An urban hip-hop fictional tale about finding love if you've ever thought that soul mates were bogus. Coraz, the forlorn, has sworn off black men and wants to try something different. The lady has a career, a home, three children, and no husband. She also has three different baby daddy's who are all Black. Out of all the drama that her ex's had given her, she finally decides to only date older, White men. Even though she is only thirty-two years old, she still appears to be in her early twenties, but it is a younger, black man in his twenties that stops and sees her as a prime catch, kids or no kids. Will Coraz continue to blow Mill off, or will Mill blow her away? Don't eem trip to read this one! This book is followed by a sequel called, "God I Respect Ya Gangsta," as Coraz confesses all of the tragic details of her life as the character, "Rainia." Teresarae has also written comedy screen play, "TAXES" with Mel Parr Jr. www.lulu.com/teresarae
Coraz Sade Singleton has had it with Black Men, but just can't let em' go! Will she save the at-risk youth in her Life Skills Class from the streets, or will a thugalicious college man steal her heart and blow her away?
They call her, 'Miss Sa Ditty Priss,' and a dead ringer for Jill Scott. Meet, Ana May Charles, a 45 year old, heavy set, African American single woman who has just lost her job of 12 years. Soon after, her apartment burns down, and she is forced to move into a homeless shelter with her ex-boyfriend from childhood who has been a drunken bum for the last two decades. The brand new car that she just paid off is totaled and she is forced to walk and ride the bus. With no luck at finding employment due to lack of skills, she is pushed to enroll back into school at Milwaukee Area Technical College. A foe she had crossed forces her to drop her courses. Can a chance opportunity in an eco-friendly Earth camp that is sent to her shelter to enroll for the summer season be the change she needs? Will her prize recipe for her famous 'DAMN CAKE' help change the world? Will Ana open her heart and ever fall in love? Eat the Damn Cake, Ana May! by Teresa Rae Butler
An urban hip-hop fictional tale about finding love if you've ever thought that soul mates were bogus. Coraz, the forlorn, has sworn off black men and wants to try something different. The lady has a career, a home, three children, and no husband. She also has three different baby daddy's who are all Black. Out of all the drama that her ex's had given her, she finally decides to only date older, White men. Even though she is only thirty-two years old, she still appears to be in her early twenties, but it is a younger, black man in his twenties that stops and sees her as a prime catch, kids or no kids. Will Coraz continue to blow Mill off, or will Mill blow her away? Don't eem trip to read this one! This book is followed by a sequel called, "God I Respect Ya Gangsta," as Coraz confesses all of the tragic details of her life as the character, "Rainia." Teresarae has also written comedy screen play, "TAXES" with Mel Parr Jr. www.lulu.com/teresarae
A Midwest preacher fights to save his dirty congregation built from the dope money of his underground 'D-Boys.' His plan was to launder it all clean through his church and quit the game. Pastor Clancey Mordant's love interest, Ms. Stylinger has a dirty secret of her own that could threaten his whole drug ring, and his manhood. His only son, KG is missing, and as everyone takes off their mask, the Truth is setting people free. If revenge is to be the Lord's, then who is to say that the Pastor isn't about to get everything that he so rightfully deserves? The bogus man of God's gangster of, "Glitter, Guns -N- Butter," is suddenly interrupted by the motto of in, "God We Trust, or Else.
In 2000, readers voted Willie Morris (1934-1999) Mississippi's favorite nonfiction author of the millennium. After conducting over fifty interviews and combing through over eighty boxes of papers in the archives at the University of Mississippi, many of which had never been seen before by researchers, Teresa Nicholas provides new perspectives on a Mississippi writer and editor who changed journalism and redefined what being southern could mean. More than fifty photographs--some published here for the first time, including several by renowned photographer David Rae Morris, Willie's son--enhance the exploration. From an early age, Willie demonstrated a talent for words. At the University of Texas at Austin, he became a controversial editor of the Daily Texan. He later studied history as a Rhodes Scholar in Oxford, England, but by 1960 he was back in Austin, working as editor for the highly regarded Texas Observer. In 1967 Willie became the youngest editor of the nation's oldest magazine, Harper's. His autobiography, North Toward Home, achieved critical as well as artistic success, and it would continue to inspire legions of readers for decades to come. In the final tally, he published hundreds of newspaper and magazine articles, along with twenty-three books. His work covered the gamut from fiction to nonfiction, for both adults and children, often touching on the personal as well as the historical and the topical, and always presented in his lyrical prose. In 1980, he returned to his home state as writer-in-residence at the University of Mississippi. In 1990, he married his editor at the University Press of Mississippi, JoAnne Prichard, and they made a home in Jackson. With his broad knowledge of history, his sensitivity, and his bone-deep understanding of the South, he became a celebrated spokesman for and interpreter of the place he loved.
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.