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Theodora Hart is a prairie woman who suffers loss but whose unique faith burns bright. She is rooted in the land of her youth and despite bad weather blooms strong like the August sun. Jesus also lights her heart. These brief poems tell of Theodora's grief and the shafts of wheat she pounds and kneads into the bread of life.
In this seventh installment of Arthur Haberman's Toronto Justice series, Homicide Detective Danny Miller and his team are faced with a body on a beach in British Columbia, a suspicious suicide, body parts found in a garbage processing plant, and the murder of a fabricator of artwork.Covid is waning, but many social and political issues related to the disease must be addressed. Libraries are dealing with matters related to censorship in addition to reopening. A drug dealer is being investigated, and the police attempt to take down his whole operation.All the characters have had their lives changed by Covid. Toronto continues to be a diverse and unique place, which remains proud of the city's variety of cultures and peoples.
In this sixth installment of Arthur Haberman's Toronto Justice series, Homicide detective Danny Miller and his team are faced with a hate crime on the street, a puzzling murder of a musician, and the killing of a dentist in his office. There are also some tensions in the relationships among the police, the government, and the press.All this occurs in the middle of Covid, and all the characters are deeply affected by what happens to their personal lives, their identity, their work, and their families during the pandemic. Danny's world includes many people who reflect the diversity and uniqueness of his beloved city.
Erin Leith was a 44-year-old schoolteacher restless in the fear that she had led a story-less life. However, for a few hot and hazy summer weeks on a Lake Huron beach, just a short drive from her everyday life, all that was about to change.Between the Sand and the Sea is one woman's search for belonging, and the vulnerable dance of revealing and concealing one's self that inevitably befalls that pursuit.
Something is wrong with Christopher Lucan. At the height of his career, the musician's songwriting, always so fresh and profound, now seems incomplete and confusing. Furthermore his performances on stage have suddenly deteriorated with wrong notes, jumbled song introductions, and out-of-tune singing. A Song With No Words follows the descending chronology of a folk singer's final tour from the contrasting vantage points of each of his band mates, leading the reader from the congenial surroundings of concert halls, and coffeehouses to a much darker world that had been lurking unexpected in the shadows of each and every show. Rob Ritchie is a writer and musician who resides in Wiarton, Ontario. For years he was a keyboard player and contributing songwriter for the group Tanglefoot. Rob continues to perform, playing with Ontario bands RPR, Harp & Holly and Midnight Blue. A Song With No Words is Rob's third novel.
The Footprints of Funny Feet was created because I was unhappy with the way I was being looked at from a disabled point of view. Throughout my life, I was always told that because I was disabled, I could never fit in, play sports, or have a real job. All the things I accomplished within the pages of this book should showcase that there should be no limitations or barriers placed on people with disabilities.I wanted to showcase this concept to my readers. I was never given any limitations set on me by my parents. The only limitations that were ever placed on me came from the general public that never really understood the physical disability. Because the general public only saw the palsy, they lacked the vision to see the essence of my true potential.
This book describes major sources of traumatic and idiopathic adult chronic pain and provides an outline for successful treatment and relief of chronic pain symptoms - no matter their duration or severity.The treatments are focused on restoring comfortable and healthy jaw functioning patterns.Dr. Cameron describes the methods he used to successfully treat his patients over the past forty years through their stories. These stories are vastly different but have an underlying level of simplicity and sameness to them.After treating thousands of pain patients, patterns have emerged. The grouping of symptoms became similar, the diagnosis straight forward, course of treatment standardized and the outcomes, generally, predictable.Many of the standard dental thoughts on chronic pain are brought into question.Based on his work, Dr. Cameron proposes and describes a simple premise which leads to an elegant theory - namely - 'The Relatively Simple Theory of Jaw Function'.'The Relatively Simple Theory of Jaw Function' places the general dentist, with his basic procedures, at the nexus of the treatment of chronic pain and dysfunction symptoms.From the stories in this book, the readers will see that the dentist has a significant influence on the comfortable function of the muscles and joints of the head and neck and, sometimes, throughout the body as well.
Danny Miller is a homicide detective in Toronto, painstakingly working with his team to solve a string of murders that are plaguing the city. With every case, Danny is transported through a complex and diverse set of lives that take him through all corners of the city and the different motives that spark some of the darkest crimes.But the murders seem to be the easy part. Danny is also working on a case that seems to be leading nowhere. After a string of robberies leave Toronto's elite stripped of their prized possessions and exposed for their controversial behaviour, Danny is left to try and solve these crimes with no evidence. In a world of social justice, it's up to Danny and his team to solve it.
Thon Piok is a South Sudanese born Canadian residing in Toronto ON. Having been born in the very late eighties, his childhood days were the peaks of the war. He is no stranger to the civil war that scrapped the then Sudan. His poetry has then insights that war is tiring and the entire world is worn out. And peace and selfless leadership and harmony is the way forward.
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