![]() ![]() Warning: This book contains BDSM play, M/F/M ménage, graphic language and a drool-worthy Dom on the hunt for a sub and a killer. The woman whose stubborn search for the delicate balance between sub life and independence could put her directly in the path of the killer. Without warning the murder case reaches ugly tentacles into the most private part of his world-the woman he wants to claim as his own. ![]() Terryn is the sub of his dreams, with the power to ease his soul. When he bumps into Terryn, a slender redhead who’s new to the scene, her wide-eyed eagerness even in the face of her nerves attracts him like gravity. The fact is, he’s a Dom in search of a sub. A part that has been left empty in a life ruled by work. Stepping into his cousin’s BDSM club is a reminder that there is another part of himself. After a long, fruitless day poring over the most gruesome evidence he’s ever seen, he needs a break. A serial killer is slaughtering young women. New York, Book 2 Homicide detective Brice Marshall’s current case has him stymied and frustrated. ![]()
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![]() ![]() ![]() Over the last two decades, Chandra Talpade Mohanty has produced an extraordinary body of writings on transnational feminism, radically changing the way we think about such categories as Third World women, women of color, and globalization. ![]() Her probing and provocative analyses of key concepts in feminist thought-home, sisterhood, community-lead the way toward a feminism without borders, a feminism fully engaged with the realities of a transnational world. Mohanty offers here a sustained critique of globalization and urges a reorientation of transnational feminist practice towards anticapitalist struggles. This collection highlights the concerns running throughout her pioneering work: the politics of difference and solidarity, decolonizing and democratizing feminist practice, the crossing of borders, and the relation of feminist knowledge and scholarship to organizing and social movements. Forging vital links between daily life and collective action and between theory and pedagogy, Mahanty has been at the vanguard of Third World and international feminist thought and activism for nearly two decades. ![]() Shipping Note: This item usually arrives at your doorstep in 10-15 daysīringing together classic and new writings of the trailblazing feminist theorist Chandra Talpade Mohanty, Feminism without Borders addresses some of the most pressing and complex issues facing contemporary feminism. ![]() ![]() Many of the ideas here are under $30, because you know you'll never hear the end of it if you spend what she thinks is too much on her. And even though she's guaranteed to love them, you won't have to break the banking shopping. Trust us when we say that any of these grandma gifts will remind her how much she means to you. You'll even find some great last-minute goodies too if you waited until the eleventh hour. The Addiction Manifesto, by Jerry Weaver, provides readers with an impassioned retelling of his experience battling addiction. We've included luxury items worth the splurge, personalized gifts that'll make her cry happy tears and practical presents that she can use every day. We've carefully combed through sites to find the most thoughtful ideas that she'll love from any of her grandchildren. Where to start? Our roundup of the best gifts for grandma is a great place. ![]() But since she's celebrated many birthdays, Mother's Days and other holidays, and likely has a bunch of people shopping for her special present, you want to try and find something really unique. ![]() ![]() JR Weaver is an army veteran and person in long-term recovery who is passionate about the health and wellness of others. Grandma should always be at the top of your list when you're shopping for the most important women in your life. The Addiction Manifesto eBook by Jerry Weaver - 9781387748235 Rakuten Kobo Read 'The Addiction Manifesto' by Jerry Weaver available from Rakuten Kobo. ![]() ![]() ![]() Though she's wary, and has a secret she’s hidden from him for five years, Lexie has little willpower when it comes to Riley and she agrees. When they inevitably meet, memories of their love make Riley yearn to reconnect, despite the pain they both suffered. ![]() He also tries not to think about Lexie Pierce, the only girl he ever truly cared about, and who broke his heart. Leaving everything behind, Riley flies home to Michigan for the first time in five years to support his mother and do his best to make amends with his father. ![]() Life in New York for ex-con Riley Moore is pretty damn good, until a call from his mother shatters the calm: his father has suffered his second heart attack in two years and is in a critical condition. From award-winning fanfic phenomenon Sophie Jackson, the third novel in the sexy and emotionally intense blockbuster A Pound of Flesh series. ![]() ![]() ![]() Let’s get this out of the way first - no, it’s not linearly told, yes, it’s inherently political, fucking deal with it. ![]() He has worked in criminal justice, the tech industry, and immigration law, and prays every day for a new album from System of a Down. He is the winner of the Ilube Nommo Award for Best Speculative Fiction Novel by an African and has appeared in Locus Magazine's Recommended Reading list.