There isn't a poet in the world, extinct or extant, who hasn't written about love or will write about love. Every poet in the future, no matter how far into the future we managed to get, will write about love. Some of those poets have written quite well about love. Others...not so much. I'd sure like to think I've cut into line somewhere between the two extremes. Good love. Bad love. Somewhere-in-between love. You'll find each represented in these pages.
Enter the world of Wayne DePriest's poetry where, as the title says, "They Ain't All Pretty, But Some Of Them Rhyme." Compiled here are upwards of a hundred poems of wit and whimsy and not a bit of angst-filled longing or despair or self-analysis in the bunch. Animals, grandchildren, lawn chairs, and buildings are the subject matter. Body parts and grammar and classic movies provide fodder for the author's imagination. One might even discover a "message" lurking in the lines, though one might suspect it wasn't intentional.
THE DEVIL'S IN THE DETAILS - Before you sign that Hellish contract, make sure you understand the fine print. JANET AND GEORGE - One day you fall down the stairs. When you wake up you're not quite yourself. Or anybody else you know. BRUMLEY'S GIFT - Even a gift of gab can't talk you out of everything. SECOND CHANCES - Make sure that Do Over moment is really what you want. A HELL OF A STORY - Collaborations aren't always the best idea. These and ten additional stories make the debut of the ""Angeltown"", ""Selected"" and ""The Button Man"" author into short fiction.
A janitor, a former junkie, a cab driver, a waitress, a high school senior. Strangers in life, they each receive a blue card in the mail. Now they are connected in death by blue cards found on their bodies. The enigmatic letters on the cards mean something to the killer, something Homicide Detective Jayson Weis has to decipher before he can rid the city of this madman. Confronted with the bodies of the present, haunted by the bodies of the past, Weis knows there will be more bodies in his future unless he can stop the Card Killer. When the few witnesses can't agree about the killer, not even the race and sex, Weis begins to dread the possibility of a second killer. His relationship with long time girlfriend Lois Fremont is deteriorating. The pressure from City Hall mounts. His own uncertainty about his future dulls the edge of his investigation. Help comes from an unexpected direction, a paraplegic teenager who has received one of the cards.
The Button Man takes a button when he takes a victim. And he takes a victim whenever he wants. The authorities don't know he exists, though he leaves them ample evidence of his existence. They just don't see it. As a rookie patrolman, Detective Dan Finney met The Button Man in Maria Kuroshchepova's apartment. Finney discovered her body, tucked neatly into her bed. A decade later the case is still unsolved and Detective Finney has seen the handiwork of The Button Man again and again without knowing it. Saddled with a partner who seems hellbent on destroying both their careers and a girlfriend who just might take what sanity he has left, Finney gradually becomes aware of a sinister force loose in the city, a man who has gotten away with murder time and time again. As the picture of The Button Man becomes clearer, Finney comes face to face with his worst nightmare.
On the train platform in the dying town of Norton, Kansas, Michael Anderson is approached by Sarah Rogers, an anguished woman in search of the daughter kidnapped nine years earlier. It is the beginning of a personal odyssey that will take Michael to Denver and back to the Kansas plains and Angeltown. Along the way he will survive a blizzard with the help of two Indians named Bob and Steve, meet the beautiful Katherine Hodges, seek answers in the disappearance of several missing children, and pursue his destiny through the dreams that carry him to the very edge of madness.
BIGELOW - When his wife is found brutally murdered, the scratches on Dan Samuels' face are enough to convince a jury. But Con Bigelow knows Dan is innocent and vows to find the man responsible for Lorna's murder. LIFE QUEST - Princess Benal claims a Life Quest of her father, the King. Now she must fulfill it. THE PHOTOGRAPH - Sometimes there's more to a photograph than meets the eye. DAY OF DEATH - Eric Donaldson woke up one morning determined to be the cause of someone's death. SHE WORE A SCARLET RIBBON - Can young love survive a father's desire for gain? Fifteen stories in this second collection from the author of "Selected," "Angeltown," and "The Button Man.
A janitor, a former junkie, a cab driver, a waitress, a high school senior. Strangers in life, they each receive a blue card in the mail. Now they are connected in death by blue cards found on their bodies. The enigmatic letters on the cards mean something to the killer, something Homicide Detective Jayson Weis has to decipher before he can rid the city of this madman. Confronted with the bodies of the present, haunted by the bodies of the past, Weis knows there will be more bodies in his future unless he can stop the Card Killer. When the few witnesses can't agree about the killer, not even the race and sex, Weis begins to dread the possibility of a second killer. His relationship with long time girlfriend Lois Fremont is deteriorating. The pressure from City Hall mounts. His own uncertainty about his future dulls the edge of his investigation. Help comes from an unexpected direction, a paraplegic teenager who has received one of the cards.
The Button Man takes a button when he takes a victim. And he takes a victim whenever he wants. The authorities don't know he exists, though he leaves them ample evidence of his existence. They just don't see it. As a rookie patrolman, Detective Dan Finney met The Button Man in Maria Kuroshchepova's apartment. Finney discovered her body, tucked neatly into her bed. A decade later the case is still unsolved and Detective Finney has seen the handiwork of The Button Man again and again without knowing it. Saddled with a partner who seems hellbent on destroying both their careers and a girlfriend who just might take what sanity he has left, Finney gradually becomes aware of a sinister force loose in the city, a man who has gotten away with murder time and time again. As the picture of The Button Man becomes clearer, Finney comes face to face with his worst nightmare.
