My Wife and Mine Rod

My Wife and Mine Rod
Author: Richard Aiyes
Publisher: Austin Macauley
Total Pages: 214
Release: 2021-11
Genre:
ISBN: 9781786125576

At times, man needs to sum up and get down to reality's civility of whether your hands are clean or not, because one day, you have to pay back all you owed. When we are young, nothing matters to us, especially when you look back and see both parents, blessed are those who don't. This made Chief Hunter to think back that it might be stupid or wrong to have sex with a strange creature in a strange environment. Isn't that enough to make him worried about the future, because what goes around comes back around? If the wife hears about his estranged love affair, how would she feel? Would she accept him? However, sometimes we often need to learn how to adapt and wait, for God's time is the best.

For the Love of Eryk

For the Love of Eryk
Author: Rod McCall
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2016-08-11
Genre:
ISBN: 9780984603589

In For the Love of Eryk, Rod McCall shares his personal experience with Parental Alienation, which was so severe, it led to the death of his son Eryk; killed by the hands of his own mother when she lost her parental rights as the courts finally saw through her alienating behavior. Part One of the Book is Rod's captivating and important story, showing how Parental Alienation can happen. Part Two of the book tells the stories of many others, specifically addressing what Parental Alienation is and how it can be stopped. Through interviewing many other parents, as well as professionals in family law, Rod's book is a powerful resource which can raise awareness, educate and be a catalyst for change.

The Boy Who Bought Old Earth

The Boy Who Bought Old Earth
Author: Cordwainer Smith
Publisher: DigiCat
Total Pages: 120
Release: 2022-07-21
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

This is a fascinating science fiction novel about Rod McBan, a wealthy kid from the most prosperous planet in the galaxy, Norstrilia. He buys earth without even realizing what he has done. It is a fun, imaginative, and fast-paced novel, a must-read for science fiction fans.

Autobiography

Autobiography
Author: George Biddell Airy
Publisher:
Total Pages: 440
Release: 1896
Genre: Astronomers
ISBN:

Cherrybrook Rose

Cherrybrook Rose
Author: Tania Crosse
Publisher: Severn House Publishers Ltd
Total Pages: 261
Release: 2012-12-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1780103735

A gripping tale of love and self-sacrifice set on wild Dartmoor The year is 1875, when life high up on Dartmoor is harsh and unforgiving. Beautiful, vivacious and compassionate, Rose Maddiford could have any husband she chooses, but she is devoted to only one man, her father, manager of the gunpowder mills at Cherrybrook.When tragedy strikes, it seems that despite Rose's determined efforts, there is only one way to hold the family together. But it is a solution that requires the greatest sacrifice from Rose. Like a lamb to slaughter, she finds herself trapped in an impossible situation.Solace comes from the most unlikely source, but what future can there be for two lost souls whose lives have been shattered by the cruel hand of fate? Perhaps, though, the answer lies in the very place Rose has not looked, and there is hope for her after all.

The Cable: A Novel

The Cable: A Novel
Author: Marion Ames Taggart
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Total Pages: 415
Release:
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1465552472

A group of small boys stood on the corner, looking anxiously down the shaded street. They ranged from eight to twelve years in age; from grimy hands to universal griminess in uncleanliness; from comfortable meagreness to ragged poverty in clothing, while in race they were polyglot, but they were identical in the impatience with which they scanned the sidewalk, vision-length, and found it empty though there were frequent passers-by. “Gee! What’s the matter wid her?” “Say! She wouldn’t go th’ udder way?” “Th’ odder way nothin’! Don’t she know we’re waitin’?” The tallest, but also the raggedest, boy of the group made a fine gesture, drawing a nickel watch from somewhere between his bagging shirt and tight trousers. “’Tain’t so late,” he said, displaying the watch’s candid face. “Twenty to one by mine, an’ I set her by the city hall when de ball dropped’t noon. She ain’t so late.” “Whatjer bet she’s got, sour balls ’r peanuts?” asked the smallest boy. “Pennies, maybe!” hopefully suggested a young Israelite not without guile; he was saving up for an excursion. “Git out! She don’t hand ’em out less’n she didn’t have time to buy nothin’,” a boy scornfully rebuked him. “Didn’ she tell us she hadn’t no use fer money presen’s less’n she was up against it fer time?” “I bet she’s got somepin!” declared a round little colored boy. “We’d ought t’ be gittin’ down town; mos’ in gen’ly she’s here by now, an’ we’s gotter git our af’ernoon ’ditions.” “Oh, chase yourself, Coony! ’Tain’t near two. Dere she is!” The last speaker ended in a triumphant yell, wildly pointing down the street as he jumped up and down, his bare feet thudding on the pavement; his comrades echoed the yell with Indian War Dance gestures. The cause of this suspense and final excitement was a slender young figure, tall for a girl, but looking taller than its actual height because of its boyish lines, the straight short skirt and straight loose jacket which clad it. The girl wore light-weight summer tweed, several colors blended in its weave to a tone of warm brownish drab. Her gloveless hands were thrust into the jacket’s side pockets; she wore a sailor hat, pushed back somewhat from her brow, but even if it had been set on her head straight, it would not have confined her masses of brilliant hair; they wreathed her face in lawless rings which had the effect of a halo worn in jest. She walked with a free, careless grace, a stride that was businesslike, yet springing, as of one who enjoyed the business which claimed her. Her face, which was not pretty, yet was compounded of many irregular charms, enhanced by a perfectly regular beauty of skin, was bright with smiles as she espied the shabby, yelling band awaiting her; the smile displayed an unbroken row of strong white teeth between full red lips. She waved her hand at the lads with a gesture which was like their own as they waved back at her, a straight-out motion from the brim of her hat, then flung widely out to the right.