A Dance of Cloaks

A Dance of Cloaks
Author: David Dalglish
Publisher:
Total Pages: 245
Release: 2014-07
Genre: Assassins
ISBN: 9780316242417

"Thren Felhorn is the greatest assassin of his time. All the thieves' guilds of the city are under his unflinching control. If he has his way, death will soon spill out from the shadows and into the streets. Aaron is Thren's son, trained to be heir to his father's criminal empire. He's cold, ruthless--everything an assassin should be. But when Aaron risks his life to protect a priest's daughter from his own guild, he glimpses a world beyond piston, daggers, and the iron rule of his father"--Page 4 of cover.

Deus Mega Therion / The Divine Mrs. E

Deus Mega Therion / The Divine Mrs. E
Author: Adam Mudman Bezecny
Publisher: Lulu.com
Total Pages: 160
Release: 2017-07-22
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0692926194

Deus Mega Therion is the story of an '80s metal band who has to work their way out of a contract with a Satanic cult. The Divine Mrs. E is the tale of an actress whose investigations into a murder lead her somewhere unexpected.

The Lay Saint

The Lay Saint
Author: Mary Harvey Doyno
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Total Pages: 237
Release: 2019-10-15
Genre: History
ISBN: 1501740229

In The Lay Saint, Mary Harvey Doyno investigates the phenomenon of saintly cults that formed around pious merchants, artisans, midwives, domestic servants, and others in the medieval communes of northern and central Italy. Drawing on a wide array of sources—vitae documenting their saintly lives and legends, miracle books, religious art, and communal records—Doyno uses the rise of and tensions surrounding these civic cults to explore medieval notions of lay religiosity, charismatic power, civic identity, and the church's authority in this period. Although claims about laymen's and laywomen's miraculous abilities challenged the church's expanding political and spiritual dominion, both papal and civic authorities, Doyno finds, vigorously promoted their cults. She shows that this support was neither a simple reflection of the extraordinary lay religious zeal that marked late medieval urban life nor of the Church's recognition of that enthusiasm. Rather, the history of lay saints' cults powerfully illustrates the extent to which lay Christians embraced the vita apostolic—the ideal way of life as modeled by the Apostles—and of the church's efforts to restrain and manage such claims.

Florence Macarthy: An Irish Tale

Florence Macarthy: An Irish Tale
Author: Jenny McAuley
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 424
Release: 2015-09-30
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 131730411X

This is the first modern scholarly edition of Florence Macarthy: An Irish Tale (1818). Owenson's seventh novel, it is the most sophisticated of her four 'national tales'. Owenson combined conventional romance plotlines with the political and social problems in Ireland, following the passing of the Act of Union in 1800.