This is the story of a teenage girl named Renee Peterson. Renee receives these letters about her friends. Letters that reveal the history of her close friends. Renee finds hints of her parents past hidden within these letters as well. Renee figures out some letters and manages to figure out possible targets of the "Secret Admirer, " only to find that they are her newest friends. Renee then finds a complicated clue in her next few letters, narrowing down her list of suspects. While Renee is receiving letters, she finds a document that her parents have kept hidden from her all these long years. It showed Renee how her parents really felt about her. In the end, Renee concludes who the killer is by elimination and detailed memory. But is she too late to save the day?
St. Philip's Church was commissioned shortly after the Carolina colony was founded in 1670. Because the Church of England was the established church, St. Philip's tried to meet the spiritual needs of the early settlers and also was responsible for oversight of elections, education and social services in everything from healthcare to disaster relief. St. Philip's churchwardens and vestry enforced morality laws and levied taxes. The colony's first state funeral--that of Governor Robert Johnson--took place in the church, as did that of the controversial, one-time vice president, Senator John C. Calhoun. Buried in the churchyard are Founding Fathers, pirate hunters, war heroes, statesmen and even the unfortunate victim of a sensational murder. This book recounts the early years of St. Philip's Church, the people who walked its aisles and some of the early religious conflicts that shook the community. Authors Dorothy Middleton Anderson and Margaret Middleton Rivers Eastman outline the fascinating history of the first church in the new colony.
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Margaret Oliphant (1828-97) had a prolific literary career that spanned almost fifty years. She wrote some 98 novels, fifty or more short stories, twenty-five works of non-fiction, including biographies and historic guides to European cities, and more than three hundred periodical articles. This is the most ambitious critical edition of her work.
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