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Все книги издательства Ingram


    The Philatelist

    D.H. Coop

    Back Cover
    The death of an elderly German lady sets off a series of events that leads to murder and links to the historical past. The key to the events is an international stamp book that C. E. Hall, a fire insurance investigator/philatelist, purchased from a stamp store. The stamp book is a record of a mysterious organization that links back before World War II. Powerful figures are trying to find the stamp book as C. E. Hall tries to unravel the mystery held within the stamp book. As C. E. Hall goes through the book, he discovers a sinister organization that had possibly tried to assassinate world leaders during World War II.

    Deep Space Dream

    D. LAWS

    Roy Darwin goes for a long hike in the forest. When he returns, he believes he had a scary but adventurous dream. Then little things make him wonder if it was a dream.

    I Tried Not To Cry

    Michael Beattie

    Rear Book Cover


    An incredible true story of one man’s rise from poverty to feed the hungry.
    After overcoming severe medical complications, and fighting to walk again, a promise was made to help mankind. After selling his home for funding, sixty-seven-year-old veteran Michael Beattie embarked on a life-changing mission to feed hungry veterans and their families, never realizing that his promise would change his way of thinking forever. And maybe, this incredible story will also change how you see others.

    THE BETTER PART OF VALOR

    Morgan Mackinnon

    Back Cover
    Myles Walter Keogh was born to be a soldier. He had a passion in his blood and a love for the thrill of battle, which led him to fight in the Papal Wars as well as the American Civil War and the Western Indian Wars. Devastatingly handsome, a notorious flirt with the opposite sex, Keogh soon learned that being a military officer extracted a terrible toll on his soul—a void he filled with depression and perhaps more drink than was good for him. History records his death on June 25, 1876, at a place called Little Bighorn, which was in Dakota Territory. But history sometimes makes mistakes, especially if there is a mysterious wrinkle in the fabric of time indicating the Irish soldier of fortune has another path open to him if only he would accept it. He has a chance to forego death, save the United States, and maybe…just maybe, find true love.

    Songs I Sing

    B. Germain Reynolds

    Songs I Sing is the raised curtain to a woman, wife, mother, and leader who writes poetry because she must. These one-hundred-plus songs—simple, sweet, sacred, serious, silly, and sensual—seek to upturn every stone in the readers’ heart, resonate in the readers’ mind, and coax a repartee that reflects the impact of the poet’s thoughts, her experiences, her aspirations, her principles. Set to the melody of self-reflection, the rhythm of purposeful living and the tempo of tolerance, Songs I Sing speaks first and foremost to the author, demanding of herself honesty and forthrightness and shunning the unexamined life. A humble exploration of rhyme and prose, reason and rhetoric, commentary and confession, this second book of poetry by B. Germain Reynolds catalogs her love relationship with words and coerces the listener to erupt in song—songs that anyone can sing.

    The Fixer

    John Stewart

    The Fixer: The Beginning

    The Fixer is a series that follows Mark Farmer in a new life. This action-packed story follows Mark as his life as he knows it falls apart and is reborn. Mark, a Special Forces soldier known to his brother soldiers as TK, The Killer, has his world turned upside down while deployed overseas. His fiancée, Katie, is kidnapped, raped, and killed by a serial killer.
    He comes home to find the police have a few leads but no hard evidence against the guy they believe to be the man that did the crime. In his outrage, Mark tracks the guy down only to find another girl dead. He becomes the man the military trained, TK. The cops are close, and TK has the man down in a field beating him to death. In the last moment as police approach, he shoots the rapist/murderer three times in the chest.
    He himself has now crossed from victim to murderer and finds himself in prison for life. Prison doesn’t go well for Mark. He won’t join the skinhead group that immediately takes notice of him. He just wants to be left alone. Shortly, he finds himself fighting for his life. With each prisoner TK kills, his sentence gets longer.
    All seems to be lost for Mark as he recovers from the latest fight in the prison hospital. Until a State Department guy walks in and offers Mark a new life. This mystery man, Troy Place, offers Mark a new job as a fixer. Mark refuses life as an assassin at first, but Troy quickly explains the job is much more than just that. The job is protecting America from its worst enemies, the untouchable ones. The twist with Mark’s missions is that they need to look like anything but an assassination. They can’t look anything like an American-sponsored hit.
    Mark leaves prison that day with a new career and freedom. He soon finds that his job will not be dull. The world is full of people that hate America and want to hurt its people and its way of life. His first mission sends him to Libya to track and kill a guy financing terrorists seeking to destroy Washington, DC. What seems to be a simple task soon turns to chaos.
    The series jumps from one crazy mission to the other. Each book putting Mark (TK) into dangerous situations and almost impossible missions. Mark proves himself cunning and valuable each time. Every mission has two objectives, kill the enemy and make it look like something else. It takes every bit of Mark’s training and imagination to do the job well. As he goes along, he finds friends to help him and unexpected allies when he needs them the most.
    Enjoy the stories.

    Boyd's Commentary

    R.H. Boyd Publishing Corporation

    The 2020-2021 Boyd's Commentary is a resource for planning and preparation for pastors, directors, teachers, students, or anyone searching for a deeper relationship with Christ. It follows the International Uniform Sunday School Lesson Outline from the National Council of Churches, and it is filled with scholarly, yet practical descriptions and exposition for modern Christians. Readers will find Boyd's Commentary useful in their search for increased wisdom and theological insight (Proverbs 4:7) for walking in the way of Christ.

    Culture and Materialism

    Raymond Williams

    Raymond Williams is a towering presence in cultural studies, most importantly as the founder of the approach that has come to be known as «cultural materialism.» Yet Williams's method was always open-ended and fluid, and this volume collects his most significant work from over a twenty-year period in which he wrestled with the concepts of materialism and culture and their interrelationship.

    The Politics of Friendship

    Jacques Derrida

    Jacques Derrida was one of most influential philosophers of the 20th century. In The Politics of Friendship he explores the idea of friendship and its political consequences, past and future in order to explore invention of a radically new friendship, of a deeper and more inclusive democracy.

    Precarious Life

    Judith Butler

    In their most impassioned and personal book to date, Judith Butler responds in this profound appraisal of post-9/11 America to the current US policies to wage perpetual war, and calls for a deeper understanding of how mourning and violence might instead inspire solidarity and a quest for global justice.