The Wives of Marty Winters

The Wives of Marty Winters
Author: Alec Clayton
Publisher: alec clayton
Total Pages: 160
Release: 2007
Genre: Gay rights
ISBN: 0980032202

Gay rights activist Selena Winters is shot in the head while giving a speech at the Seattle Pride celebration. As she lingers in a coma, her husband Marty and their friend Chloe believe they know who shot her: the same Neo-Nazi who beat up her son fifteen years earlier.

Until the Dawn

Until the Dawn
Author: Alec Clayton
Publisher: alec clayton
Total Pages: 164
Release: 2008-03-08
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0980032210

Red Warner, a famous artist, vanishes at the height of his career. A childhood friend searches for him and tells the story of his family going back generations. Until the Dawn is a coming of age story, a coming out story, and a story that brings together two worlds: the New York art world of the 1980s and the racial strife of the Deep South in the 1960s.

Imprudent Zeal

Imprudent Zeal
Author: Alec Clayton
Publisher: alec clayton
Total Pages: 228
Release: 2008
Genre: Interpersonal relations
ISBN: 0980032253

Five lives are thrown together: a failed seminarian and recovering alcoholic, a street walker in New York, the street walker's daughter who becomes a successful gallery owner, a Southerner jilted by his lover, and a selfish and self-destructive artist.

Bobby Braddock

Bobby Braddock
Author: Bobby Braddock
Publisher: Vanderbilt University Press
Total Pages: 683
Release: 2021-04-30
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0826503780

If you know country music, you know Bobby Braddock. Even if you don't know his name, you know the man's work. "He Stopped Loving Her Today." "D-I-V-O-R-C-E." "Golden Ring." "Time Marches On." "I Wanna Talk About Me." "People Are Crazy." These songs and numerous other chart-topping hits sprang from the mind of Bobby Braddock. A working songwriter and musician, Braddock has prowled the streets of Nashville's legendary Music Row since the mid-1960s, plying his trade and selling his songs. These decades of writing songs for legendary singers like George Jones, Tammy Wynette, and Toby Keith are recounted in Bobby Braddock: A Life on Nashville's Music Row, providing the reader with a stunning look at the beating heart of Nashville country music that cannot be matched. If you're looking for insight into Nashville, the life of music in this town, and the story of a force of nature on the Row to this day, Bobby Braddock will take you there.

Personal History

Personal History
Author: Katharine Graham
Publisher: Vintage
Total Pages: 951
Release: 2011-02-09
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0307758931

#1 NATIONAL BESTSELLER • PULTIZER PRIZE WINNER • The captivating inside story of the woman who helmed the Washington Post during one of the most turbulent periods in the history of American media: the scandals of the Pentagon Papers and Watergate In this widely acclaimed memoir ("Riveting, moving...a wonderful book" The New York Times Book Review), Katharine Graham tells her story—one that is extraordinary both for the events it encompasses and for the courage, candor, and dignity of its telling. Here is the awkward child who grew up amid material wealth and emotional isolation; the young bride who watched her brilliant, charismatic husband—a confidant to John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson—plunge into the mental illness that would culminate in his suicide. And here is the widow who shook off her grief and insecurity to take on a president and a pressman’s union as she entered the profane boys’ club of the newspaper business. As timely now as ever, Personal History is an exemplary record of our history and of the woman who played such a shaping role within them, discovering her own strength and sense of self as she confronted—and mastered—the personal and professional crises of her fascinating life.

New Hokkaido

New Hokkaido
Author: James McNaughton
Publisher: Victoria University Press
Total Pages: 205
Release: 2015-10-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1776560779

It is 1987, forty-five years after Japan conquered New Zealand, and the brutal shackles of the occupation have loosened a little: English can be spoken by natives in the home, and twenty-year-old Business English teacher Chris Ipswitch has a job at the Wellington Language Academy. But even Chris and his famous older brother—the Night Train, a retired Pan-Asian sumo champion—cannot stay out of the conflict between the Imperial Japanese Army and the Free New Zealand movement. When Chris takes it upon himself to investigate a terrible crime, he is drawn into the heart of the struggle for freedom, guided along the way by the mysterious Hitomi Kurosawa and the ghost of Kiwi rock 'n' roll legend and martyr Johnny Lennon. New Hokkaido is a fascinating counter-factual history and an adventure that thrills and disquiets at every turn.