjoyed a broad range of contemporary works, engaged with them in detail and depth, and even named specific titles as sources for and influences upon his creation of Middle-earth. Drawing on meticulous archival research, Ordway shows how Tolkien appreciated authors as diverse as James Joyce and Beatrix Potter, Rider Haggard and Edith Nesbit, William Morris and Kenneth Grahame. She surveys the work of figures such as S.R. Crockett and J.H. Shorthouse, who are forgotten now but made a significant impression on Tolkien. He even read Americans like Longfellow and Sinclair Lewis, assimilating what he read in characteristically complex ways, both as positive example and as influence-by-opposition. Tolkien's Modern Reading not only enables a clearer understanding of Tolkien's epic, it also illuminates his views on topics such as technology, women, empire, and race. For Tolkien's genius was not simply backward-looking: it was intimately connected with the literature of his own time and concerned with the issues and crises of modernity. Ordway's ground-breaking study reveals that Tolkien brought to the workings of his fantastic imagination a deep knowledge of both the facts and the fictions of the modern world.
Let's Make Tracks: A Christmas Story (a Max and Charles Nature Adventure)
GRANDPA SHOUTS, "Let's make tracks " as he, brothers Max, eleven, and Charles, eight, head into woodlands for the perfect Christmas tree and greens for holiday wreaths. The Adventure begins. Grandpa shows them traces of Civil War-era snake fences and a fallen American chestnut, now a "nurse log" for saplings. The boys cut mistletoe after a scary climb up pinesappy branches and tangled vines. Back in Grandma's baking-scented kitchen, Max and Charles learn how to weave greens and holly into wreaths for graves. Later, at the cemetery, Grandpa points to where the haunting statue of "Grief" once stood. "This is still a popular spot to see ghosts," he suggests. The boys scurry to the van.Home again, and after tree-trimming and cookie-baking, Max and Charles, family and friends, feast on festive foods. Dutch friend Jean shares childhood stories of St. Nick, who sometimes filled wooden shoes with coal, not candies. Traditional carols. Mistletoe kisses. Day turns into magical night as Grandpa plays his violin and all fall under the spell.
Custer's Gray Rival: The Life of Confederate Major General Thomas Lafayette Rosser
Tom Rosser served in nearly every battle of the Army of Northern Virginia. The lanky officer, known as much for his temper as his fighting abilities, resigned from West Point two weeks prior to graduation when Virginia seceded from the Union. He began the war in the artillery, transferred to the cavalry, and ended the fight under a cloud of some disgrace―even after helping win the last victory in Virginia. Sheridan Barringer's Custer's Gray Rival: The Life of Confederate Major General Thomas Lafayette Rosser tells his story in the first serious biography of this important officer. The Virginia native won success as part of the famed Washington Artillery of New Orleans before General Jeb Stuart convinced Rosser to transfer to his cavalry command as colonel of the 5th Virginia Cavalry. Rosser soon became Stuart's prot g and friend, and the dashing general did all he could to further his career. The only person who could derail Rosser, however, was Rosser, whose ability to take umbrage at the slightest offense was matched by his impatience and oversized ego. Rosser, who believed Stuart was conspiring to keep him from making general, finally achieved that rank in October of 1863 and went on to lead the famous Laurel Brigade in a number of campaigns. In 1864 after Stuart's death, he accused his new commander, General Wade Hampton, of blocking his promotion to major general. The cavalryman's most prominent service arrived in the Shenandoah Valley under Lt. Gen. Jubal Early in the fall of 1864, where Rosser led daring raids and achieved success in furnishing the army with valuable intelligence, livestock, and other supplies. His embarrassing failure in the Confederate debacle at Tom's Brook on October 9 against his former classmate and rival George Custer, combined with his absence from the front at a shad bake at Five Forks during the war's final days, cast a dark cloud over his otherwise solid record. Author Barringer mined manuscript collections, first-person accounts, and scores of letters and other memoranda written by Rosser himself to pen what is surely the most complete monograph of the gray cavalryman. Rosser, who looked upon life as a series of contests, loved the glory of combat. He continued fighting rivals, gray and blue, after the war by means fair and foul, unable to check his ego and short temper. He ended his military career "in the most unlikely fashion"―as a general in the United States army in the Spanish-American War. Custer's Gray Rival is a long overdue study of one of American's most interesting characters.
