Jun 22

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Cryptid the Lost Legacy of Lewis and Clark

Title: Cryptid: The Lost Legacy of Lewis and Clark
Published by: iUniverse
Paperback: 312 pages
ISBN: 0595359744
$18.95
Available from your favorite bookseller

About Cryptid

Uncover the secret evidence of Sasquatch within Lewis and Clark’s lost journals in Eric Penz’s Cryptid, a cryptofiction award-winning novel.

The line between history and legend can be deceptively thin–too thin perhaps to maintain the claim that one is exclusively fact and one fiction. Such may be the case with the history of Lewis and Clark. For the fact is that two hundred years after they were handpicked by Thomas Jefferson to lead an extraordinary expedition to the Pacific coast legends still persist regarding unexplained gaps in the explorers’ field journals.

Call it legend, call it history, Cryptid tells the riveting story of conspiracy theorists who have new evidence of a centuries-old cover-up. When a cryptozoologist, a paleontologist, and a descendant of Jefferson begin connecting the dots, they threaten to do more than unveil the well-guarded scientific discovery that lies at the heart of the ancient secret; they threaten to rewrite American history. That is if they can survive a conspiracy that dates back to the Founding Fathers-the very same that haunted Lewis to his grave. It may be that one of our nation’s first secrets is still being kept.

Cryptid illustrates how the human act of seeking the truth can be the very element that destroys it. Two centuries in the making, Cryptid is the final chapter of the Lewis and Clark story. As with any good tale, the best secrets have been kept until the end.

About the AuthorEric Penz, author of Cryptid

Eric Penz is a partner in an insurance and financial services agency. He earned his bachelor of science degree in environmental biology from Eastern Washington University in 1995. His postgraduate work was done at the University of Washington where he completed a two-year literary program in commercial fiction. Between managing his clients’ portfolios and writing, he spends his spare time as an amateur adventure athlete. He and his wife and their two boys make their home in Sammamish, Wash.

Photo: Author Eric Penz at Camp Sherman, the base camp located at 10,000 feet on Mount Rainier in Washington State. Photo by Wayne Waldroup.

Excerpt

Jefferson looked up from the letter with intent, to the object lying concealed beneath white linen amid his desk and then to the sheet of paper next to it. He picked up the one page inventory of all items brought back by the Expedition and slid it atop Lewis’s letter. Holding them as one, he searched down the invoice until he found the single item noted near the bottom: One large & complete male prymate skul.

He had no answers for his friend, for he too doubted, had been struck deeply by Lewis’s account upon his return. The same evil mix of emotions whirled in his own soul. Staring into the skull’s empty, unseeing eyes was haunting enough, but to think of the animal alive and peering into its soul would chill the heart of any man, make him question his deepest beliefs. The fleshless skull had been more than enough to cause Jefferson to do the same. And that was this new animal’s power, its value to men. It forced them to see the world as it truly existed, not the lie men lived in their own minds. It shed light on the full evil of man’s selfish corruption. The very motive behind the actions Jefferson was about to commit.

He surveyed his now cluttered desktop: the veiled skull, the two small chests containing the journals, and the letter and invoice he set down next to them. In spite of assurances he would make to the contrary, this bit of evidence still existed, and that gave him heart. Perhaps he was not yet the same as them. Those with wealth, power, influence. Those who had not yet surrendered to the principles of the Revolution, who mortgaged public resources for private gains. But he also could not as yet honor Lewis’s request to publish it all. No, he had to stay the course, for the sake of the Union, for the dream.

Patience and wisdom was what was needed. A time would come when the nation would be strong enough, and the hearts and minds of the people willing to hear the truth. For if the truth came out now it would not survive long enough to find its way into history and be preserved. Until then they would believe the truth destroyed, for that’s what he would tell them when they asked, for certainly they would. He would simply lie. A thing any good president becomes skilled at.

