REVISED EDITION: When the lights go out, Mickey and her brother Virge at first think it's just one of those things. But then, the Angel comes...and the Earthquakes begin...and the world as we know it will never be the same again. Join the adventure, as this small group of survivors discover that they are THE Remnant of Believers, and the last hope for those who have put off their Salvation maybe just a bit too long
"I'm the black Tarzan," Tutula tells the frightened young girl, as he helps her, her sister and their mother out of the boat before the vicious little alien creatures can set upon them. But there are more acid regurgitating, ever hungry, and deadly Fifurs coming closer by the minute, not only here but back at the Resort as well.The few survivors face a race against time. More Fifurs are closing in...and so is the river of lava from the Volcano.
Unexploded landmines and ordnance are one of the most horrifying legacies of any war, killing and maiming thousands of people all over the world each year, often long after the conflict has ended. Nobel Prize honored Mines Advisory Group (MAG) is dedicated to eradicating this menace, not only saving lives, but offering new beginnings to these war-torn regions. Explosions: Stories of Our Landmined World is an all-star charity anthology for MAG, featuring stories contributed by both bestselling and up-and-coming authors. 100% of the proceeds from this book will go directly to MAG and its work around the world. Jeffery Deaver, David Morrell, John Sayles, Peter Straub, Amy Wallace, and James Grady are just some of the writers whose work author and screenwriter Scott Bradley has collected here, with haunting visions of "our landmined world" to help build a better one. From the Spanish Civil War to Iraq; from the corridors of power to the battlefield, these 25 tales, along with a cover by Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist Matt Wuerker, offer an extraordinary literary feast for any reader. And help save lives at the same time. www.maginternational.org
Meet Jeffrey a ten-year old boy who loves adventure. Jeffrey is the middle child with an older sister and younger sister. Jeffrey likes company on his adventures, so he cajoles his friends to join him on the adventures that are sometimes dangerous. God has a message for Jeffrey, but Jeffrey is not paying attention because he is so busy pursuing his adventures. God allows Jeffrey's own actions to bring all his adventures to a sudden stop so that he can hear God's message. The message for Jeffrey is learning what true leadership means, and not the cajoling way that sometimes worked for Jeffrey, as well as other valuable lessons that will serve him throughout his life.Through circumstances surrounding Jeffrey's captured attention, Jeffrey travels back in time to 1,400 BC seeking instruction from Moses and ultimately Joshua. Join Jeffrey's adventures as he finds himself joining the Israelites as they camped on the Plains of Moab across from Jericho. Jeffrey learns many lessons, including responsibility, the meaning of wisdom, obedience, courage and leadership. Read about the many adventures Jeffrey joins in with Joshua and the two spies, the important lessons from the two herdsmen, joining Moses on Mt. Nebo, the fall of Jericho, along with many others.
Tragedy often strikes us without warning, like a lightning strike in a storm. For KD Wagner, a lightning bolt of devastation struck her as she drove a tractor trailer through a California mountain pass. Somebody murdered her eighteen-year-old son, Jeffrey. Instantly, her world reduced to the smoke and ashes of every parent's worst nightmare. Wagner chronicles these events in this gut-wrenching narrative of loss, injustice, and finally, hope. From her solo navigation of a dangerous mountain pass to the peaceful internment of Jeffrey's ashes in a Hawaiian cove, Wagner invites the reader on her journey through loss to find a Different Place of life after. Along the way, she shares the tale of Jeffrey's life cut short-his challenges, his gifts, his adventures. Jeffrey: The Injustice of Murder is a tribute to the human spirit and the love between a mother and son, a love that survives the cruelest of lightning strikes, the strike of death. This heart-wrenching story will lead people to: - Feel the Injustice of the United States Law Enforcement and Legal System.- Gain an understanding of "What to Say" and "What Not to Say" after Loss.- Recognize the SHOCK REACTIONS of a sudden violent tragedy.- Discover the long-term consequences of loss.- Believe in the power of LOVE to heal in this life and beyond. TIME DOES NOT HEAL ALL WOUNDS-IT'S HOW YOU USE YOUR TIME
Tragedy often strikes us without warning, like a lightning strike in a storm. For KD Wagner, a lightning bolt of devastation struck her as she drove a tractor trailer through a California mountain pass. Somebody murdered her eighteen-year-old son, Jeffrey. Instantly, her world reduced to the smoke and ashes of every parent's worst nightmare. Wagner chronicles these events in this gut-wrenching narrative of loss, injustice, and finally, hope.From her solo navigation of a dangerous mountain pass to the peaceful internment of Jeffrey's ashes in a Hawaiian cove, Wagner invites the reader on her journey through loss to find a Different Place of life after. Along the way, she shares the tale of Jeffrey's life cut short-his challenges, his gifts, his adventures.Jeffrey: The Injustice of Murder is a tribute to the human spirit and the love between a mother and son, a love that survives the cruelest of lightning strikes, the strike of death.This heart-wrenching story will lead people to: - Feel the Injustice of the United States Law Enforcement and Legal System.- Gain an understanding of "What to Say" and "What Not to Say" after Loss.- Recognize the SHOCK REACTIONS of a sudden violent tragedy.- Discover the long-term consequences of loss.- Believe in the power of LOVE to heal in this life and beyond.TIME DOES NOT HEAL ALL WOUNDS-IT'S HOW YOU USE YOUR TIME
When Ricky Reyes dares Jeffrey to get a bloody dagger out of the old McGyver house on Halloween night, Jeffrey is counting on Max, his ghostly friend, to help him.