Custer's Gray Rival: The Life of Confederate Major General Thomas Lafayette Rosser
Tom Rosser served in nearly every battle of the Army of Northern Virginia. The lanky officer, known as much for his temper as his fighting abilities, resigned from West Point two weeks prior to graduation when Virginia seceded from the Union. He began the war in the artillery, transferred to the cavalry, and ended the fight under a cloud of some disgrace―even after helping win the last victory in Virginia. Sheridan Barringer's Custer's Gray Rival: The Life of Confederate Major General Thomas Lafayette Rosser tells his story in the first serious biography of this important officer. The Virginia native won success as part of the famed Washington Artillery of New Orleans before General Jeb Stuart convinced Rosser to transfer to his cavalry command as colonel of the 5th Virginia Cavalry. Rosser soon became Stuart's prot g and friend, and the dashing general did all he could to further his career. The only person who could derail Rosser, however, was Rosser, whose ability to take umbrage at the slightest offense was matched by his impatience and oversized ego. Rosser, who believed Stuart was conspiring to keep him from making general, finally achieved that rank in October of 1863 and went on to lead the famous Laurel Brigade in a number of campaigns. In 1864 after Stuart's death, he accused his new commander, General Wade Hampton, of blocking his promotion to major general. The cavalryman's most prominent service arrived in the Shenandoah Valley under Lt. Gen. Jubal Early in the fall of 1864, where Rosser led daring raids and achieved success in furnishing the army with valuable intelligence, livestock, and other supplies. His embarrassing failure in the Confederate debacle at Tom's Brook on October 9 against his former classmate and rival George Custer, combined with his absence from the front at a shad bake at Five Forks during the war's final days, cast a dark cloud over his otherwise solid record. Author Barringer mined manuscript collections, first-person accounts, and scores of letters and other memoranda written by Rosser himself to pen what is surely the most complete monograph of the gray cavalryman. Rosser, who looked upon life as a series of contests, loved the glory of combat. He continued fighting rivals, gray and blue, after the war by means fair and foul, unable to check his ego and short temper. He ended his military career "in the most unlikely fashion"―as a general in the United States army in the Spanish-American War. Custer's Gray Rival is a long overdue study of one of American's most interesting characters.
School's Out for Murder: An Alton Oaks Mystery
When Charli Parker is asked to do some substitute teaching at the local elementary school during the last few days of the semester, she jumps at the chance to get her foot into the local school system. However, her joy changes to terror when she discovers the body of one of the teachers hanging from a rope over her desk. It looks like suicide, but why would the delightful Ms. Dempsey want to kill herself? She was getting married in a few days and all her students loved her. Nosy Charli suspects foul play and is determined to investigate even though the by-the-book principal is always in her way.With the help of her good friend Sadie and a friend on the police force, Charli starts snooping, only to discover that someone doesn't want her nosing around. When another body turns up in the school parking lot, Charli's theory that Ms. Dempsey's supposed suicide is actually murder gathers momentum and Charli's detecting may just put her in the path of a killer desperate to cover their tracks.
Raghu's Adventures: Escapades of Raghu and his motely friends
Meet Raghu, a mischievous and playful boy, and his gang of friends Selvam, Shankar, Surya and Ganesh. Raghu and Vishakh are sworn enemies. Raghu is constantly badgered by his old neighbors. Ganesh is aghast when he is warned about a possible expulsion from school. What could possibly happen? Read on, as Raghu takes you along to experience the exciting escapades with his motely gang.
Caregiver's Workbook: Planning a Road Trip with Mom or Dad
The Caregiver's Workbook: Planning a Road Trip with Mom or Dad is a great tool to help you plan a road trip with your aging parent. It includes sections for: brainstorming trip locationssetting a budgethotel informationvehicle safetypackingextra pages for notesThis 8" x 10" workbook is filled with tips and advice from the author who takes care of her elderly mother. Her mother is legally blind, hard of hearing and unable to walk unassisted. Enjoy your trip and use this workbook for your next 10 road trips
It's Me Again Hello God It's Me Again

