This story opens with the unfolding tragedy of a young woman coming to Alaska in 1957. Her life is marked with the birth of three children from three separate men - one who is her husband, one who takes her by force, and a third who becomes her common law husband in the wild north. In such a short period of time, Ella G dies a tragic death, but her children become the protagonists of the emerging story. Their characters are developed separately, and through their outrageous Alaskan trials, they ultimately meet at the 25th anniversary of their mother’s death at a graveyard in Anchorage. This book centers on the gold in the Alaskan hills, its mining and claim jumping, the rivalry between the antagonist (McKenzie) and the protagonist (Cayote) resulting in substantial violence – multiple gunfights, fist fights, arson, car crashes, and so forth. Ultimately, the protagonist loses his life in a plane crash exploring the mystery of the book (which will not be revealed here). The children have, however, gone their own way – RT becoming a politician, Bethra a criminal defense attorney, and Ernie a gold and ivory smuggler. They find a huge cache of gold in the midst of this adventure which is lost, stolen, found, and relocated, and in the middle of this they come upon a cache of woolly mammoth tusks. The remainder of this story concerns itself with smuggling these tusks out of Alaska to exchange them for weapons. While the vulgar culture, the street violence, and the crass relationships are the center of the story, the tusk found in the wild is the thing upon which it all centers.
Prime Crimes gives a detailed account of the treason committed in Libya by the Obama Administration, and includes the Strategic Goals of the Muslim Brotherhood for the United States, a Congressional letter to the director of National Intelligence concerning the influence of the Muslim Brotherhood on the White House, and a disclosure of the communications from Benghazi, including pleas from Ambassador Stevens for additional security help that went completely ignored by Obama. The state department disclosure is attached for easy reference. An alarming and compelling book. Prime Crimes documents the greatest acts of treason in America's history. A must read.
The End Times Reader is a gathering of Apocalyptic writings from ancient authors, including the Apocalypse of Enoch, the Apocalypse of Baruch, the Apocalypse of Esdras, the Apocalypse of Zerubbabel, the Apocalypse of Peter, James and Paul, now easily found in one location for easy reference
A collection of the epistles of Peter, John, James, Jude and Paul with Hebraic expression, the Epistles Reader footnotes critical concepts of the Epistles with the Hebraic term to give an even greater meaning to the ideas expressed in these biblical writings.
The Gospel Reader is a Collection of the Four Gospels of the New Testament (Brit Chadashah) in Hebraic Expression, where the concepts of the text are accompanied with the Hebrew terms that convey the concept in parentheses and footnotes beside the English. This is a great tool in relating the teaching of the New Testament to the Hebraic roots of the Old Testament, as the reader can understand the full context of exactly what was being said. The Gospel Reader also includes a complete Hebraic transliteration of the "Lord's Prayer" (the Avinu) and a complete Hebraic transliteration of the words of the Messiah (HaMashiach) in the giving of the renewed covenant (the Brit Chadashah) at the Last Supper. A perfect tool for those teaching the Gospels in Hebraic concepts!
The Eth Cepher Daily Planner for the Gregorian calendar year 2014 begins on January 1, 2014, but sets out the calendar days on both the Gregorian and the Hebraic calendar, reflecting both the biblical names, and the traditional Jewish names of the months. This calendar also sets forth every Sabbath, together with each week's Torah portion (Padasha, Haftarah and Besorah), and marks the seven biblical feasts, plus Purim and Chanukah. You will never miss another important biblical date!
The Yom Qodesh (Holy Day) is a calendar that begins on the first day of the Hebrew year (the 1st of Aviv) and which is complete on Simcha Torah in the Gregorian year 2017. The Yom Qodesh has the torah portions (parashat, haftarah, and besorah) for each week through the entirety of the calendar. The Yom Qodesh indentifies every sabbath, sets forth the seven Levitical feasts, plus Channukah and Purim, and sets forth the seven fasts. The Yom Qodesh is based on the biblical instruction for establishing the calendar, which declares the beginning of the month as the zero moon, and which starts the year in the month of Aviv (in the Spring). The Yom Qodesh is the perfect guide for those without a computer who simply want to know the biblical day of the year, the biblical month, the biblical year, and to be able to readily decipher the feast days. Shalom.
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.