He reached out and eased open the lids of the two chests containing the two sets of Lewis’s field journals. The question then became, what was he to do? But as soon as he thought it, he already knew the answer, had indeed been planning it for months now. Only now he was not dealing in theory but in practice, and he found it much harder in the doing.

His fingers were on the leather-bound spines, walking along them as he took inventory, assuring himself they were all there. And they were. It was Clark, after all, who had retrieved them along with the letter. Nothing less would be expected.

Jefferson paused, fingers resting on the spine of the last volume in the chest, and waited for the resolve. These were not after all personal journals, though that would be ill mannered enough. No, these were the property of the government of the United States of America, official military records, proprietary documents protected under the Constitution. And he was no common citizen ignorant to his actions. He was a founding brother of the Revolution, author of the Declaration of Independence, and third President of the Union. But then, this would not be his first unconstitutional act, nor, for that matter, was he any longer president. And so, he held a deep breath and gently lifted out the last volume in the chest. Confirming he had chosen correctly, he set it atop his desk and then selected out another, and another, each being easier than the last, until there was a small stack in front of him.

Breathing freely now, he eyed the volumes still inside the chests. And then with a sigh he closed the two lids, locked them, and set both chests next to the stairs for Clark to pick up in the morning to take to Philadelphia for publication. From a bottom desk drawer he retrieved a lock box, placed it on his desk, and opened it. Surveying what remained—the skull, letter, invoice, journals—he felt shameful for not including more, for there was so much more he could. But it was all he could afford. Any more and the enemy would know of his actions. Besides, nothing more would fit in the box. Not that the skull fit, but that was a minor detail he would certainly resolve.

So this was it then. These were his crumbs of bread to be left along the trail for a generation yet unborn to follow, that is if they know their history. But where should he begin? The end, of course, where it would be most painful, the punishment most just. And with that he took out his ink and quill, opened a volume from the stack of journals, and on its few remaining blank pages began composing his confession.

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Jun 16

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The Witch on Oak Street by Major Mitchell

Title: The Witch on Oak Street
Author: Major Mitchell
Reading level: Ages 9-12
Paperback: 204 pages
Publisher: Infinity Publishing (March 30, 2006)
ISBN: 0741430304
$13.95
Available from your favorite bookseller

About The Witch on Oak Street

Nine year-old Debbie Folino believes she can do most anything, but when she takes a dare to trick-or-treat the old witch living in the spooky house at the end of Oak Street, she discovers eighty-year-old Sara Baker, who will change her life forever. Sara becomes the mentor who opens a new world for her young friend. She guides her through the trials of growing, loving, sharing, and even death. Most of all, Sara introduces Debbie and her family to someone who will become an even more important person in their lives, Jesus Christ 

About the Author

Although Major had spent many an hour, and countless reams of paper, creating his own comic books (mostly westerns) as a child, it wasn’t until he entered college that he began to think of writing as a serious pastime.  He remembers being held after class on his second day in English 1-B, and listening with fear as professor Hillhouse cautioned several others that they were not prepared for her class, and should transfer out.  

She then proceeded to encourage Major and one other student to enroll in a creative writing class, as they both had a true talent with words.  Since that day, he has enrolled in several classes and writing organizations that have helped develop in him the talent you will find in his two published novels and his children’s picture book.  He currently has several other books in the publishing process at the moment this is being written.  We are confident that, after reading his historical novels, The Doña and Mokelumne Gold, and his forty-nine page children’s book Charlie Shepherd, you will also become a member of his ever growing fan base.

Jun 16

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Show and Tell by Karen Vanderlaan

Title: Show and Tell
Author: Karen Vanderlaan
Paperback: 267 pages
Publisher: PublishAmerica  
ISBN: 1413746373
$24.95
Available from your favorite bookseller

About Show and Tell

As a young girl on the idyllic Milky Way Farm, author Karen Vanderlaan initially believes life is full of magic, wonder and horses. All too quickly, however, her innocence is lost when her mother gets involved with an abusive, manipulative woman named Bunny. Bunny subjects Karen and her young siblings to unspeakable cruelties—all in the name of God.