Gambler, journalist, fervent alcoholic and four-times married Jeffrey Bernard writes the "Low Life" column for the Spectator magazine chronicling Soho life as well as offering a very personal philosophy on vodka, women and race-courses. From this, Keith Waterhouse has brilliantly constructed a play (the title being the euphemism used by the Spectator when Bernard is incapable of writing his column) which is set in the saloon bar of Bernard's favourite Soho pub, the Coach and Horses. Having passed out in the lavatory, Bernard awakes in the early hours of the morning to find himself alone and in the dark. Unable to contact the landlord, he is resigned to spending the rest of the night with a bottle of vodka and an endless chain of cigarettes, narrating a story of hilarious anecdotes and witty reminiscences which are enacted by two actors and two actresses who bring to life the various characters who populate Jeff 's world. Starring Peter O'Toole, later succeeded by Tom Conti then James Bolam, the play enjoyed a hugely successful run at the Apollo Theatre, London.
Jeffrey Hunter is best remembered today for his roles as half-breed Martin Pawley in John Ford's classic western The Searchers (1956), as Jesus Christ in Nicholas Ray's King of Kings (1961) and as Christopher Pike, the first captain of the U.S.S. Enterprise, in the original Star Trek pilot. This work chronicles Hunter's entire film and television career from his beginnings as a 20th Century-Fox contract player to his untimely death in 1969 at the age of 42. Fellow 20th Century-Fox contract player Robert Wagner provides the Foreword and contributes his memories of working with Hunter. Former vice president and head of Desilu Studios Herbert F. Solow discusses Hunter's role in the original Star Trek pilot and Lloyd J. Schwartz shares his memories of being present at Hunter's audition for the role of Mike Brady in The Brady Bunch (1969). Hunter's "lost" film Strange Portrait (1966) is also discussed in detail and his radio and theatre career highlighted.
Jeffrey was the resident apparition in the Selma, Alabama, home of nationally-known folklorist Kathryn Tucker Windham and the inspiration for Windham’s best-selling collection of macabre tales that reveal two hundred years of Alabama’s ghostly secrets, 13 Alabama Ghosts and Jeffrey. One of the most popular books ever published in the state, generations of Alabama children and students have been thrilled and chilled by Windham’s spectral legends. Following the overwhelming success of 13 Alabama Ghosts and Jeffrey, Windham and Jeffrey began to journey across the South assembling a second collection of ghastly tales that repeat Windham’s winning combination of traditional folklore, Southern history and culture, and family-friendly story-telling. In Jeffrey Introduces 13 More Southern Ghosts, Windham’s disembodied friend roams the states of Kentucky, Tennessee, Georgia, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Florida to recall thirteen more timeless, spine-tingling tales of baneful and melancholy spirits that spook the most stoic heart. Opening this volume is ?The Girl Nobody Knew.” One midsummer night in the genteel Kentucky mineral spring resort of Harrodsburg, a beautiful lady arrived at the town’s grand hotel. The belle danced late into the night with the town’s smitten gallants only to expire suddenly with the notes of the last quadrille. The spooked residents of Harrodsburg guard a grave you can see to this day. Readers then visit the world-famous Bell Witch of Robinson County, Tennessee. Jeffrey also makes his first trip to old New Orleans to reveal a revenant in residence on Royal Street before continuing his ghostly progress across Dixie. This new edition returns Jeffrey Introduces 13 More Southern Ghosts to its original format in jacketed cloth full of original, black-and-white illustrations in a handsome keepsake edition perfect for gift-giving and for families, folklorists of all ages, and libraries.
Accompanied by her faithful companion, Jeffrey, a friendly spirit who resided in her home in Selma, Alabama, Kathryn Tucker Windham traveled the South, visiting the sites of spectral legends in Mississippi, Georgia, and Tennessee, among other places. In Jeffrey’s Latest Thirteen: More Alabama Ghosts, a sequel to her landmark Thirteen Alabama Ghosts and Jeffrey, Windham introduces readers to thirteen more of Jeffrey's ghostly acquaintances, each with the charm and universal appeal that has created hundreds of thousands of Jeffrey fans. Among the other hair-raising tales in this collection, Windham spotlights the apparitions of academia. From the three Yankee soldiers who haunt the University of Alabama’s Civil War–era Little Round House to the Confederate soldier who resides in the University Chapel at Auburn University, Alabama’s institutions of higher learning seem to have more than a few paranormal pupils. Photographs of the sites about which Windham writes are one of the best-loved features of her series of “Jeffrey the Ghost” books. Jeffrey’s Latest Thirteen features the image of a beautiful child who, though not photographed in life, reappeared long enough to be photographed with his bereaved father's borrowed camera. Bewitched readers will find the startling photograph of the child in the next-to-last chapter, just pages before he book’s photograph of Windham’s own spectral muse, Jeffrey. This commemorative edition returns Windham’s thrilling classic to its original 1982 keepsake quality and includes a new afterword by the author’s children.