Separated from the man she loves, Chloe Kingsley finds herself alone in Mesopotamia, haunted by memories and driven to survive. Here, in a land where upheavals in the heavens and a flood on earth portend catastrophe for mankind, the rulers demand an appeasement - a beautiful young woman to placate the gods.
Porter Mason's young life is shattered when his beloved father succumbs unexpectedly to a heart attack, leaving Porter and his mother penniless and deeply in debt. Porter has no idea how bad it really is until the bankers come calling. When he goes to his older brother Roy for help, he is even more shocked to find him in the same situation, along with some of his closest neighbors. This leaves the family with no way to make a living in their beloved Oklahoma, so after selling everything including his horse (and best friend), Porter, Ma, Roy, and Roy's wife, Josie, along with neighbors, Jacob and Mary, head to California to make a new start. Although it is new, it is a far cry from the way he used to live, and it takes a lot of getting used to. After a trying teenage period and serving in Vietnam, Porter prevails, becoming a successful land-owner, but never finding peace in this troubled life. As many do, he eventually finds his way home and to the happiness he deserves. Pat Frank was born in Mississippi County, Arkansas, to share-croppers, Troy and Mattie Crotts. The family eventually bought their own farm and eked out a living until Pat was twelve-years-old. Then they sold out and moved to California, living in Orange Cove and doing field labor. Pat has her own business and now lives in Hanford, California. "Salt of the Earth" is Pat's fifth novel.
From the author of the post-apocalyptic classic Alas Babylon, comes an eerie, cold war thriller A young teenage couple having a rendezvous one night on a beach in Florida suddenly sees a submarine emerge from the ocean. Armed soldiers disembark the vessel and a Buick drives off its landing ramp. For Henry Hazen, who is scheduled to ship out to an army training camp the next day, the sight leaves him uneasy, but he tells no one what he has witnessed. Katherine Hume is the only woman working for the Pentagon’s Atomic Energy Commission. From intelligence they have gathered, she and her team are convinced the Russians are poised to conduct a nuclear attack on the U.S. on or shortly before Christmas. But convincing their superiors an attack is imminent is proving far more difficult than she could have imagined—even after several stealth fighter planes and their pilots go missing over the Gulf. Banker Robert Gumol sees all the signs that the big attack is finally coming. As a reluctant spy for the Russians, Gumol’s loyalties lie more with his adopted country than his motherland. Deciding to take the next flight to Havana, he risks being executed by the Russians if his betrayal is discovered—but he’s willing to put it all on the line for a chance at freedom. With the clock ticking, the fate of America hangs by a very thin thread. A classic of science fiction that is a cautionary tale of the dangers of nuclear power, Forbidden Area is as timely today as it was when it was first published in 1958.
In the Cyber year of 2100, Superheroes are made not born. Anyone who wishes to acquire superhuman powers that defy the very laws of nature and logic once thought to be forbidden to mankind can now freely purchase them for a hefty price tag courtesy of the ruthless Global Enterprise known as the Super Inc. Corporation. But not all is well in the Golden City, the newly established capital of the free world and the place where superheroes are made, for it has long been known that powers corrupts & dangerous superpowers that can be readily bought with cold hard cash by almost anyone who can afford it will undoubtedly only ever serve to destroy the very fabric of the civilized world itself and ultimately prove catastrophic for all superhumans and non super alike...
In the apocalyptic aftermath of the war to end all wars, the world has all but been reduced to vast stretches of nuclear wastelands ruled by terrifying mutants and savage packs of roaming marauders. the only form of order left in the new world is preserved by the empire, the last civilized alliance of mankind, that willingly destroys any and all possible threats to its establishment. But when empire forces one day storm into the small borderland settlement of Hogtown slaughtering all the inhabitants and totally annihilating the place without any clear explanation or logical reasoning, the man known as The Headhunter, & the last remaining resident of Hogtown, embarks on a deadly mission to the empire capital in search of answer and revenge with horrifying consequences...
Originally published at the dawn of the Atomic Age, Mr. Adam is a riveting, chilling novel from the author of the post-apocalyptic classic Alas Babylon, revealing the dangers of nuclear power—and the far greater danger of government bureaucracy. A young newspaperman accidentally turns up the biggest story of his career: On a certain date in the not-too-distant future, there are no reservations in the maternity wards of any hospitals in New York. When the journalist’s AP office checks other cities, he discovers that this alarming state of affairs is not just in the United States, but in the entire world. A few months earlier, an accidental explosion in an atomic plant in Mississippi released an unknown form of radiation that turned the Earth’s men sterile—with one notable exception. Mr. Homer Adam, who was at the bottom of a lead mine in Colorado at the moment of the explosion, is the only man unaffected by the atomic rays. Naturally, he is in great demand, and sadly, it’s up to the government to decide what to do with him. One of literature’s first responses to the atomic bomb, Mr. Adam is an artifact of classic science fiction—an equally biting satire and ominous warning to society—that will resonate deeply with readers today as it did when it was first published in 1946.
