Robert M. Garcia, a professional drummer from the age of 17, attended Florida A&M University (FAMU), in Tallahassee, and later studied at the Berklee College of Music, in Boston, Massachusetts. During his freshman and sophomore years at FAMU (1968-1970), he was on the drum line of the world famous band, the FAMU Marching 100. Through the years, Garcia became widely known as a master drummer. However, later in his life, for reasons revealed in this book, he switched his focus from drums to the grand harp. Robert Garcia became a skilled and versatile harpist. His music was a joy to the many people who saw and heard him perform. . . . The fact that Robert was able to move over to the harp is a sign that he always had a pitched-instrument player nestled within his musical gift. It is a great blessing that he was able to express this part of his musical personality later in his career. The fact that he enjoyed such success at this is clearly a testament to the versatility and depth of his musical talent. Vern C. Falby, Ph.D. Faculty, Music Theory Peabody Conservatory of the Johns Hopkins University
INDIGO TALES is a collection of short stories about characters who stumble into surprising situations during their travels: a weekend getaway; a longer visit to a dream destination; relocation from a small town to the big city. Some characters meet strangers with secrets. Others are subjected to crime. Still others discover hidden agendas of someone close to them. As they navigate their way through intrigue and deception, characters in Indigo Tales compel readers to travel with them toward each storys unique resolution.
In Evergreen Leaves, the characters are worldly-wise and affluent. They are involved in the arts, journalism, the performing arts, music and philanthropic support of the arts. Although sophisticated, some of them are unwittingly deceived in “A Quiet Evening” and “The Leather Envelope,” both of which are set in Washington, DC; and in “That Friday,” which is set on Marco Island in southern Florida. In “Visiting Lena,” the main characters experience generational conflict. And in “The Nighttime Limousine Tour,” characters fall victim to crime. Both stories are set in Paris, France. Other stories in Evergreen Leaves are set in the Washington, DC - Maryland area and are titled: “In October,” a story that involves mismatched lovers; “Maureen’s Gift” which follows the journey of one gift; “The Promise” in which a character makes a unique vow; and “A Christmas Surprise,” in which a couple and their friends experience Yuletide together in France.
Bluesette Blue Stills, a magazine editor from Washington, DC, arrives at her sassy jazz singer friend Nareen Andersons apartment in Paris, France, ready to start her vacation. But shock and disappointment grip her when Nareen acts strange and suddenly vanishes! Blue enlists the help of another friend in Paris, Eddie Proctor, a tour guide. Eddie sticks with Blue through a police investigation into Nareens disappearance; while keeping his tour groups on schedule. With Nareens disappearance and the adventures of Eddies tour groups, Blue and Eddie are caught up in tension, romance, crime and passion on both sides of the Seine River. Improvising their way through surprising and dangerous situations, the characters in INTRIGUE IN PARIS drive this story steadily towards an exciting resolution.
The Jazz Flower is a follow-up to Forbidden Circles, which ends with Nora Johnson and Douglas Stills expecting their first child. In The Jazz Flower, the child is born. Later, the couple has two more children. But it is their first child, Rosa, who takes center stage. Rosa Johnson Stills grows and blooms into a beautiful mocha-hued jazz singer in 1930s and '40s Washington, D.C. During those years, Rosa challenges her light-skinned grandmother, Lilly, who low rates her dark skin color and her jazz dream. Rosa also fights her rival, socialite Iris Haywood, in an endless effort to possess her first love, Attorney Alan Covington. Because of a long-ago pact their families made, Alan is pledged to Iris. And Iris will never let him go. Eventually, Rosa relocates to New York City to take a singing job at The Blue Phoenix nightclub and to try to forget Alan. In New York, Rosa dates Jackson Parker, a racketeer. But Alan is in her arms whenever he's in New York on business-even after he and Iris are married. Parker threatens to kill Rosa if he catches her with another man. Set in the Swing and Bebop eras of jazz music, The Jazz Flower unfolds prejudice, obsession, and murder, as it transports readers from D.C. to New York, to Paris, France, on its way to a riveting conclusion.
Bluesette "Blue" Stills, a magazine editor from Washington, DC, arrives at her sassy jazz singer friend Nareen Anderson's apartment in Paris, France, ready to start her vacation. But shock and disappointment grip her when Nareen acts strange and suddenly vanishes! Blue enlists the help of another friend in Paris, Eddie Proctor, a tour guide. Eddie sticks with Blue through a police investigation into Nareen's disappearance; while keeping his tour groups on schedule. With Nareen's disappearance and the adventures of Eddie's tour groups, Blue and Eddie are caught up in tension, romance, crime and passion on both sides of the Seine River. Improvising their way through surprising and dangerous situations, the characters in INTRIGUE IN PARIS drive this story steadily towards an exciting resolution.
