Frederick Williams, outstanding novel "Just Loving You" explores family relationships, discusses what it means to be a black writer in America and examines the very nature of love. You can't miss this one!
A documentary biography of Dr. Frederick Granger Williams (1787-1842), who was a doctor, farmer, justice of the peace, and a scribe and assistant president to Joseph Smith, founder of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormons). Also includes biographies of his wife and children.
Life is a cycle of death from one generation to the next. From day one we all have equal opportunities in life. As a young man who made some wrong choices at an early age and those choices will follow him all through the rest of his life. While trying not to become a statistic of the hood, but growing up in a society of poverty without a father can have a major effect on how your life turns out. Being raised around pimps, drug dealers, and wine-os their habits are bound to rub off on you. There are two roads in life: the road to destruction and the road to success; its totally up to you which one you will choose in life. You have to play the hand you were dealt, but you must play it to win. Sometimes things may not go as planned. You must never mix business with pleasure and loyalty and trust are everything. By know means ever should you let a woman come between you and your homies. Always stay true to yourself and know that snitches get stitches. If you ever get to the point that the money makes you instead of you making the money... GAME OVER! Written by: Frederick Williams aka Kwunt Dedicated to: Letha Williams
Jesus' Parables for the Everyday Person By: Frederick Williams, MD Jesus was a master storyteller, and through His many parables that are recounted in the Bible, we can discover the mysteries of the Kingdom of God. Though they may seem hard to decipher and learn from, Jesus' Parables for the Everyday Person will make examining these parables easy and enlightening so that you can apply their messages to your own faith.
The "new media" -- interactive videodiscs, telecommunications, computers, VCRs, teletext systems, and more -- present researchers with new challenges when it comes to studying practical applications or theoretical effects. This valuable volume aids researchers in first recognizing the special qualities of interactivity, demassification, and asynchroneity that the new media have created and to instruct professional researchers and students in alternative research methods, multiple methods, and the triangulation of results. For the first time, a variety of methods are examined as they apply to new media research, including mathematical modeling, controlled experiments, quasiexperiments, surveys, longitudinal studies, field studies, archival and secondary research, futures research and forecasting, content analysis, case studies, and focus groups. Whether the problem to be researched is as focused as considering the cost-benefit for a school wishing to adopt computers in the classroom or as wide-ranging as determining the effects of video games on child socialization, this up-to-date and thorough guide alerts researchers to the pitfalls of traditional methodology and offers a firm foundation upon which they can build reliable, accurate projects able to produce sound results.
Author is a African-American who expressed his experiences through poems. He was wrongly accused but was not able to win. He wrote poems expressing his freedom (got out of jail); He is sharing his motivation and wants to inspire others who is going through a lot.
Now in paperback for the first time, Elementary Classical Greek is a trusted handbook for learning the language that does not presuppose a knowledge of Latin. Based on the premise that average American students can learn the language, the lessons are thorough but not pedantic, simple but not superficial, and the textbook has been proven in the classroom and for independent learners. Elementary Classical Greek stresses a clear and orderly presentation of the language, accompanied by individual sentences or short passages that illustrate grammar, give practice in reading, and help build vocabulary. Drawing on decades of experience teaching classical Greek, Frederick Williams presents a text in which grammatical explanations are clear, succinct, and correct and the selected readings are varied, interesting, and useful. Included in the nearly one-hundred reading passages are excerpts from Plato's Ion and Republic, Aristophanes's Clouds, and Paul's first letter to the Corinthians. The popular textbook is designed for a course meeting for two semesters. There are twenty-four lessons in all, with appendixes on prepositions, Greek numbers, and the Greek verb, plus Greek-English and English-Greek vocabularies, a grammatical index of subjects, and a list of Greek authors cited. Selected readings are presented first in simple, then more complex, language until the reader is led to the actual words of the ancient author--all within the same lesson. This elementary device helps bridge many of the difficult gaps between modern English and ancient Greek.
The life story of a great minister who led the civil rights battles of the 1960's in the state of South Carolina and was a close friend to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
I want my readers to play a movie in their mind, when they are reading this book. In a nutshell, starting with the party in the Hollywood Hills. The twist and turns of a story of the Agape love of five families of the divided mansion. They end up adopting a baby, named Emily. Her father is put in prison for life without parole, the trip to Africa. The near catastrophe at the divided Mansion, family tension and drama, with the kidnapping of baby Emily and the whole situation ending up in the courts.
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.