Ever tried to dig a hole to China when you were a kid? Ever get very far? Imagine Marty Kent, a shy, pudgy, 12-year-old kid who not only started a hole to China, but maybe dug a deeper one than any kid ever has -and kept digging even after he knew he'd never make it all the way, for reasons of his own that others came to share: Brenna Nelson, Marty's determined friend and schoolmate . . . Feisty, ambitious young reporter Kelly Trapp . . . Her crusading publisher boss, Joel Kincade . . . Shrewd Mayor Judy Thomas, with a yen to build up tourism in her small town . . . Driven by Marty Kent's unique vision, this once-belittled boy and his generation-spanning co-warriors battle to defeat bullies and nay-sayers big and small who'll stop at nothing to bring a halt to his truly huge idea - one that threatens against all odds to bring a message of indomitable good will across a nation and around the world. Gary Kaschak's Hole to China will have you not just rooting heartily for Marty and his pals, it will make you wish this "tall tale" really had happened -and maybe even lead you to hope and pray that some day someone like Marty may yet make a reality like his "Hole" come to pass, to inspire and help heal our hurting world.
In Gary Kaschak's Lifestone, an obscure, "disreputable" cemetery plot proves the key to unlock a mystery rooted in the 19th century- and to right a host of wrongs and injustices suffered by an extraordinary woman whose forgotten, heroic, freedom-seeking journey and labors of faith brought healing and love to countless lives... whose amazing story will reach out from this inspiring novel to touch yours. An unlikely partnership of current day sleuths- elderly journalist-historian Peter McDonnell and two college students: spoiled young publishing scion Torrance Albright III and determined Maura Dean- joins to track legendary Professor Sebastian Norwich's unique assignment back to the U.S. Civil War's end and beyond, in search of a dynamic woman named Hope, through a web of murder, prejudice and deceitful cover-up it will take all their ingenuity, courage, energy and even love to untangle. Kaschak suspensefully cross-cuts this saga between his modern-day, young-old investigators' probings and the epic, 19th- century puzzle and kaleidoscopic cast of characters they're striving to solve and reveal, dominated by Hope, the giant of faith and compassion who even from the grave draws ages, ethnicities and social classes together in an embrace of truth and joy that can know no death.
A compelling memoir at the intersection of baseball and American history Cleon Jones has never forgotten where he came from. As a child, growing up in a Mobile, Alabama shotgun house with no electricity or running water, he yearned to follow the path of hometown heroes Satchel Paige and Hank Aaron, and his community uplifted him. Navigating the perilous norms of the Jim Crow South, Jones ascended to baseball's highest ranks, leading the 1969 New York Mets with his bat and catching the final out to clinch the "miracle" World Series title. But after 13 years in the major leagues, Jones returned to the place he loves, the neighborhood where it all started: Africatown. Coming Home is Jones's love letter to his roots in Alabama's most historic Black settlement, whose origins can be traced back to the last known illegal transport of slaves to the United States aboard the Clotilda. Jones candidly discusses how his Africatown neighbors helped supply him with a bat and glove when his family could not afford equipment, the opposition he faced as a Black player after leaving Alabama, his fond memories of the Miracle Mets, and his post-baseball fight to save his dying community. Also featuring Jones's outlook on the modern game and American society, this timely chronicle is a profound slice of history for all baseball fans.
Becky Chapman breaks her right hand in volleyball practice, setting off a chain of events destined to affect thousands of people over the next 20 years and beyond.
No origin story of the New York Mets is complete without Ed Kranepool. The lefty first baseman known as "Steady Eddie" made his major-league debut at age 17 during the team's inaugural season and would eventually depart, nearly two decades later, with his name written throughout the franchise's record books. In this definitive autobiography, Kranepool shares a remarkable life story, including early years playing stickball in the streets of the Bronx, the growing pains the Mets endured as an expansion club, his offseasons working as a New York stockbroker, and of course the miracle 1969 season that ended in an unforgettable World Series victory. He also opens up about the personal miracle which came 50 years after that famous championship: a lifesaving kidney transplant made possible by a Mets fan donor. A month after the surgery, Kranepool threw out the first pitch at Citi Field and boldly offered his services as a pinch hitter. Affable, open, and brimming with knowledge of the game, this thoroughly New York tale will delight baseball fans in Queens and beyond.
For boys and girls growing up playing baseball in the 50s and 60s, one player stood out above all others--Mickey Mantle. Millions of kids copied his batting stance, ran the bases like he did, and pretended to be him on the sandlot, schoolyards and Little League fields all across the country. But for one young boy that fantasy went far beyond just pretending and believing--convincing himself that indeed, he was, Mickey Mantle. My Name was Mickey Mantle is a coming-of-age story highlighting the naivety of youth, the trials and tribulations in growing up, and the realization that our bigger-than-life heroes may not be heroes at all. With far-reaching implications spread over 50 years, My Name was Mickey Mantle takes the reader on an engaging and sometimes unbelievable journey from the sandlots of Binghamton, New York, and ending on the hallowed grounds of the Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in Cooperstown.