The Jazz Flower is a follow-up to Forbidden Circles, which ends with Nora Johnson and Douglas Stills expecting their first child. In The Jazz Flower, the child is born. Later, the couple has two more children. But it is their first child, Rosa, who takes center stage. Rosa Johnson Stills grows and blooms into a beautiful mocha-hued jazz singer in 1930s and '40s Washington, D.C. During those years, Rosa challenges her light-skinned grandmother, Lilly, who low rates her dark skin color and her jazz dream. Rosa also fights her rival, socialite Iris Haywood, in an endless effort to possess her first love, Attorney Alan Covington. Because of a long-ago pact their families made, Alan is pledged to Iris. And Iris will never let him go. Eventually, Rosa relocates to New York City to take a singing job at The Blue Phoenix nightclub and to try to forget Alan. In New York, Rosa dates Jackson Parker, a racketeer. But Alan is in her arms whenever he's in New York on business-even after he and Iris are married. Parker threatens to kill Rosa if he catches her with another man. Set in the Swing and Bebop eras of jazz music, The Jazz Flower unfolds prejudice, obsession, and murder, as it transports readers from D.C. to New York, to Paris, France, on its way to a riveting conclusion.
INDIGO TALES is a collection of short stories about characters who stumble into surprising situations during their travels: a weekend getaway; a longer visit to a dream destination; relocation from a small town to the big city. Some characters meet strangers with secrets. Others are subjected to crime. Still others discover hidden agendas of someone close to them. As they navigate their way through intrigue and deception, characters in Indigo Tales compel readers to travel with them toward each storys unique resolution.
In Evergreen Leaves, the characters are worldly-wise and affluent. They are involved in the arts, journalism, the performing arts, music and philanthropic support of the arts. Although sophisticated, some of them are unwittingly deceived in “A Quiet Evening” and “The Leather Envelope,” both of which are set in Washington, DC; and in “That Friday,” which is set on Marco Island in southern Florida. In “Visiting Lena,” the main characters experience generational conflict. And in “The Nighttime Limousine Tour,” characters fall victim to crime. Both stories are set in Paris, France. Other stories in Evergreen Leaves are set in the Washington, DC - Maryland area and are titled: “In October,” a story that involves mismatched lovers; “Maureen’s Gift” which follows the journey of one gift; “The Promise” in which a character makes a unique vow; and “A Christmas Surprise,” in which a couple and their friends experience Yuletide together in France.
Robert M. Garcia, a professional drummer from the age of 17, attended Florida A&M University (FAMU), in Tallahassee, and later studied at the Berklee College of Music, in Boston, Massachusetts. During his freshman and sophomore years at FAMU (1968-1970), he was on the drum line of the world famous band, the FAMU Marching 100. Through the years, Garcia became widely known as a master drummer. However, later in his life, for reasons revealed in this book, he switched his focus from drums to the grand harp. Robert Garcia became a skilled and versatile harpist. His music was a joy to the many people who saw and heard him perform. . . . The fact that Robert was able to move over to the harp is a sign that he always had a pitched-instrument player nestled within his musical gift. It is a great blessing that he was able to express this part of his musical personality later in his career. The fact that he enjoyed such success at this is clearly a testament to the versatility and depth of his musical talent. Vern C. Falby, Ph.D. Faculty, Music Theory Peabody Conservatory of the Johns Hopkins University
Effectively communicate Christ across Cultures The gospel message transcends cultures, but human communication does not. In Transforming Communication missionary and professor Vee J. D-Davidson provides principles for the intercultural communication of Christ. Using her twenty-five-plus years of experience teaching as a Westerner in Asia as a starting point, Davidson provides transferable principles that encourage awareness of context-specific issues and that see opportunities for intercultural communication as wholly unique opportunities, regardless of any perceived communication barriers. Readers from multiple different cultures will be able to apply the principles presented by use of relevant examples, illustrations, and enlightening insights provided from a wide range of Global South and Global North multicultural and intercultural perspectives. Transforming Communication offers practical principles to encourage and challenge Christian readers to build relationships that might well require engaging with issues that bring them out of their comfort zone but, the book also offers insights and encouraging devotional nuggets that feed into a triad of knowledge-impartation, self-examination and challenge, along with spiritual enrichment for the task.
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.