Showing 65–80 of 194 results

  • Journey to the Temple of Ra by David P. Tangredi

    A young traveler, who is favored by the Gods, wanders into a village unaware of the guidance that led him there. His life is about to change. The journey that ensues takes him to distant lands, myriad teachings, and diverse cultures. Yet obstacles abound. The perpetual turning of the Wheel of Fortune keeps karma and justice in check. Not even the Gods can control or predict its mysterious ways.

  • Junah Tales: Secret of the Garden: Fables for a Healthy Happy Life (Volume 1) by M. R. Neer

    Junah Tales offers animal stories like Aesop did but now with life lessons that are modern, universal, and wellness-oriented. Like other classic fables, each fable is a story within a larger story — in this case of Junah’s heroic quest to find the secret of the garden. The fables are written for 5th grade (age 10) and up, although younger kids may enjoy having the fables read to them.

    These stories are a great way to teach natural, holistic values to children. The detailed illustrations will help them imagine what’s happening in the garden. Insights from these fables will also help all of us re-connect to nature and enjoy life in a healthier and happier way.

  • KARA (Universal Matter Book 2) by Martin Cosgrove

    It’s the 22nd century and environmental disaster coupled with the tyranny of a One World Government have brought human civilisation to the brink of collapse. Kara must find a way to introduce a mystical energy source known as Universal Matter to the people, liberating them from the control of Government.

  • Keeping Faith: A Novel by Jodi Picoult

    When the marriage of Mariah White and her cheating husband, Colin, turns ugly and disintegrates, their seven-year-old daughter, Faith, is there to witness it all. In the aftermath of a rapid divorce, Mariah falls into a deep depression – and suddenly Faith, a child with no religious background whatsoever, hears divine voices, starts reciting biblical passages, and develops stigmata.

  • Lady Grace & the War for a New World (Earth’s End) (Volume 2) by Sandy Nathan

    Not everyone dies in the nuclear conflagration. Surviving any way they can, the lucky ones make their way to Piermont Manor, Jeremy Edgarton’s ancestral home. Jeremy is the sixteen-year-old tech genius who might have stopped the atomic war, but couldn’t. No one knows how much time has passed since the world blew up.

  • Life Expectancy: A Novel by Dean Koontz

    “A roller-coaster ride . . . remarkable . . . Prepare to be enchanted.”—The Sunday Oregonian

    Before he died on a storm-wracked night, Jimmy Tock’s grandfather predicted that there would be five dark days in his grandson’s life—five dates whose terrible events Jimmy must prepare himself to face.

    For who Jimmy Tock is and what he must accomplish on the five days his world turns is a mystery both dangerous and wondrous.

  • Lila, The Revolutionary by William T Hathaway

    Lila, the Revolutionary is a fable for adults about an eight-year-old girl-smart, charming, and tough as can be-who creates a world revolution for social justice.

    No one ever told her she couldn’t end poverty and inequality, so she doesn’t doubt that she can Just Do It! Starting with the Nike shoe factory where she works. Like the boy in “The Emperor’s New Clothes,” Lila can see the reality that adults are blind to. And she’s not shy about pointing it out.

  • Lone Cypress by Laura K. Cowan

    What does it mean to be possessed? By a person, by a dream, and by your demons? Shana knows. Shana was a ballerina. At least that was what her mother told her when she moved them to New York so she could pursue the dream. But after Shana was kicked out of school for experimenting with new dance forms and escaped her stage mom only to fall into a dangerous marriage, all she has left is a list of things she thought she was. The only thing still alive in her spirit is the ballet she wanted to choreograph, and suddenly it has taken on a life of its own. Shana runs, from her husband, from her life, and from the terrifying dreams that insist she make a change–until she runs out of time and must face not only her husband’s hired gun but the monster in her mind.

  • Lost Horizon by James Hilton

    Lost Horizon is a novel by English writer James Hilton. It is best remembered as the origin of Shangri-La, a fictional utopian lamasery high in the mountains of Tibet.

    The book explicitly notes that having made war on the ground man would now fill the skies with death, and that all precious things were in danger of being lost, like the lost histories of Rome (“Lost books of Livy”). It was hoped that overlooked by the violent, Shangri-la would preserve them and reveal them later to a receptive world exhausted by war. That was the real purpose of the Lamasary; study, inner peace and long life were a side benefit to living there.