Karen’s spirit is deeply scarred by Bunny’s inhumanity, but the adversity serves to solidify in Karen an inner strength and calmness that carry her through even greater challenges later in life. Karen’s story is at once uplifting and heart-wrenching. It reveals the best and worst of human nature in a riveting, true-life tale of the author’s journey to change life for herself, her siblings, her children and her beloved horses.

Excerpt

Ripples.

A single pebble dropped in still water triggers an endless series of perfect concentric circles drifting outward toward the end of time. Not so when many pebbles fall. Then the ripples emanating from each fallen stone crisscross, intersect, and alter the course of every other ripple. Perfection is lost in the complexity, but in the multitude of patterns, there arises the chance for beauty as well as chaos. So it is in life. The actions of one infinitely echo in the lives of others. For good or ill. This is the Ripple Effect, and I believe it is true. How else can I explain my life? How else can I explain even this one afternoon?
 
A twelve-year-old girl in my middle-school class for children with emotional problems wanted to spend her lunch hour in the classroom. I had just been selected as one of two “Teacher Heroes” by our local school foundation for my work rescuing horses. Embarrassed by accolade, I immediately stored the poster-sized photo essay used to publicize the honor. My young student had seen the poster in my classroom closet and asked to read it. After lunch, this child became increasingly unruly. Her belligerence escalated as the afternoon wore on, almost to the point that I might be forced to suspend her from school. She – we - survived the afternoon.

After the dismissal bell rang, I straightened the room and picked up the poster to put it away. A mark caught my eye. Someone had smeared a word on the perimeter of the poster and then had attempted to repair the damage, making things worse. It dawned on me that my little student, in holding up the poster, had smudged one word with her thumb. The reason for her misbehavior became clear. When she arrived the next morning I asked my staff assistant to teach the class while I escorted the little girl into the hall. I said to her with a smile, “I think I know why you were having a hard time yesterday.” Her little body became rigid and her eyes dropped to her shoes. Then she tossed her head, and with characteristic defiance demanded, “Why?” “When you were reading my poster yesterday you accidentally -” “Suspend me if you want, I don’t care,” her words were betrayed by the tears running down her cheeks. My eyes welled up as I put my hands on her small shoulders. “It was an accident sweetie,” I whispered. “Don’t you know you are worth more to me than that poster?”

She raised her head and stared at me; her mouth opened. I hugged her tightly. She laid her head on my shoulder, and I felt her body relax. Here was a child whose alcoholic father demanded that she remove her clothes and grant him sexual favors. Here was a physically beautiful child whose mother took her to the area of town where prostitutes gather and used her to attract men. Here was a child surrounded by adults who exploited her at every turn and, worse, made her feel responsible for their exploitations. Only her feisty spirit protected her from further sexual abuse. Each time she felt backed against a wall, her claws came out. She fought everything. She had spent time in a lock-up facility for drug use. Her only protection from her family came from the supervision provided by the State because she never earned her way off probation. I hated to think that anything connected with me might add to her misery or to the weight of the responsibilities she already carried for the unconscious adults in her life. She gave me one last embrace and we returned together to our classroom.
 
Isabelle
 
Big brother said, ”Just wait till you meet her.
She’s the good kid, she’s perfect.”
Isabelle, whose non-father touched her
Whose mother took his side.
No one believed her pain.
 
Isabelle who is betrayed,
Angry and so afraid – fights back.
Hate filled words are quickly spewed
Fierce defiance – her protection of choice.
 
Isabelle – still perfect inside
But the world did not know.
 
It was the end of the grading period, and I had asked my students to write a paragraph about something they had learned that term. While reviewing their assignments, I came to the paper written by the little girl. My heart sank as I glanced at it; she had written only one sentence. I knew she could do better. Then I read her words, “I learned I am more important than a poster.” I set the papers down and let the tears come. I get so frustrated, knowing that nothing I teach can outweigh the tragic circumstances in which my students live. I question whether my work makes any difference. But, I had made a dent this time. A young child reached out to touch a story I had shared about horses that I rescued from the meat market. My effort was the conduit through which these animals came to live extended, useful lives. My story, a child’s reach - these simple acts had a profound effect on both of us in ways we could not have foreseen.

