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    Untamed Heart

    Price range: $3.99 through $9.99

    Shane Cordell, raised by the Cheyenne, is savagely handsome. Women are drawn to him like a moth to a flame, and he’s every bit as dangerous. His heart never gets involved…until now. Ashley Clayton is beautiful and independent, She was raised without a mother’s touch, having only her father and ranch hands to ease her into womanhood. She is naïve in the ways of etiquette but not in the ways of the flesh, horseflesh mostly. Upon her first encounter with Shane, she feels a strong attraction immediately, but there is a lie…a lie she is sworn to keep. A lie that seems so innocent now bodes heartache for their future. Shane must face his past in a courtroom where he is charged with rape and murder. Just as he’s found not guilty, Ashley’s innocent lie sends him running again, this time into a prostitute’s arms.

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    Adolf Hitler’s Ghost

    Price range: $3.99 through $9.99

    Elizabeth Maria was born in Vienna, Austria, just before Adolf Hitler occupied Austria. She then became a German citizen, and her father was drafted into the German Army to ­ fight for Mr. Hitler in Russia. He had opposed Adolf Hitler openly and ­first lost his job at the University of Vienna and then was sent to Russia. Miraculously he survived Stalingrad and ­ five years in Russian Prison Camps. Elizabeth, her sister, and Mother spent most of the War in small villages to get away from the constant bombing raids on the big cities. After the War she could go back to Vienna and attend high school there. During the 6th grade of high school, she received an AFS Scholarship to the USA and spent one year in Erie, Pennsylvania, with an American family. After graduating from Medical School, she did a residency in Pathology. As a result of some lucky circumstances, she was invited by Stanford University, CA, on a fellowship in Pathology. She fell in love with California and decided to stay there, she continued her residency at the Cedars Sinai Hospital in Los Angeles. After she could afford to buy a nice house in Los Angeles, she brought her three children to America. She stayed in LA until her retirement at the age of 66 years and moved to Santa Fe, NM, where she became a painter with the help of the Community College in Santa Fe. She now lives in Albuquerque, NM, and works as a professional painter.

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    My Son Phillipe

    Price range: $3.99 through $9.99

    Do you know that mothers never stop loving their kids? They did, do, and will put themselves in great danger to protect their children.

    In the memoir My Son Phillipe, the author tells of her saga to rescue her little son, Phillipe, who became trapped in Jerusalem during the Palestinian uprising known as Antifada. Phillipe is one of the first Americans to experience terrorism and its strategies in action. He saw suicidal bombers, smelled the gas of the explosions, and was beaten up, dragged by his hair and starved. Due to tremendous humanitarian efforts of the United States and its allies, the special agent on the terrorism, Nadia Phillips, guided by the war veteran John Koss with the support from President Ronald Reagan and Alaskan Senator Ted Stevens, rescued Phillipe from the iron grasp of war that devastated the nations involved.

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    Battle of Britain

    Price range: $3.99 through $9.99

    Another look at one of the battles during WW2, where Hitler thought he could invade and conquer during his reign of terror on the world. He decided to try and knock out the Royal Air Force of Britain. He was not expecting the resistance that the British Air Force and Navy were to give him in his quest for annihilation of Great Britain.

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    Reparations for Black, Negro, and Colored Americans

    Price range: $3.99 through $9.99

    The meaning of this book is that it provides a scientifically based affirmation for reparations. The overall conclusion is this! Reparations for Black, Negro, and Colored Americans must be based upon the money, profit, and wealth created by the buying and selling of any Black, Negro, and Colored Americans as a “commodity”, “a thing”, or as “commodities” in the open financial markets solely during the U.S.A. “domestic slave era”. The White American slave owners’ money, profit, and wealth was grounded in the slave owners’ systemic patriarchy and fatherhood practices during the “domestic slave era”, 1807-65. Finally, the South’s White American slave owners’ system of patriarchy and their fatherhood practices equate to family and kinship with Black, Negro, and Colored Americans. These fathers transferred all the wealth, money, profit to their White American children; and, these fathers transferred nothing to their Black, Negro, and Colored American children. Reparations!

