Author's e-books - government. Page - 1
Zormna is at court once more for insubordination--assumed guilty and forced to prove herself innnocent. Unfortunately her record of pranks is against her. And the judges in the Council have a vendetta. At the least, she could lose her position in the Surface Patrol. At worst, she could end up in prison for a crime she did not commit.
Stillpoint is a daring, controversial examination of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict that shows the struggles of ordinary men and women on both sides. Spanning the period from 1947 to the modern day and showing how lives are affected from Boston to Beirut, from Haifa to Rockport. Do we learn from history? It would appear that we don't. What we learn we can easily forget, but understanding is of a different order, it cannot be forgotten. The poet T.S. Elliot describes this place of
This is a short story about a girl (written in first-person point of view). She lives in a futuristic nation with her family where everything is a beach. The government replaced all houses and roads (to the joy of some and devastation of others) with beaches. She hangs out with her e-bot and older brother.
Zormna is at court once more for insubordination--assumed guilty and forced to prove herself innnocent. Unfortunately her record of pranks is against her. And the judges in the Council have a vendetta. At the least, she could lose her position in the Surface Patrol. At worst, she could end up in prison for a crime she did not commit.
Stillpoint is a daring, controversial examination of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict that shows the struggles of ordinary men and women on both sides. Spanning the period from 1947 to the modern day and showing how lives are affected from Boston to Beirut, from Haifa to Rockport. Do we learn from history? It would appear that we don't. What we learn we can easily forget, but understanding is of a different order, it cannot be forgotten. The poet T.S. Elliot describes this place of
This is a short story about a girl (written in first-person point of view). She lives in a futuristic nation with her family where everything is a beach. The government replaced all houses and roads (to the joy of some and devastation of others) with beaches. She hangs out with her e-bot and older brother.