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Welcome to Amarthia, where lions, tigers, and bears roam the city streets, and nobody bats an eye. But civilization is only fur-deep, and beneath the surface lies a world few know exists, filled with intrigue, deception...and monsters. Only the agents of the Tiger's Stripe stand between the ordinary world and those who would throw it into chaos. An ancient horror has surfaced in the arid city of Kairran. The Tiger's Stripe sends in their Hunters, agents specially trained to kill the monsters before the deadly truth behind them is revealed. But the secret may already be out. Assad Alabwaq, one of Kairran's vicious crime lords, has heard rumours of the beasts and believes they would make a fine addition to his brutal gladiator games. And it appears he isn't working alone. However, everything falls apart when a political assassination throws the region into chaos, and the Hunters discover they aren't the only ones on Alabwaq's trail. Sedric Barnes, a journalist from the nation of Locke, seeks to expose the crime lord and force an uninterested public to realize the threat on their doorstep. Little does Barnes know that the strange birthmark on his arm is more than a curiosity, and he is about to enter a world of cloaks, daggers, and creatures of nightmare thousands of years old. This revised edition of Mark of the Tiger's Stripe contains altered material from the original version. Most changes were minor, and done to fix errors and provide better characterization. However, they are still changed from the original, and it is my hope that previous readers think of them for the better.
Luke-Acts contains a wealth of material that is relevant to politics, and the relationship between Jesus and his followers and the Roman Empire becomes an issue at a number of points. The author's fundamental attitude toward Rome is hard to discern, however. The complexity of Luke's task as both a creative writer and a mediator of received tradition, and perhaps as well the author's own ambivalence, have left conflicting evidence in the narrative. Scholarly treatments of the issue have tended to survey in a relatively short scope a great amount of material with different degrees of relevance to the question and representing different proportions of authorial contribution and traditional material. This book attempts to make a contribution to the discussion by narrowing the focus to Luke's depiction of the Roman provincial governors in his narrative, interpreted in terms of his Greco-Roman literary context. Luke's portraits of Roman governors can be seen to invoke expectations and concerns that were common in the literary context. By these standards Luke's portrait of these Roman authority figures is relatively critical, and demonstrates his preoccupation with Rome's judgment of the Christians more than a desire to commend Roman rule.
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