īorn in Massachusetts and raised in Connecticut, Tochi is a consummate New Englander, preferring the way the tree leaves turn the color of fire on I-84 to mosquitoes and being able to boil eggs on pavement. His non-fiction has appeared in Uncanny Magazine, Nowhere Magazine, Tor.com and the Harvard Journal of African-American Public Policy. His short fiction has appeared in Asimov's Science Fiction, Omenana, Black Enough: Stories of Being Young & Black in America, and elsewhere. He has graduated from Yale University, New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts, Columbia Law School, and L’institut d’études politiques with a Masters degree in Global Business Law. Tochi Onyebuchi is the author of Beasts Made of Night, its sequel Crown of Thunder, War Girls, and Riot Baby, published by Tor.com in January 2020. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() When Thread does threaten there is a sudden desperate scramble for survival. Many believe that Thread will never fall again, and the ancient warnings are just stories. The Weyrs (where dragons and dragonmen live) have dwindled in number to only one. ![]() Civilization regressed to a medieval state, much technology and knowledge has been lost, and dragonmen are no longer honored, the common people chafe at having to support them. In the setting of the story, four hundred years have passed since the last Threadfall. Traditions and social rules built up to support the dragonriders who protect the planet, with Holds providing goods and supplies to the dragonmen who live in rocky caves on cliff faces (the Thread spores can’t harm rock). Thread destroys nearly everything it touches. Their importance is to save the planet from Threadfall- noxious acid spores that cross the gap of space from a satellite planet with an erratic orbit, when it approaches close enough. The early inhabitants- explorers and scientists- genetically engineered an indigenous species to become the huge dragons, capable of breathing fire and forming a telepathic and emotional bond with human riders. Pern is a planet once colonized by humans and long since abandoned or forgotten by Earth. ![]() ![]() Lewis, who has been such a successful apologist for Christianity, should have the courage to admit doubt about what he has so superbly proclaimed. This is a part of a healthy grief which is not often encouraged. "I am grateful to Lewis for having the courage to yell, to doubt, to kick at God in angry violence. Madeleine L'Engle wrote in an introduction to the 1989 edition: ![]() Joy's first name was Helen, so Lewis referred to her as "H" throughout the text. ![]() ![]() It wasn't until after Lewis's death in 1963 that it was republished under his own name. The book was first published under the pseudonym N.W. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() While this book is mostly focused on Claire (as all past books have been), we get something new that I loved. Frank Collins is still being kept a secret, Shane is drifting away and even Eve and Micheal have a secret! All this adds up to lots of drama and home intrigue as a I wonder how it is all going to come out. ![]() Shane is one of the first to check it out and gets really into the fighting there but when one fights under vampires, bad things can follow.Ĭlaire is told some startling information but is heavily threatened to keep quite about it. We have boxing areas, ratchet ball, karate mats and even a fencing room and more! I would love to have a gym like how this appears in my city (less the vampires). We get all the standard gym setups for weights, cardio, etc. One thing I must say is that it must be HUGE. In this book a new gym has opened up where a vampire is training humans and vampires alike. Everyone has secrets from one another and not all of them are good! The drama within the Glass house reaches all new heights in this book. ![]() I love this series but this book really showed me some points I liked more than previous books and some I liked less. ![]() ![]() ![]() So when Aiden James calls her out of the crowd, picking her over every other single female in the supernatural community, Emma doesn’t know what to think. Not that she would want to be-what girl in her right mind would volunteer to be a sex slave for a year, giving up the rights to her own body and sexuality to a dominating male who likes to bite? Not Emma, that’s for sure. So she figures there’s no way she’ll be chosen as the Bloodlust Sacrifice for the new vampire Sovereign. Not only that, but she’s full figured instead of thin, like her gorgeous, talented cousins, and has dishwater brown hair and muddy hazel eyes to match. A witch without power meets a vampire lord with a taste for domination.Įmma Krist is a dud-a person from a powerful line of witches with no magic of her own. ![]() ![]() Lings was able to convey tiers of profundity in a short passage (even one sentence) and to do so with uncanny consistency. Once again, I was awestruck by the ease with which Mr. Lings passed, I happened to have been reading one of his books that my wife had ordered and just received, Symbol and Archetype: A Study in the Meaning of Existence. In Islamic tradition (and I'm pretty sure the tradition is widespread), when a great person dies, whether a saint or scholar or sage, the whole world is somehow effected, even the fish in the sea. Our sense of sacred connection is so co-opted by Starbuck casualness, essential spiritual accoutrements within us are disabled from perceiving the depth of loss that humanity suffered recently with the passing of Martin Lings. ![]() One of the damned things about this world is the ease with which we can go through a day and not feel the dimming of light. ![]() |