Ripples.
 
So it is in my life, too. I am going to make it because I am worth more than some people in my life ever knew.

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Jun 16

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The Tortoise Diet by Patty Church

Title: The Tortoise Diet
Author: Patty Church
Paperback: 272 pages
Publisher: Phyto Publishing
ISBN: 097735380X
$19.95
$23.95Available from your favorite bookseller

About The Tortoise Diet

Here is a collection of life-changing ideas that alter your eating habits forever. You get a series of training assignments, such as eating more fiber, jotting notes in a notebook (it’s surprising if you do this; how many meals last week did you grab in the car because you were rushed? And were they salads and water and a small burger or were they double-quarter-pounders with extra fries?) How much do you really drink? Is it one glass of wine (a small one?) or is it two big beakers a night? These things add up.

Some of the habits are really helpful, not only to dieters but to the poor eater; case in point, eating protein along with carbohydrates at each meal. I know someone who is skinny and always hungry. A hardboiled egg or a slice or two of meat with a starchy snack replaced his endless empty munching of cookies.

In the appendix are meal plans graded by how many calories. Not everyone should be eating 1100 calories a day, so it helps to know what constitutes a 525 calorie meal, for example. Here’s a 550 Calorie meal:

275 Calorie serving of whole grain, high fiber cereal, 8 ounces non-fat milk, 1 slice whole grain toast, 1 tbs no sugar all fruit jam spread, one orange.

Interesting; this meal is very high in fiber, and it isn’t particularly low in calories (300 and under.)

The author also gives hints on taming the craving monster, if you want something creamy (no-sugar pudding versus fatty ice cream, crunch–carrots or peapods versus chips.)

About the Author

Patty Church writes, “Because I am a Registered Nurse with a Bachelor’s Degree, you’d think I would have seen enough of the health consequences related to obesity to motivate me to lose weight.

Sadly, knowing something doesn’t always lead to the “doing” part, so despite my medical knowledge, I woke up a discovered myself at age 45 weighing 248 pounds. Seeing that awful number on the scale caused me to finally make the decision to figure out, once and for all, how to lose weight and keep it off. The Tortoise Diet by Patty Church

Incredibly, life has changed for me! I have finally discovered easy and workable “real-life” techniques for achieving true and lasting fat loss. Even more exciting, I’ve also learned to maintain my weight without starvation and while enjoying my life. For someone like me, a semi-professional dieter for most of my life, this is AMAZING!

My book, the Tortoise Diet, is the compilation of everything I learned while losing 120 pounds! In the book I present a series of step-by-step assignments, teaching the twenty-five habits I have found to be essential for weight loss success. By learning to practice these habits I was able to reach my target weight and body fat percentage! Whether you have ten pounds to lose, or 120 pounds, they are the key to improved health and permanent weight loss.”

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Jun 16

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Passion an erotic romance by P.F. Kozak

Title: The Second Law of Dying
Author: Geoff Laundy
Paperback: 440 pages
Publisher: iUniverse, Inc
ISBN: 0595363334
$23.95
Available from your favorite bookseller

About The Second Law of Dying

Long ago his mother had routinely cleaned the windows of the family home to invisibility. But the glass had shut him away nevertheless, a fading print of a boy, a creature as flat and boneless as the paper animals taped on the plaster. The symptoms of chronic disease had excluded him from the world outside—and the world inside, created from books piled high in the sickroom provided small compensation for his expected death. Only the vast histories of human conflict were a consolation. His reading and rereading of them intensified the enmity that nourished his remaining strength. Or that’s what he chose to remember as he looked down on the quiet street below.