THE DEVIL'S IN THE DETAILS - Before you sign that Hellish contract, make sure you understand the fine print. JANET AND GEORGE - One day you fall down the stairs. When you wake up you're not quite yourself. Or anybody else you know. BRUMLEY'S GIFT - Even a gift of gab can't talk you out of everything. SECOND CHANCES - Make sure that Do Over moment is really what you want. A HELL OF A STORY - Collaborations aren't always the best idea. These and ten additional stories make the debut of the ""Angeltown"", ""Selected"" and ""The Button Man"" author into short fiction.
On the train platform in the dying town of Norton, Kansas, Michael Anderson is approached by Sarah Rogers, an anguished woman in search of the daughter kidnapped nine years earlier. It is the beginning of a personal odyssey that will take Michael to Denver and back to the Kansas plains and Angeltown. Along the way he will survive a blizzard with the help of two Indians named Bob and Steve, meet the beautiful Katherine Hodges, seek answers in the disappearance of several missing children, and pursue his destiny through the dreams that carry him to the very edge of madness.
There isn't a poet in the world, extinct or extant, who hasn't written about love or will write about love. Every poet in the future, no matter how far into the future we managed to get, will write about love. Some of those poets have written quite well about love. Others...not so much. I'd sure like to think I've cut into line somewhere between the two extremes. Good love. Bad love. Somewhere-in-between love. You'll find each represented in these pages.
Enter the world of Wayne DePriest's poetry where, as the title says, "They Ain't All Pretty, But Some Of Them Rhyme." Compiled here are upwards of a hundred poems of wit and whimsy and not a bit of angst-filled longing or despair or self-analysis in the bunch. Animals, grandchildren, lawn chairs, and buildings are the subject matter. Body parts and grammar and classic movies provide fodder for the author's imagination. One might even discover a "message" lurking in the lines, though one might suspect it wasn't intentional.
BIGELOW - When his wife is found brutally murdered, the scratches on Dan Samuels' face are enough to convince a jury. But Con Bigelow knows Dan is innocent and vows to find the man responsible for Lorna's murder. LIFE QUEST - Princess Benal claims a Life Quest of her father, the King. Now she must fulfill it. THE PHOTOGRAPH - Sometimes there's more to a photograph than meets the eye. DAY OF DEATH - Eric Donaldson woke up one morning determined to be the cause of someone's death. SHE WORE A SCARLET RIBBON - Can young love survive a father's desire for gain? Fifteen stories in this second collection from the author of "Selected," "Angeltown," and "The Button Man.
When an online writing group full of sick and twisted people, decide to take on the subject of murder… this is what happens.'The Unblocked Writers Group' was started on facebook in 2010. On most days, they are content with the usual activities—sharing writing tips, posting excerpts of their current projects, hi-jacking posts with what they believe to be witty commentary and generally finding newer and more creative ways to drive each other nuts. However, once they were challenged to create their best fictional murder story in flash-fiction format, all hell broke loose.'Dis-Membered' is a collection of short narratives from 12 writers with one mission: crafting the untimely and gruesome demise of whoever they felt had it coming. With tactics ranging from subtle acts of deceit and trickery to raw and savage depravity, they combined to leave a trail of bodies on the page. In the end, no one was safe from their wrath—not even their fellow group members.
What makes a person confess to a crime he did not commit? Was he coerced? Is he trying to protect someone else? Interrogation has come under attack as opponents focus on false confessions. However, most cases are still resolved by confession, not forensic evidence. Among the new topics covered in the Second Edition of this bestselling book, Practic
The defining feature of this work is the collection of official registrations, records of emancipations, orders of apprenticeship, tax lists and other local court records of free people of color residing in Lynchburg from 1805 through the Civil War. A remarkable primary source for genealogical and historical research. -- Publisher.
But for a few twists of fate, Atlanta could have grown to be the recording center that Nashville is today. Pickin' on Peachtree traces Atlanta's emergence in the 1920s as a major force in country recording and radio broadcasting and its forty years as a hub of country music. From the Old Time Fiddlers' Conventions and barn dances through the rise of station WSB and other key radio outlets, Wayne W. Daniel thoroughly documents the consolidation of country music as big business in Atlanta. He also profiles a vast array of performers, radio personalities, and recording moguls who transformed the Peachtree city into the nerve center of early country music.
I have written this book to give a greater understanding of how this history was formed and the relationship between history of old and today as we see culture expand. This is my story. It explains the principles of slavery, organized baseball, and Veterans of the military. There are some stories of individuals that have made and are making an impact on this great nation. This book was written to inform readers about Black History, in Warren County, McMinnville, Tennessee located in middle Tennessee. The very first chapter was written to inspire all that read it. Chapter two is to explain principles of slavery. There are names, dates, and information that can help give individuals closure in the history. The photos in this book are most important, so that you can have a name, a place, what a person or people look like. It took 17 years to get information, history, stories, photos, and research, to make this a very interesting book. When one opens this book Through Wolf's Eyes, they will see what I see. Great book for historians, no matter what flavor you are!
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.