It's Me Again Hello God It's Me Again

Mike Kelley

Published by Parables
2020
sidottu
Awakened in the night Jesus speaking to me a voicespoken low. "I cannot hear you Jesus, help me nowthough this pencil in my hand". He took the pencil andpressed it to the page. He wrote words that hurt me, and made me cry. I could clearly read them even withthe tears in my eyes. He took the pencil, held it to myface, all the words he erased. He wanted me for apurpose, but I didn't carry through, then he gave meback the pencil and a job for him to do, this time I willfollow his calling to do what he would have me do.Through my prayers, now I share with you. Mike Kelley, Born in the bluegrass, just outside Louisville, Kentucky. Traveling the world and the country sometime feeling like a tumbleweed, building on his experiences of life. Served in the US Navy and a Vietnam Veteran with Attack Squadron Seventy-Five from Oceana Virginia. A writer of poetry and short stories and a member of the International Society of Poets. Studied with Rod McKuen, in Southern California. Has worked in Radio commercials as "Cowboy Bob". Has a hand in art, music, and song writing. A lover of nature and outdoor activities. Now living happily in Cincinnati, Ohio with his wife Susan.
McSweeney's Issue 73 (McSweeney's Quarterly Concern): Manifesto: A Collection of Manifestos
McSweeney's three-time National Magazine Award-winning quarterly returns with a subjective and selective group of manifestos, all from the twentieth century and onward, all roaring with outrage and plans for a better world. Featuring life- and history-changing works from Andr Breton, Bertrand Russell, Valerie Solanas, Huey Newton, John Lee Clark, Dadaists, Futurists, Communists, Personists, and many more past and future -ists, plus brand-new work from brilliant radical thinkers Eileen Myles and James Hannaham. Let this incendiary collection light your whole world on fire. From the introduction: We need manifestos. They are often strange, ill-considered, and regrettable. They are just as often brilliant and pivotal in changing government, art, and the direction of the human animal. But always manifestos are passionate, always they command attention and use language for perhaps its most urgent purposes--the rattling of complacent minds. Featuring: The Manifesto of Futurism (1909) by Filippo Tommaso MarinettiDada Manifesto (1918) by Tristan TzaraDadaism in Life and Art (1918) by Richard HuelsenbeckManifesto of Surrealism (1924) by Andr BretonManifesto (1952) by John CageThe Russell-Einstein Manifesto (1955) by Bertrand RussellPersonism: A Manifesto (1959) by Frank O'HaraSecond Declaration of Havana (1962) by Fidel CastroPlan of Delano (1966) by United Farm WorkersThe Ten-Point Program (1966) by Huey NewtonS.C.U.M. Manifesto (1967) by Valerie SolanasPrinciples of the Asian American Political Alliance (1968) by Asian American Political AllianceRedstockings Manifesto (1969) by RedstockingsDouble Jeopardy: To Be Black and Female (1969) by Frances M. BealThe Gay Manifesto (1970) by Carl WittmanThe Combahee River Collective Statement (1977) by Combahee River CollectiveWhy Cheap Art? (1984) by Peter SchumannThe Advantages of Being a Woman Artist (1988) by Guerrilla GirlsI want a president (1988) by Zoe LeonardCreate Dangerously: The Immigrant Artist at Work (2010) by Edwidge DanticatThe First Manifesto of the Museum of Everyday Life (2011) by Clare DolanNo Stage (2015) by John Lee ClarkManifesto for World Revolution (2023) by Kalle LasnPress Conference for a Tree (2023) by Eileen MylesDestroy All Manifestos (2023) by James Hannaham
Martell's World You're No Different Than Me

Martell's World You're No Different Than Me

Cynthia Green

S.H.E. Publishing, LLC
2023
sidottu
Martell's World, "You're No Different Than Me," tells the story of a hard-of-hearing boy that feels different because of his hearing loss.Parents and children alike will enjoy Martell's World Series, which will spark thoughtful conversations on how we are all unique but similar in many ways.