In The Second Law of Dying, the ghostly presence of Nobel laureate Dr. Albert Schweitzer lays out the map of moral choices for Dr. Hugo Haultain as he grinds his way through the abyss of degradation that poisons his life. Across several continents and ending in Schweitzer’s remote African hospital, varying and inevitable circumstances give the notorious and depleted Dr. Haultain the daily option of turning violently on the world—or not.

About the Author

Geoff Laundy was born in Victoria, British Columbia, raised in Vancouver and partially (but not satisfactorily) educated. This schooling compelled me to consider the primary ideas of the century––1) cars are the icon of the age , 2) dipsomania is a near-religion, 3) bloody-mindedness is a sport for everybody. Geoff Laundy The Second Law of Dying

Laundy says: “I was intrigued as well by the fact that ‘facts’ have only a tenuous connection to truth. I was more intrigued that what we call “reason” was apparently a good reason to exclude facts. I was most intrigued by the appearance of overwhelming vulgarity in our institutions.

In 1973, having spent most of my life driving around, drinking, playing football and otherwise conforming, I decided to reform, get married and retreat to the far end of the Canadian bush country. By way of subsequent events, I learned that middle age can be a satisfactory education and knowledge promotes survival. For example, the summer air remains cool in the northern latitudes and root crops do best. Residents tend to favor seasonal produce. As a corollary to these actual facts, trees there are dense, so just being a wood splitter generates a lot of warmth.”

Jun 16

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Passion an erotic romance by P.F. Kozak

Title: Passion
Author: P.F. Kozak
Paperback: 328 pages
Publisher: Aphrodisia
ISBN: 0758214170
$12.95
Available from your favorite bookseller

About Passion

A highwayman comes riding… Lost in her books, shy and beautiful Pash is free to explore her fascination with sexy rogues. Her wickedest fantasies are of bold, sensual and powerful men, who release the passions she keeps locked deep inside…and the fear…

Her new riding instructor seems to have stepped out of her wildest dream. Ivan is masterful…handsome…and a very experienced lover. His invitation to a world of forbidden pleasure is irresistible…and Pash says yes…

Excerpt

Sorry, this is a G-rated site :)

About the Author

P. F. Kozak has had a unique perspective on sexuality since she discovered playing doctor, long before puberty. Once her hormones blended with her imagination, exotic erotic fantasies were born, andP.F. Kozak author of Passion, an erotic romance stories filled her head. At university, she majored in English writing and theatre, intending that writing would give the burning in her belly a voice.

As life often does, it made other plans. Getting married and earning a living supplanted the dream of writing. Writing became her hobby, rather than a career.

However, the dream only took a back seat, it did not die. Writing remained her passion and her joy. With the publication of her first two books, “Passion” and “Sins and Secrets”, being a writer is no longer a castle in the sky. It is real, and it is only just beginning.

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Jun 16

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Other-wise and School-wise by Carol Josel

Title: Other-wise and School-Wise
Author: Carol Josel
Paperback: 324 pages
Publisher: Scarecrow  Education
ISBN: 1578860377
$36.95
Available from your favorite bookseller

About Other-wise and School-wise

So, how exactly do you raise healthy, well-behaved children who honor family life, work hard in school, believe in themselves, and are not afraid to try new things—even risk failure? Certainly, no one book has all the answers, but Other-Wise and School-Wise: A Parent Guidebook targets most of the home front and school-related issues that face parents today and offers expert advice, activities, and lessons to help them bring up well-adjusted, academically successful kids.

About the Author

Carol Josel, a teacher since 1966, is currently a learning specialist with the Methacton School District in Pennsylvania, working with middle school children and their parents. She is also the author of GettCarol Josel ing School-Wise: A Student Guildbook (ScarecrowEducation, 2002), Ready-to-use ESL Activities for Every Month of the School Year (Center for Applied Reaserch in Education), and her writings have appeared in such professional publications as Teaching Pre-K-8 and The Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy.