Gary Webb had an inborn journalistic tendency to track down corruption and expose it. For over thirty-four years, he wrote stories about corruption from county, state, and federal levels. He had an almost magnetic effect to these kinds of stories, and it was almost as if the stories found him. It was his gift, and, ultimately, it was his downfall. He was best known for his story Dark Alliance, written for the San Jose Mercury News in 1996. In it Webb linked the CIA to the crack-cocaine epidemic in Los Angeles during the Iran Contra scandal. His only published book, Dark Alliance is still a classic of contemporary journalism. But his life consisted of much more than this one story, and The Killing Game is a collection of his best investigative stories from his beginning at the Kentucky Post to his end at the Sacramento News & Review. It includes Webb's series at the Kentucky Post on organized crime in the coal industry, at the Cleveland Plain Dealer on Ohio State’s negligent medical board, and on the US military’s funding of first-person shooter video games. The Killing Game is a dedication to his life’s work outside of Dark Alliance, and it’s an exhibition of investigative journalism in its truest form.
No origin story of the New York Mets is complete without Ed Kranepool. The lefty first baseman known as "Steady Eddie" made his major-league debut at age 17 during the team's inaugural season and would eventually depart, nearly two decades later, with his name written throughout the franchise's record books. In this definitive autobiography, Kranepool shares a remarkable life story, including early years playing stickball in the streets of the Bronx, the growing pains the Mets endured as an expansion club, his offseasons working as a New York stockbroker, and of course the miracle 1969 season that ended in an unforgettable World Series victory. He also opens up about the personal miracle which came 50 years after that famous championship: a lifesaving kidney transplant made possible by a Mets fan donor. A month after the surgery, Kranepool threw out the first pitch at Citi Field and boldly offered his services as a pinch hitter. Affable, open, and brimming with knowledge of the game, this thoroughly New York tale will delight baseball fans in Queens and beyond.
In Gary Kaschak's Lifestone, an obscure, "disreputable" cemetery plot proves the key to unlock a mystery rooted in the 19th century- and to right a host of wrongs and injustices suffered by an extraordinary woman whose forgotten, heroic, freedom-seeking journey and labors of faith brought healing and love to countless lives... whose amazing story will reach out from this inspiring novel to touch yours. An unlikely partnership of current day sleuths- elderly journalist-historian Peter McDonnell and two college students: spoiled young publishing scion Torrance Albright III and determined Maura Dean- joins to track legendary Professor Sebastian Norwich's unique assignment back to the U.S. Civil War's end and beyond, in search of a dynamic woman named Hope, through a web of murder, prejudice and deceitful cover-up it will take all their ingenuity, courage, energy and even love to untangle. Kaschak suspensefully cross-cuts this saga between his modern-day, young-old investigators' probings and the epic, 19th- century puzzle and kaleidoscopic cast of characters they're striving to solve and reveal, dominated by Hope, the giant of faith and compassion who even from the grave draws ages, ethnicities and social classes together in an embrace of truth and joy that can know no death.
A compelling memoir at the intersection of baseball and American history Cleon Jones has never forgotten where he came from. As a child, growing up in a Mobile, Alabama shotgun house with no electricity or running water, he yearned to follow the path of hometown heroes Satchel Paige and Hank Aaron, and his community uplifted him. Navigating the perilous norms of the Jim Crow South, Jones ascended to baseball's highest ranks, leading the 1969 New York Mets with his bat and catching the final out to clinch the "miracle" World Series title. But after 13 years in the major leagues, Jones returned to the place he loves, the neighborhood where it all started: Africatown. Coming Home is Jones's love letter to his roots in Alabama's most historic Black settlement, whose origins can be traced back to the last known illegal transport of slaves to the United States aboard the Clotilda. Jones candidly discusses how his Africatown neighbors helped supply him with a bat and glove when his family could not afford equipment, the opposition he faced as a Black player after leaving Alabama, his fond memories of the Miracle Mets, and his post-baseball fight to save his dying community. Also featuring Jones's outlook on the modern game and American society, this timely chronicle is a profound slice of history for all baseball fans.
Becky Chapman breaks her right hand in volleyball practice, setting off a chain of events destined to affect thousands of people over the next 20 years and beyond.
Engineering of nanophase materials and devices is of vital interest in electronics, semiconductors and optics, catalysis, ceramics and magnetism. Research associated with nanoparticles has widely spread and diffused into every field of scientific research, forming a trend of nanocrystal engineered materials. Electrochemical methods are widely used for the preparation of nanoparticles and the electrochemical properties of such nanomaterials are most relevant for their applications. This comprehensive reference work will appeal to advanced graduate students and researchers in the field specialized in electrochemistry, materials physics and materials science.
A Gary Revel Memoir: I was born in Florala, Alabama. My mother and father divorced when I was 5. Music became a friend and I formed a band when I was 15. Right out of high school I joined the United States Navy. After that Hollywood California called, then New York, Memphis, Nashville and back to Hollywood. Along the way I investigated the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. I wrote some of the stuff down and put it in this book. I hope you enjoy reading it. More: Playing poker with men in a rough and tumble southern juke joint is not the typical activity of a 10 year old boy but it was for Gary Revel. Dancing with waitresses to Rock & Roll, Blues and Country music coming from the jukebox was also part of his usual childs play. Once he accepted the request to associate in the investigation of the MLK assassination he started his journey that would eventually take him into Brushy Mountain Prison in Petros Tennessee to meet the supposed killer of Martin Luther King Jr., James Earl Ray. Danger, intrigue and murder followed as he entered the darkness of the investigation of the Martin Luther King Jr. assassination.
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.