Desert Remains

Desert Remains
Author: Steven Cooper
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 445
Release: 2017-10-10
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 163388354X

Detective Alex Mills turns to psychic Gus Parker to help him solve a series of baffling murders perpetrated by a deranged killer who leaves his victims' bodies and taunting clues in the desert surrounding Phoenix, AZ. Someone is filling the desert caves around Phoenix with bodies--a madman who, in a taunting ritual, is leaving behind a record of his crimes etched into the stone. With no leads and no suspects, Detective Alex Mills sees a case spinning out of control. City leaders want the case solved yesterday, and another detective wants to elbow Mills out of the way. As the body count rises, Mills turns to Gus Parker, an "intuitive medium" whose murky visions sometimes point to real clues. It's an unorthodox approach, but Mills is desperate. When Parker is brought to the crime scenes, he sees visions of a house on fire and a screaming child. But what does it mean? He struggles to interpret his psychic messages, knowing that the killer is one step ahead and that in this vast desert, the next murder could happen anywhere. Nor does it help that he's always been unlucky in love and now finds himself the prey of a lovelorn stalker. She is throwing him off his game. Someone will win this contest, and both Parker and Mills fear it will be the cunning, ruthless killer, who is able to use the trackless landscape as a cover for his brutal crimes.

The Desert Remains

The Desert Remains
Author: Charles Poling
Publisher: UNM Press
Total Pages: 252
Release: 2007
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780826342577

Chasms between family members widen in the aftermath of the death of a mother, her secret burial site, and a daughter's struggle with love and forgiveness.

The Book of what Remains

The Book of what Remains
Author: Benjamin Alire S‡enz
Publisher: Copper Canyon Press
Total Pages: 131
Release: 2010
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 1556592973

Presents a collection of poems focusing on the border between the United States and Mexico.

Desert Remains

Desert Remains
Author: Robert Burlingame
Publisher:
Total Pages: 9
Release: 1983
Genre: American poetry
ISBN:

Death of the Desert

Death of the Desert
Author: Christine Luckritz Marquis
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
Total Pages: 225
Release: 2022-03-22
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 0812298233

In the late fourth century, the world of Christianity was torn apart by debate over the teachings of the third-century theologian Origen and his positions on the incorporeality of God. In the year 400, Archbishop Theophilus of Alexandria convened a council declaring Origen's later followers as heretics. Shortly thereafter, Theophilus banished the so-called Tall Brothers, four Origenist monks who led monastic communities in the western Egyptian desert, along with hundreds of their brethren. In some accounts, Theophilus leads a violent group of drunken youths and enslaved Ethiopians in sacking and desecrating the monastery; in others, he justly exercises his episcopal duties. In some versions, Theophilus' violent actions effectively bring the Golden Age of desert monasticism to an end; in others, he has shown proper respect for the desert fathers, whose life of asceticism is subsequently destroyed by bands of barbarian marauders. For some, the desert came to be inextricably connected to violence and trauma, while for others, it became a site of nostalgic recollection. Which of these narratives subsequent generations believed depended in good part on the sources they were reading. In Death of the Desert, Christine Luckritz Marquis offers a fresh examination of this critical juncture in Christian history and brings into dialogue narrative strands that have largely been separated in the scholarly tradition. She takes the violence perpetrated by Theophilus as a turning point for desert monasticism and considers how monks became involved in acts of violence and how that violence came back to haunt them. More broadly, her careful attention to the dynamic relations between memory practices, the rhetorical constructions of place, racialized discourse, and language and deeds of violence speak to us in our own time.

Collected Poems

Collected Poems
Author: Federico García Lorca
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Total Pages: 1155
Release: 2018-08-14
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 1466898658

A revised edition of this major writer's complete poetical work And I who was walking with the earth at my waist, saw two snowy eagles and a naked girl. The one was the other and the girl was neither. -from "Qasida of the Dark Doves" Federico García Lorca was the most beloved poet of twentieth-century Spain and one of the world's most influential modernist writers. His work has long been admired for its passionate urgency and haunting evocation of sorrow and loss. Perhaps more persistently than any writer of his time, he sought to understand and accommodate the numinous sources of his inspiration. Though he died at age thirty-eight, he left behind a generous body of poetry, drama, musical arrangements, and drawings, which continue to surprise and inspire. Christopher Maurer, a leading García Lorca scholar and editor, has brought together new and substantially revised translations by twelve poets and translators, placed side by side with the Spanish originals. The seminal volume Poet in New York is also included here in its entirety. This is the most comprehensive collection in English of a poet who—as Maurer writes in his illuminating introduction—"spoke unforgettably of all that most interests us: the otherness of nature, the demons of personal identity and artistic creation, sex, childhood, and death."

The Loot of Cities

The Loot of Cities
Author: Arnold Bennett
Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand
Total Pages: 122
Release: 2023-09-05
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 3368924559

Reproduction of the original.