Get ready to cast on the colorwork socks of your dreams! Prolific knitwear designer and colorwork aficionado Charlotte Stone has created a sensational variety of patterns in her signature colorful style, so you can flaunt your personality and keep your feet cozy at the same time. Whether or not you’re experienced in knitting socks or stranded colorwork, you’re in good hands with Charlotte’s best tips, tricks and techniques at the ready. Easy enough to whip up in a day or two, these socks are perfect to make for yourself or gift to your loved ones—if you can bear to part with them! Discover the fun of stitching adorable animals as you knit patterns like the Autumn Mice, Counting Sheep or Dog Walk socks (featuring a particularly sassy Shiba Inu!). Celebrate good times while casting on projects like I’m Batty for Halloween, The Holly and the Ivy or a pair of heartwarming I Heart Socks for your valentine. Whip up footwear inspired by the great outdoors, like Summer Meadows, Midnight in Zermatt or Starry Night socks, so your feet can look as adventurous as you feel! No matter what, with a treasure trove of 25 whimsical patterns to choose from, you’ll never settle for boring socks again.
Semi Serious invites you along for the ride as the author recounts the sudden change in direction that her life took, from teaching middle school to getting behind the wheel of an eighteen-wheeler. She opens up about the initial decision, training, and challenging rookie year in the first few chapters and incorporates Bible verses and some of her personal poems throughout. After gaining experience and a certain level of comfort, more attention could be paid to the freedom and adventure of the open road, the sights of nature, and encounters with people she would otherwise never have met. As the pages keep turning, the journey evolves from highway miles to a spiritual journey that may surprise you as much as it did the author. While not included in the list of employee benefits, the solitude and vast time for reflection and connection with God prove to be one of the best perks of trucking. Semi Serious seems like a unique experience, but perhaps not. Setting aside the specifics, the courage to Step out in faith has guided countless people to act on Gods inspiration and find priceless rewards. Semi Serious is for those at every stage of their own spiritual journey, since there are as many different roads to faith as there are people in this world. Semi Serious is one womans journey of stepping outside of the box while climbing into the cab of a big rig and always holding the hand of God. Thought provoking and insightful, this compilation of stories and poems is for anyone contemplating a new route in their faith journey. With humor and an attention to detail, Char Stone candidly shares Gods guidance in her life as she travels, literally, the highways of life! Jean S. Graff, MS, NCC, LCPC
When she retired, Abigail Stone bought a little house in Vancouver, Washington. She had been drawn to the property by the huge arborvitae hedges on the east and west side of the property. After a moderate wind storm took down one of the trees in the east hedge, Abigail decided it might be wise to have the hedge pruned. The arborist she hired stated he had never seen an arborvitae hedge so tall. It was his guesstimate that the trees were at least 75-years old and had never been pruned. Midway through the pruning of the massive hedge, the arborist stopped work. Wrapped around the ninth tree in the tall, dense hedge was a human skeleton. Abigail Stone has solved several mysteries since she moved to Vancouver. But this was her biggest challenge. Skeletons don't have pockets to carry identification. She and a reporter from the local newspaper followed many leads and were able to identify the bones as well as solve another mystery connected to them.
When Abigail Stone visited the local historical museum she wandered into an area being renovated for a new permanent exhibit. The volunteer working there told her that the brick wall she was examining had once been the outer wall of the museum. It had been covered when an addition to the museum was added in 1948. While talking to the volunteer about the exhibit that would eventually be housed in this large area, Abigail noticed an irregularity in the brick work of the recently uncovered outer wall. Upon closer examination, she found a loose brick and, behind it, a note. Some time later a couple who were renovating their very old house found a packet of letters tied together wedged behind a rafter in the attic. Because the top few letters appeared to be written by the librarian nearly a hundred years before, they brought the letters to the museum. The note Abigail found had been written by the same person. She did some research to discover who the writer was and to whom he was writing. She uncovered both a love story and an unsolved 100-year old crime.
One rainy Sunday morning 4-year old Lily Waters was kidnapped from the front door of her family church. Her mother sings with the choir and had come to church earlier leaving Lily and her step-father to come later. By the time they came to church it was pouring down rain. Lily did not want to be carried in and begged to be dropped off at the front door like the old ladies who didnt want to get too wet running in from the parking lot. She never made it into the church. There were no clues. No stranger had been seen inside or outside the church. A thorough search of the neighborhood provided nothing. Lilys step-father was questioned but dismissed as to fault. A ransom note was never received. Lily seemed to have vanished into thin air.
