Haunting Voices

Haunting Voices
Author: Brenda Segna
Publisher: iUniverse
Total Pages: 166
Release: 2003-12
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0595300685

The voices strike without warning... They torment without mercy... And they've only just begun... Before she was raped, Jen Remini was brilliant and confident--rising to the top of her field. But now the young physician assistant is fighting for existence and trying to resist the haunting voices that are trying to take over her mind. While facing the demons of the rape, Jen is overcome with the fact that something powerful is rising, a malevolence that may claim her life for its own... As nightfall approaches, Jen senses that she is in great danger. Sinister forces seem to be bringing her closer to darkness in a nightmare state that she cannot control...and she cannot conquer...

Voices in the Snow

Voices in the Snow
Author: Darcy Coates
Publisher: Black Owl Books
Total Pages: 301
Release: 2020-01-07
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

Clare remembers the cold. She remembers abandoned cars and children's toys littered across the road. She remembers dark shapes in the snow and a terror she can't explain. And then... nothing. When she wakes, aching and afraid in a stranger's gothic home, he tells her she was in an accident, a crash in the snow. He claims he saved her. Clare wants to leave, but a vicious snowstorm has blanketed the world in white, trapping them together, and there's nothing she can do but wait. At least the stranger seems kind... but Clare doesn't know if she can trust him. He promised they were alone here, but she sees and hears things that convince her something else is creeping about the surrounding woods, watching. Waiting. Between the claustrophobic storm and the inescapable sense of being hunted, Clare is on edge... and increasingly certain of one thing: Her car crash wasn't an accident. Something is waiting for her to step outside the fragile safety of the house... something monstrous, something unfeeling. Something desperately hungry.

Voices in the Ocean

Voices in the Ocean
Author: Susan Casey
Publisher: Anchor
Total Pages: 329
Release: 2015-08-04
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 038553731X

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • Inspired by a profound experience swimming with wild dolphins off the coast of Maui, the bestselling author of The Wave set out on a quest to learn everything she could about dolphins—the other intelligent life on the planet. “Part science, part memoir, part impassioned plea for change.” —People Susan Casey’s journey takes her from a community in Hawaii known as “Dolphinville,” where the animals are seen as the key to spiritual enlightenment, to the dark side of the human-cetacean relationship at marine parks and dolphin-hunting grounds in Japan and the Solomon Islands, to the island of Crete, where the Minoan civilization lived in harmony with dolphins, providing a millennia-old example of a more enlightened coexistence with the natural world. Along the way, Casey recounts the history of dolphin research and introduces us to the leading marine scientists and activists who have made it their life’s work to increase humans’ understanding and appreciation of the wonder of dolphins.

Voices from the Chicago Grave

Voices from the Chicago Grave
Author: Scott Markus
Publisher: Thunder Bay Press (MI)
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2008-08
Genre: Body, Mind & Spirit
ISBN: 9781933272191

Chicago is full of ghosts, mysterious deaths, murders, and tragic events. Visit over eighty macabre Chicagoland locations you'd never want to visit after dark. The most famous Chicago ghost stories, including ""Resurrection Mary"" and ""Bachelor's Grove,"" are featured along with some lesser-known tales such as ""The Sunnybrook Asylum"" and ""The Gate.

Haunting the Korean Diaspora

Haunting the Korean Diaspora
Author: Grace M. Cho
Publisher: U of Minnesota Press
Total Pages: 263
Release: 2008
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0816652740

Since the Korean Wara the forgotten wara more than a million Korean women have acted as sex workers for U.S. servicemen. More than 100,000 women married GIs and moved to the United States. Through intellectual vigor and personal recollection, Haunting the Korean Diaspora explores the repressed history of emotional and physical violence between the United States and Korea and the unexamined reverberations of sexual relationships between Korean women and American soldiers.

Toni Morrison and the Queer Pleasure of Ghosts

Toni Morrison and the Queer Pleasure of Ghosts
Author: Juda Bennett
Publisher: SUNY Press
Total Pages: 218
Release: 2014-11-13
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1438453558

Offers the first queer reading of all ten of Morrison’s novels. Toni Morrison and the Queer Pleasure of Ghosts radically intervenes in one of the most established and sacred topics in Toni Morrison scholarship, love. Moving beyond Morrison’s representation of ghosts as the forgotten or occluded past, Juda Bennett uncovers how Morrison imagines the spectral sphere as always already queer, a provocation and challenge to heteronormativity—with the ghost appearing as an active participant in disruptions of compulsory heterosexuality, as a figure embodying closet desires, or as a disembodied emanation that counterpoints homophobia. From The Bluest Eye to Home, Morrison’s novels have included many queer ghosts that challenge our most cherished conceptions of love and speak to cultural anxieties about black sexualities, gay marriage, AIDS, lesbian visibility, and transgender identities. Not surprisingly, the scene-stealing ghost Beloved appears at the very heart of this book, but Bennett cautions against interpretative stasis, inviting readers to break free of the stranglehold Beloved has had on imaginations, so as not to miss the full force of Morrison’s lifelong project to queer love.

Rhetorics Haunting the National Mall

Rhetorics Haunting the National Mall
Author: Roger C. Aden
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 245
Release: 2018-09-15
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 1498563244

Rhetorics Haunting the National Mall: Displaced and Ephemeral Public Memories vividly illustrates that a nation’s history is more complicated than the simple binary of remembered/forgotten. Some parts of history, while not formally recognized within a commemorative landscape, haunt those landscapes by virtue of their ephemeral or displaced presence. Rather than being discretely contained within a formal sites, these memories remain public by lingering along the edges and within the crevices of commemorative landscapes. By integrating theories of haunting, place, and public memory, this collection demonstrates that the National Mall, often referred to as “the nation’s front yard,” might better be understood as “the nation’s attic” because it hides those issues we do not want to address but cannot dismiss. The neatly ordered installations and landscaping of the National Mall, if one looks and listens closely, reveal the messiness of US history. From the ephemeral memories of protests on the Mall to the displaced but persistent presences of inequality, each chapter in this book examines the ways in which contemporary public life in the US is haunted by incomplete efforts to close the book on the past.

The Haunting of Holden Castle

The Haunting of Holden Castle
Author: Ben Tousey
Publisher: Ben Tousey
Total Pages: 240
Release: 2010-03-23
Genre:
ISBN: 0557152593

Holden Castle has dark, turbulent secrets, and two innocent young men find themselves standing in proxy, reliving the roles of earlier tragic figures, long thought dead. From the moment they arrive, Sean and Tony experience a profound and distinct case of déjà vu, as if they're living their lives and the lives of someone else at the same time. They discover that they are the secret.

Coastal Environments in Popular Song

Coastal Environments in Popular Song
Author: Glenn Fosbraey
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 175
Release: 2022-12-30
Genre: History
ISBN: 100081467X

This book examines how popular music is able to approach subjects of bio-politics, climate change, solastalgia, and anthropomorphisation, alongside its more common diet of songs about love, dancing, and break-ups – all while satisfying its primary remit of being entertaining and listenable. Nearly a thousand books have been published on bioethics since Van Rensselaer Potter’s Bioethics Bridge to the Future (1971), with a marked increase in the past 20 years. However, not one of these books has focused itself on popular music, something Christopher Partridge describes as ‘central to the construction of [our] identities, central to [our] sense of self, central to [our] well-being and, therefore, central to [our] social relations’. This edited collection examines popular music through a range of topics, from romance to climate change. Coastal Environments in Popular Song is perfect for students, scholars, and researchers alike interested in bioethics, social history, and the history of music.