Purgatory’S Bridge

Purgatory’S Bridge
Author: Z. Garcia
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Total Pages: 45
Release: 2017-02-17
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1524671886

Takashi Azuno is a nineteen-year-old boy just starting out in college, trying to live and fit in on his own but is having trouble (due to the fact that hes surprisingly and unintentionally antisocial, says his best friend Arashi), and it doesnt get better at all with the moment he bumped into Yosuna Hatake while running late to school (hes always late). Takashi found an old wooden box with ancient encryptions on it. During school a strange woman picked him up and claimed to be his girlfriend. It was Yosuna. After a subtle greeting and a fresh first kiss, he was dragged back to his apartment by Yosuna and was asked about the box. While trying to get it for her, he dropped the box, and out came two medallions with a bunch of drugs as cover-up. The moment he picked up one of the medallions, his story began while his chance at a normal life ended.

A Modern Purgatory

A Modern Purgatory
Author: Carlo de Fornaro
Publisher:
Total Pages: 202
Release: 1917
Genre: Roosevelt Island (New York, N.Y.)
ISBN:

"This book is a record of the prison experiences of Carlo de Fornaro, artist, writer, editor, revolutionary. It is a record of experiences in the famous Tombs prison, in New York city, and in the New York city penitentiary on Blackwell's island."--Introduction.

Secrets of Purgatory

Secrets of Purgatory
Author: Melissa Castillo
Publisher: Page Publishing Inc
Total Pages: 331
Release: 2017-04-03
Genre: Young Adult Fiction
ISBN: 1684096804

Secrets of Purgatory by Melissa Castillo [--------------------------------------------]

Raw Edge of Purgatory

Raw Edge of Purgatory
Author: Alberta Davies
Publisher: Xlibris Corporation
Total Pages: 245
Release: 2011-04-29
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1477167773

Edge of Purgatory is a memoir of the tribulations and survival of Alberta Davies during the Liberian Civil War. In this book, Ms. Davies tells how God and the Virgin, Mary helped her through the woes, throes, and thrones of the Liberian horror. The book explains how the invasion into Liberia began in December, 1989. It gives a brief history of the country, the three principal parties involved in the conflicts, the rebels attires barbaric attitudes. The book explained the Liberians' reactions to the incursion, the sufferings endured, and the arrival of ECOMOG, the death of Samuel K. Doe, the rule of Prince Johnson, the election of Charles Taylor, and the natural resources stolen. Finally, the book concludes with advices for the 2011 election, the countrys natural resources monitoring, and a letter to the Liberians at home from an exile Liberian.

Three Purgatory Poems

Three Purgatory Poems
Author: Edward E Foster
Publisher: Medieval Institute Publications
Total Pages: 313
Release: 2004-07-01
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 1580444008

Though our modern understanding of the medieval doctrine of Purgatory is generally shaped by its presentation by Dante in the Divine Comedy, there is a lengthy history of speculation about the nature of such a place of purgation. Through these fourteenth-century Middle English poems, readers can experience something of the controversies that surfaced and resurfaced even after Aquinas had articulated his doctrine of the Communion of Saints. The Gast of Gy, as Foster notes, puts a human face on the doctrine of Purgatory, not only in the amiable, logical, and patient person of the Gast of Gy himself, . . . but also in the careful and cautious dialogue between the Gast and the Pryor who questions him. Sir Owain and The Vision of Tundale present two accounts of the purgatorial journeys of living individuals who are offered a chance to see the torments they have brought upon themselves by their less-than-perfect lives along with the opportunity to return and amend those lives. All three poems were quite popular, as was the doctrine of Purgatory itself. And why not? As Foster notes in his general introduction, it the doctrine of Purgatory had everything: adventure and adversity, suffering and excitement, and, most importantly, a profound theological warning wrapped in the joyful solace of communion with the departed and hope for our own sinful selves.