Raising academically successful children who grow into sociable and productive adults is a universal concern. And, while no one book can adress all parenting issues, Other-Wise and School-Wise: A Parent Guidebook responds effectively to most of them, offering expert advice, activities, and lessons to help parents and their children both at home and at school.

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Jun 16

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Letters to Luke

Title: Letters to Luke
Author: Dr. Joe E. Holoubek
Paperback: 547 pages
Publisher: Little Dove Press
ISBN: 0975376624
$19.95
Available from your favorite bookseller

About Letters to Luke

Letters to Luke is the story of a doubter who becomes a believer, a man of science who becomes a man of faith. It emphasizes the healing power of forgiveness, respect for women’s spirituality and the sacredness of life.

The power of Letters to Luke lies in the author’s ability to write with authority – as if he and his beloved wife were living in the time of Christ and encountering Jesus for the first time. Their spiritual journey unfolds in letters to Luke of Antioch, a friend and fellow physician.

Letters to Luke takes place in Capernaum, Jerusalem, Jericho and Nazareth. The physicians Joseph and Elisa also accompany Jesus, his apostles and other followers on their journey from Galilee to Judea for Passover. This interactive map shows the Holy Land in the time of Jesus, Joseph, and Elisa.

It started after a severe illness during which the author was semiconscious for days. “At that time,” he recalls, “I had a dream that I was with Jesus in Nazareth.”

The author and his wife took more than more than 40 courses in Scriptures, theology, Biblical history and early Christianity. Other major sources of inspiration for this work were Pierre Barbet’s pioneering study, A Doctor at Calvary, and the research of John P. Jackson Ph.D. and Rebecca Jackson, co-founders of the Turin Shroud Center of Colorado.

About the Author

Dr. Joe Holoubek’s extensive list of published works includes articles on cardiology, medical ethics and health care of the clergy and religious. A crucifixion scholar, he and his wife, Dr. Alice Baker Holoubek, gave talks across the nation on the physical sufferings of Christ at Calvary.  Dr. Joe Holoubek Letters to Luke

As members of the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre, the doctors Holoubek toured the Holy Land. “To walk in the places where Jesus walked is an unforgettable experience,” says the author.

Dr. Joe is a distinguished member of the Catholic Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, an organization limited to 50 Catholic scholars of academic stature who have earned doctorate-level degrees.

A founder of LSU School of Medicine in Shreveport, Louisiana, he is former president of the National Federation of Catholic Physicians Guilds, the Louisiana Heart Society and Tri-State Medical Society.

Dr. Joe and Dr. Alice practiced internal medicine together for more than 40 years.

He is a graduate of the University of Nebraska College of Medicine. She was among the first women to graduate from LSU School of Medicine in New Orleans.

Dr. Alice and Dr. Joe met in 1937 during a summer fellowship at Mayo Clinic and wrote to each other almost daily until they married in 1939. Dr. Alice, who died in 2005, was Dr. Joe’s greatest source of inspiration.

Excerpt

From Letter 23
Our practice is growing, Luke. Word is spreading that Elisa and I have taken special training under Abraham of Jerusalem and we are getting patients from the surrounding villages and towns. I am no longer called “Joseph’s boy,” but am treated like a learned physician. But today a new healer came to town.

I know you, too, are accustomed to the wandering healers who arrive, set up a booth and sell a tonic, usually made of cheap wine and a few herbs, which they claim will cure every sort of disease. These charlatans come, stay a few days, then move on, leaving the patients still ill but now with empty pockets. However, this new healer seems different.

Elisa encountered him first. She came upon a crowd of people gathered around a man they said was healing people of afflictions for which we have no cure. A deaf person could now hear, and a lame man was on his feet and walking.

She entered the crowd and saw a man in his early thirties. His clothes were clean and neat but plain, unlike the fancy clothes that so many wandering healers wear. She watched as he went from person to person, speaking to them, touching them, looking deeply into their eyes. He did not examine them in any way nor did he give them any tonic. She did not witness any cures, but the people he touched seemed somehow changed. She hurried to the clinic to share word of this new healer in town.

