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In The Darkness of Midnight is a work of fiction with a hint of real-life actuality. I believe some readers will see similarities in their personal life experiences while others will enjoy if for the rollercoaster thrill it will provide. It is a tribute to the power of one's mind and the strength faith can generate. When you embark on this journey with Jean you will witness her fear as well as her unwavering belief that you control your destiny. This edge of your seat mystery will empower you, equip you, and move you emotionally to weigh-in on what really goes on in the darkness of midnight, not to mention the light of day.
This book speaks of scars in our life and how we obtain each one. Just as Jesus bore scars on His hands and feet for us; we also bear scars from sin and shame. But we can find hope, as well as peace and comfort, and the end of our pain and suffering when we turn to Christ.This book also tells of pain, suffering, and victory through Jesus Christ our Lord for two sisters. Each sister found that only He can bring the inner healing, which is inside of us that longs for the pain to stop and that we need so desperately.Many people are covered with scars, but not to the naked eye for others to see or notice.Jesus sees all our scars, pain, and broken lives, with all the many shattered pieces.
This is a classic detective mystery. Briefly, the plot concerns the death of a reclusive, elderly lady, who is the aunt to the female love interest and her brother, and sister to their mother. The investigating girl detective is among the school friends of the male love interest engaged to the female. The problem in this book would seem to be, 'who dun it'. Readers may be pulled in at the start by the appealing young woman Jax Gray who shows up needing a job as maid to a rather haughty old woman. Two lovers are the heart of the problem throughout the book. In this story Mary Eliska Girl Detective herself is seeking and finding someone to love -- and at times she may seem to be unprofessional for a police officer. The male love interest is a pure-bred British Gentleman, strong on sports, short on brains, impulsive in behavior. While Mary Eliska is in pursuit of a solution, readers run into two women daffy about the British Gentleman, his Uncle who loved a woman who was related to most of the protagonists and who fell to her death twenty years before, a gambling house owned by one of those who loved the Gentleman, and a bevy of others who are related in some fashion to those who enter into the action. There is a counterfeiting ring involving relatives of the protagonists some twenty years before. Early in the book an old and a bit strange woman is found murdered at her home and it just so happens that not too long before she is discovered, her servants were just chatting among themselves about the unusual household. There is a very complex maze from which for most of the tale you'll be wondering just how to emerge. You may be wondering where and when the 'secret passage' part comes in which is explained in its entirety only after readers get half-way through the book. It is a good mystery story, with loads of characters; an interesting tale with elements of excitement while readers wait for Mary Eliska Girl Detective to find the answers. Some of the characters are somewhat inexplicable in their motivations until the puzzle is revealed completely. All the clues are there, but finding the solution is a challenge.
A young designer gets entangled in a murder and the murderer is after her. After attacking her once, she moves to a friend's estate. No one knows that he is the father of the killer. At the estate, she makes friends with the dog handler who patrols with the dogs. She and one of the dogs form a very strong bond and she ends up being given the dog by the man she works for who owns the estate and loves her like a daughter.No one knows that he plans to help the police catch the killer because he knows who he is.All works out well for the police but as Ayden gains a friend she loses another.
Paragraphs are visually illustrated with a self-contained stylistic story of loyalty, intelligence, and courage of a pet dog. The story evolves in poetic verse to keep a child in rapt attention with a mixture of adventure and word fascination with coincidental development to spark a child's imagination. The verses are made for easy understanding, for toddlers and preschool children alike. Elementary school children will also be hooked by the rhyme. So, parents, don't be surprised if your children request a repeated rereading of The Adventures of a Dog Named Sam at bedtime and throughout the day. A must for any children's book collection for animal lovers and poetry lovers alike.
Beyond Valor II The Patriots has the knights going on another journey but this time it is to expel a lord out of the kingdom who has betrayed the king and angered the queen so much she has demanded this lord to be gone for good. It is the job of several handpicked knights to ensure everything goes well. The one thing no one has thought of is the huge purple dragon Brutus. Will this change anything? Will he know when to attack or will it be too late. There are several twist in this journey because they are going to the outer realm of the kingdom and things there are much different than anywhere else in the kingdom.
It is another exciting Mary Eliska Girl Detective whodunnit, with less romance than usual. The plot is that a couple had a room in which all walls and items are white. One day when they were away, a police officer walks in front of their house, he listens to a beautiful song. After some events, the officer enters the house and a lady wearing black is found dead in the white room. There are a lot of characters, about 15 suspects, and the plot twists many times "Eleven o'clock and a windy night!" might have been the cry of medieval watchmen at that hour on the 24th of July. Constable Mulligan was more reticent, as it formed no part of his duties to intimate publicly the time or the state of the weather. Nevertheless, the bells of the Anglican Church, Troy, London, S.W., chimed the hour through the clamor of a high wind; and those people who were not in bed must have decided to retire. Not that anyone appeared to be stirring. The lights were extinguished in all windows within the range of Mulligan's vision, and the flashing of his lantern on the doors and gates in Achilles Avenue showed that they were discreetly closed. Not even a tramp or a cat enlivened the roadway. Mulligan was apparently the sole waking person in a sleeping world. Few readers will anticipate the ending of the story.
Mary Eliska Girl Detective and The Mystery of the Gray Mask originally The Gray Mask a 1920 mystery by Charles Wadsworth Camp (1879-1936) currently in the public domain. Camp was a writer, a critic, and a foreign correspondent who suffered lung damage from exposure to mustard gas during World War I. The Camp detective mystery has been re-written by William A. Stricklin as part of a series of girl detective murder mysteries solved by his daughter as fictional Mary Eliska Girl Detective. This novel follows Mary Eliska who is a New York girl detective in love with the chief's daughter Margaret (Meg) In this story Mary Eliska Girl Detective and The Mystery of The Gray Mask in response to an unforeseen summons, Mary Eliska hurries along the hallway and opens the chief inspector's door. As she faces the rugged figure behind the desk, and gazes into those eyes whose somnolence conceals a perpetual vigil, her heart quickens. She had been assigned to the detective bureau less than six months. That brief period, however, had revealed a thousand eccentricities of her chief. The pudgy hand beating a tattoo on the table desk, the lips working at each other thirstily, the doubt that slipped from behind the veil of the sleepy eyes, were all like largely printed letters to Mary Eliska Girl Detective-letters that spelled delicate work for her, possibly an exceptional danger. Through episodic chapters of horror and crimes that follow Mary Eliska Girl and Meg discover crooks and romance. Mary Eliska Girl Detective and her chief's highly capable daughter Meg usually save one another at the last second, and in this Mary Eliska book perhaps Meg deserved be the main character. This is no book to read in a lonely house, though convinced that if it were begun under such conditions it would be finished after summoning a trusted good friend to keep close company... This book is the sixth published by Authors Press in a series of novels featuring fictional detective Mary Eliska as journalist and amateur sleuth, presented as more capable than the police, in the United States or perhaps in France as Mademoiselle Rouletabille (roule ta bille, or "Roll your marble") French slang for "Globetrotter", one who has been around the world and seen it all, expanded to connote a cool-headed, unfazeable, nonchalant person.
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