Separated from the man she loves, Chloe Kingsley finds herself alone in Mesopotamia, haunted by memories and driven to survive. Here, in a land where upheavals in the heavens and a flood on earth portend catastrophe for mankind, the rulers demand an appeasement - a beautiful young woman to placate the gods.
With an oppressive government looking over their shoulders and a deadly secret lab practically next door, archaeologists Mars and Anne Ederly are caught up in a conspiracy to hide the existence of biological weapons while working on a dig in Babylon.
From the author of the classic Alas Babylon comes this riveting story of a Marine captain and his soldiers and their arduous, difficult retreat from Changjin Reservoir to Hungnam during the Korean War—a stirring portrait of courage and sacrifice. “These are not stragglers, sir. This is Dog Company…” In Pat Frank’s classic 1951 war novel, one-hundred-twenty-six soldiers commence their long, harrowing journey at Changjin Reservoir during the height of the Korean War, but few will survive the grueling fight and eventually reach Hungnam. Vividly bringing to life the bravery, daring, and turmoil a unit of soldiers endures, Hold Back the Night reveals their gripping stories. Captain Mackenzie, commander of Dog Company, not only bears the responsibility for victory or defeat, but also feels the full weight of the emotional toll that the war inevitably takes on him and his troops. His one consolation to inspire his band of soldiers to keep on going is an unopened bottle of Scotch that holds bittersweet memories of his wife who gave it to him as a gift. Sergeant Ekland, a cocky, determined communications sergeant, is due for a battlefield promotion and longs for the day his tour is over so he can be reunited with his fiancée—that is if he makes it out of Korea alive. Private Couzens, finds himself in a precarious situation with the enemy due to circumstances out of his control—a situation that causes his loyalties to come into question with his superiors. As readers follow the lives of these men and the other unforgettable soldiers, Pat Frank’s epic novel of war, loss, and survival recounts a crucial chapter in American history.
Fantasium Volume 2 includes Doomsaurs, The Foultongue Deathmatch Games, Fear Factor, Killer Babes and Horrorville. This is the second volume continuation from Fantasium Volume 1
Wismer, a recently retired Army colonel and chaplain, provides a behind-the-scenes look at life in Baghdad during the months following the invasion in 2003. His work not only reveals the daily drama of war, but also raises salient questions about U.S. strategy regarding the War on Terror.
My book is a book for people that are seeking the TRUTH concerning their Salvation which comes to man through redemption, BASED on a LIVING relationship with the Lord Jesus founded in a LIFE giving process which comes forth out of death to SELF, and a Life that comes forth from a SEED of Life sown in the Natural Life of the Natural Man born in Adam, which produces a Man in the Image of the Lord Jesus, free from INIQUITY and full of the fullness of Christ. A SEED from the TREE of Life, sown in Man, which TRANSFORMS Man into the Image of His creator through redemption, which is a God CREATION process from the Alter of sacrifice and the Cross Jesus died upon applied to the heart of Man redeeming man out of sin called INIQUITY
Due to conquests and colonialism through the centuries, it is not unusual for languages and cultures to be influenced by other, foreign languages and cultures. The modern English language, for example, owes many of its words to Old Norse and Latin, debts dating from contacts made during the Middle Ages. Verbal Encounters is a collection of papers on the cultural and linguistic exchange in Old Norse, Old English, and medieval Latin literature written in honour of Roberta Frank, former University Professor of Medieval Studies at the University of Toronto. The essays feature new scholarship in the field, on topics such as the integral position of Anglo-Latin within Anglo-Saxon culture and literature, constructions of feminine strength and effectiveness in Anglo-Saxon literature, the rise of Latin-based learning in twelfth-century Iceland, medieval Icelandic religious poetry, and the conversion to Christianity in medieval Scandinavia. The essays in Verbal Encounters are not merely a fitting tribute to Roberta Frank, but also strong contributions to current scholarship on medieval literature and culture.
The book of Revelation is perhaps the most theologically complex and literarily sophisticated text in the New Testament. In this commentary John Christopher Thomas and Frank Macchia make the brilliant but challenging text of Revelation more accessible and easier to understand on its own terms, rather than as a futuristic prophecy. In addition to their literary, exegetical, and theological analysis of the text, they offer sustained theological essays on the book's most significant themes and issues, accenting especially the underappreciated place of the Holy Spirit in the theology of the book.
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.