“Abraham told us to be on the lookout for new methods of treatment,” she said. “This man seems to have something that we do not have. Come with me. Let us learn more.”

I know that Elisa is not easily fooled, so I decided to join her. We finished the work with our patients and went to find the new healer.

By the time we arrived the crowd had settled at the man’s feet. He was sitting and speaking to those gathered, like the wise men do in the Temple. He was not speaking of healing but of performing good deeds, caring for those who are poor or in need.

He had a kind expression and a pleasant smile. His hair was neatly groomed, parted in the middle and braided in the back of his head in the Galilean manner. And yet he was a little taller than most Galileans. His muscles were pronounced, as if he had done heavy work. With the scars on his hands I would place him as a carpenter by trade.

Luke, I cannot find the words in Greek to explain, but just looking at him, listening to him, gave me a feeling of confidence and trust. Whenever someone came close to the man and begged to be healed, he would talk to them quietly but intently. He did not ask questions as we do in trying to learn the history of an illness. He did touch them on the arm or shoulder. Then he would say something astonishing. “Your sins are forgiven. Go and sin no more.”

Luke, his words clearly had an effect on each of the petitioners. The distress lifted from their eyes and a peaceful look came over their faces. They kissed his hand and began to praise God for sending this healer. Elisa whispered to me, “I do not know this man, yet I feel I have seen him before.”

“As do I. But I cannot recall where we would have met.”

The crowd grew larger as word spread of the cures. But this stranger, this healer in plain clothes, somehow slipped away. Those who had gathered gradually left, still talking of what they had seen. We went to examine some of those he had touched.

“Look, there is the man with the withered leg,” Elisa said. “My father treated him with the paralytic disease when we were both children. Now he walks normally with both legs.”

“There is the woman who has been crippled in her back all of her life,” I added. “She is walking upright and straight.”

As we examined others, we found every case was the same. There was simply no explanation for these cures within our knowledge of medicine.

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Jun 16

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Annette Wick I'll Be In The Car

Title: I’ll Be In the Car: One Woman’s Story of Love, Loss and Reclaiming Life
Author: Annette Januzzi Wick
Hardcover: 408 pages
Publisher: Three Arch Press.
ISBN: 0977485609
$23.95
Available from your favorite bookseller

About I’ll Be In the Car

What happpens when all you wanted in life begins to slip away?  Annette Wick was forced to answer that question when her young husband was diagnosed with leukemia. What would become of their idyllic marriage? Their infant son? Her dream home on the Oregon coast?  

Presented by Three Arch Press, this inspiring story traces Annette’s brave adventure into the dark valley of grief and back again to the warm sunshine of hope. Told in the voice of a poet, I’ll Be in the Car is, ultimately, a story of joy and triumph.

About the Author

Annette Januzzi Wick was born in Amherst, Ohio and is now a freelance writer based in Cincinnati. Her work has appeared in Design Magazine, The Cincinnati Enquirer, The Loveland Herald and Whole Living Journal. Excerpts from I’ll Be in the Car were awarded Honorable Mention in the 73rd Annual Writer’s Digest Competition. Her poem, Voting at the Waterford, was included in a collection of poems for Cincinnati’s Peace and Justice Collection. Annette Wick I'll Be In the Car

Annette plans to use this book as a tool for others who have experienced loss and grief. She hopes to let others know, through her efforts, that they are not alone.

In addition, Annette roots for the Cincinnati Reds and her hometown Cleveland Indians while raising money for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society of Southern Ohio and serving as marketing chair for Women Writing for a Change Foundation

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Jun 16

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Fourth Down and Long by Tony Lotti

Title: Fourth Down and Long
Author: Tony Lotti
Paperback: 110 pages
Publisher: iUniverse, Inc..
ISBN: 059534285X
$12.95
Available from your favorite bookseller

About Fourth Down and Long

No matter how impossible your dreams may seem, Fourth Down and Long, the inspiring and witty biography of author Tony Lotti, will motivate you to make your dreams come true.