Abigail Stone reti red and moved to the beauti ful State of Washington. She planned to play tourist for a while before looking for volunteer opportuniti es. One bright spring Tuesday Abigail went to visit and photograph the old grist mill located some 25 miles from her home in Vancouver. On the way back from this venture, she was forced off the road by a red pickup truck. A red pickup truck that was shooti ng at another vehicle. The Lower River Road is narrow and without guardrails. Abigail found herself upside down on the side of the road. All she could see was the river below her. Being of a curious nature, once she and her vehicle had been uprighted and towed home, she set out to fi nd why the red pickup truck was shooti ng at the other vehicle. That vehicle was found with several bullet holes in it and its occupants missing. This story follows Abigail as she makes new friends and visits the Oregon Coast in an eff ort to unravel the mystery. At the conclusion she realizes that the one thing she learned from this adventure was that you could never panic too early.
Some 13,000 years ago, humans were drawn repeatedly to a small valley in what is now Central Texas, near the banks of Buttermilk Creek. These early hunter-gatherers camped, collected stone, and shaped it into a variety of tools they needed to hunt game, process food, and subsist in the Texas wilderness. Their toolkit included bifaces, blades, and deadly spear points. Where they worked, they left thousands of pieces of debris, which have allowed archaeologists to reconstruct their methods of tool production. Along with the faunal material that was also discarded in their prehistoric campsite, these stone, or lithic, artifacts afford a glimpse of human life at the end of the last ice age during an era referred to as Clovis. The area where these people roamed and camped, called the Gault site, is one of the most important Clovis sites in North America. A decade ago a team from Texas A&M University excavated a single area of the site—formally named Excavation Area 8, but informally dubbed the Lindsey Pit—which features the densest concentration of Clovis artifacts and the clearest stratigraphy at the Gault site. Some 67,000 lithic artifacts were recovered during fieldwork, along with 5,700 pieces of faunal material. In a thorough synthesis of the evidence from this prehistoric “workshop,” Michael R. Waters and his coauthors provide the technical data needed to interpret and compare this site with other sites from the same period, illuminating the story of Clovis people in the Buttermilk Creek Valley.
Eivy a enfin atteint son but, le monde surnaturel d'Othea, qui regorge de mystères... et de dangers. Alors qu'elle parvient à peine, avec Kiam et leurs amis, à échapper à l'esclavage, elle va découvrir que de dangereux et charismatiques pirates sillonnent ce monde à la recherche de la Pierre de Vie, cette gemme aux étranges pouvoirs, qui attire toutes les convoitises... Ignorant tout du sort qui a été réservé à Ako, Eivy se lance à la recherche de sa famille qui aurait disparu en mer il y a quelques années, et embarque pour cela à bord du Dark Abyss, le navire d'une fougueuse et incontrôlable capitaine. Tandis que la rivalité entre pirates fait rage, quel objectif secret poursuit Abyss derrière sa froide détermination ? Quelles sombres vérités Eivy va-t-elle découvrir sur son propre pouvoir ? Et surtout, comment luttera-t-elle contre les créatures de cauchemar que la mer mettra sur son chemin ?
Le roman gagnant de notre premier concours francophone de Fantasy YA, marrainé par Margaret Rogerson ! Eivy survit dans les bas-fonds de Greybor depuis qu'elle est orpheline. Lorsqu'elle a l'occasion d'embarquer sur le Red Stone, le bateau d'un redoutable pirate connu pour sa dent de pierre rouge qui le rend invincible, elle saisit sa chance de partir à l'aventure. À bord, elle fait la connaissance de Kiam, orphelin lui aussi, et se retrouve bientôt investie par le capitaine d'une dangereuse mission : mettre la main sur une mystérieuse carte... Eivy ignore alors que ce voyage va l'emmener bien au-delà des mers de son monde, et à la rencontre de son propre passé. Comment échappera-t-elle aux pouvoirs de Slivengan, le pirate sans foi ni loi prêt à tout pour leur barrer la route ? Et quels secrets cache Ako, le charmant jeune homme aux yeux vairons qui semble en savoir beaucoup sur tous ces mystères... ? « Pirates, magie, rebondissements et aventures sont au programme de ce page turner au rythme haletant ! » Marie, Cultura, Villefranche sur Saône
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.