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    An Empire In Ruins: But A Formidable Adversary

    Price range: $3.99 through $9.99
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    The Junk Drawer: A Place for Our Dreams

    Price range: $3.99 through $8.99

    The Junk Drawer: A Place for Our Dreams introduces us to two groups of teens growing up in Memphis, TN, in the late sixties. One group is black and the other white. Their initial meeting almost ends with devastating consequences, but the hopes and dreams of these teens are put to the test in an effort to bring about racial reconciliation following the death of Dr. King and the violence that follows. This story is tempered with the unforgettable good times of Washington Park in North Memphis. Rickey Alan Smith demonstrates that every person, even in war-ravished Vietnam, has dreams. No obstacle can stand in the way of true love. The Junk Drawer shows just what we should do to keep our hopes and dreams alive.

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    A Toy Black Soldiers Story

    Price range: $3.99 through $8.99

    The Author grew up in a two-parent home on the northside of Chicago in an area known as Cabrini Green Projects. His parents gave birth to 10 children. Four brothers and five sisters. Willis is the oldest child.

    My father served in Manila Philippines under General Wainright. He distinguished himself on rescue missions of American prisoners and special assignments during the ongoing battles against the Japanese in the Philippine Island 3 years hand to hand combat with the Japanese. He returned home and married the author’s mother who was an elementary school teacher and a missionary. He was a military police and after the war in 1959, became a Chicago Policeman. He was an American hero.

    The author was unable to afford college and decided to volunteer for military service with plans to enter college upon completion of military obligations. This landed him in the middle of the Vietnam Era War at a place called Phan Rang Vietnam from 1968-1969 where he served as a medical corpsman.

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    Black Tuesday: A Novella

    Price range: $3.99 through $8.99

    As an academic project, the author extensively researched the day and era of the cataclysmic financial event, the Stock Market Crash of October 29, 1929; its roots and causes he labeled The Gathering Storm; The Day Itself; The Deluge; and its Aftermath. Concurrent with the history unfolding is the capture of the flavor of the early third of the Twentieth Century, especially of New York City where the event transpired, and the lives and loves of a host of characters assembled by Hanrahan to show that the financial tragedy had its share of victims, participants and affected onlookers.

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    The Broken Poet

    Price range: $3.99 through $6.99
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    The Patriarchy of White American Slave Owners

    $3.99

    The Patriarchy of White American Slave Owners: Family and Kinship with Black, Negro, and Colored Americans in the U.S.A. South provides the scientific certainty that during the U.S.A. “domestic slave era”, 1807-65, (the U.S.A.’s second slave era) the systemic patriarchy and the fatherhood practices of the White American slave owners of the U.S.A. South produced, fathered, over 10,000,000 Black, Negro, and Colored American children. During the same time, these same slave owners fathered over 5,000,000 White American children. This book’s scientific certainty verifies all these White, Black, Negro, and Colored American children were brothers and sisters to each other. Siblings! The South’s White American slave owners were the fathers of all these children.

    Traditionally, the primary method used by the White American slave owners to distinguish among their own children to buy and to sell was skin color distinctions. Historically, those slave owners’ decisions of skin color exemplify the origin of white racism in the U.S.A. These White American slave owners and all their children constituted various White, Black, Negro, and Colored American families in the South. The relations between and among all their children constituted their kinships in the South.

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    The Last Laugh Is Mine

    $2.99

    This novel is about the struggle by a young man to change an age-old traditional matrilineal system of inheritance and its consequences. The hero Owia Atta is forced to become a farmer, contrary to his wish to be educated to play a leadership role in this fictionalized African community of Wofakurom. He works to create his father’s wealth but is disinherited at his father’s death when the assets are given to his father’s nephew in accordance with tradition and customs. Owia Atta’s resistance against this practice provides moments of tension in the novel, leading to his clash with tradition and consequent felony for which he is punished. But his daring efforts have a big impact on his society. The novel reflects the reality of an ethnic group’s worldview and draws attention to its potential to create social unrest. It interweaves political, social, cultural, and economic issues, bringing together historical developments and the place of the traditional African society in the modern world.