Inspired by his faith and family, Lotti remains steadfast through the ups and downs of life. No matter what your profession or status in life, Fourth Down and Long will encourage you to never give up on your dreams or the search for happiness—no matter how impossible it seems.

Excerpt

Why?

I’ll give you a quick timeline so you can get your bearings here. I had major surgery in late January 2000. I was recovering at home on my birthday, which was on Thursday, February 10, and I got my billboard from God concerning my career choices the next day.

On my way home from the meeting at the gas company, I called my dad and told him what was going on. He told me not to worry—God must want me to go into real estate full-time. One thing my dad would always bring up was that I should go to the high school and coach football. I always helped kickers and coaches if they asked me, but I wasn’t the type to just go up to a school and say, “Here I am! I want to coach.” A new high school was being built up the street from my house, and Dad thought it would be perfect for me. It was scheduled to open in August 2000, but they hadn’t named a football coach yet.

I truly believe that God has plans for everyone’s lives. This up-and-down roller coaster I was on was getting ready to jump the tracks. I spent that weekend working in real estate; after all, I had to get busy, since I was now self-employed. I told Dad that I had to get the ball rolling, so we made plans to sneak off on Tuesday and play golf. We played together at least once a week. I never really liked the sport, but he did. I was playing so we could hang out together.

When I was a kid, he used to go off to play, but I couldn’t go because I was still too young. I was thrilled to be able to hang out with him this way. Tuesday came, but not in the way I had expected. My telephone rang at about six o’clock in the morning, and my mom was on the other end. She said that Delta had called, and they were taking my dad over to South Fulton Hospital. She wanted me to take her there so we could find out what was going on. In the car on our way there, we talked about how his blood pressure was probably high, and we guessed the nurse at Delta wanted it checked out. That had happened a few times before.

My dad had high blood pressure and diabetes. When we arrived at the hospital, we were greeted by several Delta executives. I looked at Mom, and both of us were puzzled. All we were told was that the emergency room nurse wanted to know as soon as we got there. The nurse took us back to the emergency room, where we were greeted by the specialist.

Mom saw Dad lying there and went straight to him. I was left to talk to the doctor myself. He started to tell me that they had already figured out what was wrong with him. He had a cerebral hemorrhage, the doctor explained, and he went on to say he was sorry. I remember looking at him and saying, “Are you telling me my father is going to die?” He looked at me and said, “Yes.” They had ruled out risking surgery, because cutting into his brain to find the leak was like looking for a needle in a haystack. The doctor said that the hemorrhage was very large and had caused my dad to have a stroke. “The fact is,” he said, “you don’t get any symptoms with this until it’s too late. Most people don’t live to make it to the hospital.”

I asked him if there was any hope at all. He said that if Dad made it through the next forty-eight hours, he might have a chance. I went to my dad’s bedside, where he was still awake and trying to talk. The stroke had caused his speech to slur, but I could still understand him. He looked at me and said, “The doctor tell you I had a stroke?” I just kept telling him to please rest, because it was very important that we get his blood pressure down. Mom began to ask me questions, and then simply said, “Well, it’s not life-threatening. He’s not going to die, is he?” I just looked at her and nodded my head yes.

About the Author

Tony Lotti has been involved in football practically his whole life.  During his playing career, he achieved many awards with recognition capped off by being brought into training camp with the New England Patriots in 1990.  He punted 81 times for a 41 yard average his senior season and was selected as a Division II All-American for Tennessee Wesleyan College.  He became the first football player from Morrow High School to earn collegiate All-American status.  He was also selected 1st Team All Mid South Conference and received proclamations from the State of Georgia, as well as, Clayton County and the City of Morrow, GA declaring “Tony Lotti Jr. Day – Feb. 24, 1990.”  He was a member of Professional Kicking Services (PKS) of Sparks, Nevada where he assisted instructional kicking camps in Ohio, California and Florida.

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