The New Toyan Ranch

The New Toyan Ranch
Author: Darrin Atkins
Publisher: iUniverse
Total Pages: 134
Release: 2002
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0595255795

Dora Toyan fell in love up in the mountains, fell in love with a man named Theodore, a man instrumental in helping her and her family build the New Toyan Ranch and construct it to the exact designs of the Toyan ranch that preceded it by nearly twenty years.

Black Beach

Black Beach
Author: Ian Macpherson
Publisher: Troubador Publishing Ltd
Total Pages: 238
Release: 2007
Genre: Intelligence officers
ISBN: 190588642X

Newly recruited MI6 agent Bo Pett is sent to equatorial Africa to unscramble a plot involving corruption, corporate bribery and a dastardly coup d'etat. But no-one in London had told him about the complications and the horrors of Black Beach prison, the French, Spanish, and Nigerian governments, terrorism, deceit, revenge, and especially love.

That Knock at the Door

That Knock at the Door
Author: Holly S. Fenelon
Publisher: iUniverse
Total Pages: 416
Release: 2012
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1475925379

A blue star for each family member serving in America's military... a gold star if that life was lost in defense of the nation's freedom. IN WORLD WAR I, the American tradition of the service flag began. Families displayed a simple fabric banner with a blue star for each family member serving in the U.S. Armed Forces. If a family member died in the nation's service, a gold star covered that individual's blue star on the family service flag. Not a symbol of mourning, the gold star represented the family's pride and the honor and glory accorded to that individual for making the supreme sacrifice in defense of the America's freedom. Soon, the term "gold star mother" came to be used to identify and honor women who had lost a son or daughter in wartime military service. Following the war, as the nation focused its attention on those veterans who had returned whole in mind and body, gold star mothers served as a constant reminder of the true cost of war. In 1928, a group of these women formed American Gold Star Mothers, Inc., an organization created to honor those who had died by being of service to veterans and their families in need, supporting gold star families, and caring for veterans who had returned with physical, emotional and psychological wounds. From that humble beginning, American Gold Star Mothers, Inc. has become an icon of national service, opening its membership time and again to gold star mothers of later wars and conflicts, including Iraq and Afghanistan. Their amazing legacy of service is an important yet largely unknown chapter in American history. This book presents the story of gold star mothers in America and the first comprehensive history of American Gold Star Mothers, Inc., drawn from nearly a century of archival materials. The fascinating story of the strong women who honored their fallen sons and daughters by dedicating themselves to the service of veterans and peace is both compelling and inspiring.