  • Lucifer: The Story of a Descended Angel by Elizabeth Beckett

    Lucifer is a brief, intense novel about the Dark Angel with a bad rap.The story is set more than a million years back in Earth-time and follows the life of this unique Angel who set himself a particular purpose to serve humankind. From the heavenly creation of the human being as overseen by the universal White Brotherhood to Lucifer’s current role in soul-testing, the Dark Angel’s true purpose in spiritual evolution is revealed.

  • Manifested by Iva Kenaz

    Fourteen-year-old Lisa is an incorrigible dreamer obsessed with a hero from a medieval novel she’s been reading, guard Tertius. Eventually, Tertius starts to manifest in Lisa’s life and the two lost souls begin helping each other with their romantic dilemmas. Lisa finds herself drawn to her scoundrelly classmate and Tertius longs to reunite with the love of his life despite the depressingly written destiny. Besides losing herself in fiction, Lisa also wishes to reconcile with her father, an erratic painter whose crazy mind always finds something out-of-ordinary to focus on. Manifested (aka My Melancholic Diary) tells a story about creating your own reality, re-writing what you dislike about your past and start writing a brighter future.

  • Memoirs and Misinformation: A novel by Jim Carrey & Dana Vachon

    “None of this is real and all of it is true.” –Jim Carrey

    Meet Jim Carrey. Sure, he’s an insanely successful and beloved movie star drowning in wealth and privilege–but he’s also lonely. Maybe past his prime. Maybe even . . . getting fat? He’s tried diets, gurus, and cuddling with his military-grade Israeli guard dogs, but nothing seems to lift the cloud of emptiness and ennui. Even the sage advice of his best friend, actor and dinosaur skull collector Nicolas Cage, isn’t enough to pull Carrey out of his slump.

    But then Jim meets Georgie: ruthless ingénue, love of his life. And with the help of auteur screenwriter Charlie Kaufman, he has a role to play in a boundary-pushing new picture that may help him uncover a whole new side to himself–finally, his Oscar vehicle! Things are looking up!

    But the universe has other plans.

    Memoirs and Misinformation is a fearless semi-autobiographical novel, a deconstruction of persona. In it, Jim Carrey and Dana Vachon have fashioned a story about acting, Hollywood, agents, celebrity, privilege, friendship, romance, addiction to relevance, fear of personal erasure, our “one big soul,” Canada, and a cataclysmic ending of the world–apocalypses within and without.

  • Mission: Soul Rescue: Escape from the Immortals (Volume 1) by William Fietzer

    They stole her consciousness, now they want her soul . . . After many years of research in the Amazon, Psychologist Victor Furst finally acquired the shamanic ability to detect psychic vampires and retrieve the souls of their victims. As happens with endeavors driven by passion, his discoveries would not come without sacrifice—his wife, Evelyn, grew tired of his absence and left—taking his precious daughter, Miriam, with her. As though commanded by fate, he finds Evelyn again when his old rival at the CIA, Basil Zarkisian, abducts her consciousness, leaving her body lying in limbo as though in a coma; diagnosis—Alzheimer’s disease. But Victor knows Evelyn is in no coma and Alzheimer’s is just for cover… Victor is in a race against rebels and time. His hope for Evelyn lies with her eccentric sister and—Miriam. Miriam will be a tough sell when Victor reveals what he will need to help Evelyn…

  • Music of Sacred Lakes by Laura K. Cowan

    “A beautiful and striking portrait of a man who comes to the end of himself before experiencing a rare grace that resurrects him to his place in the world. This emotional story hums with truth and hope.” —Erin Healy, bestselling author of House of Mercy and Stranger Things

    A story about reconnecting with the source of your life and your joy, Music of Sacred Lakes gives voice to the spirit of the land and lakes that gave birth to us all. With this second and astonishingly sophisticated novel, Dreaming Novelist Laura K. Cowan cements her reputation as one of the most imaginative new American Fabulists, a writer of spiritually-oriented magical realism, literary fantasy, and visionary fiction in the line of Alice Hoffman, Ursula K. Le Guin, or Paulo Coelho, but characterized by an electric mix of lyrical language, an evocative sense of place, and quick-moving narrative that harkens back to a time when literary fiction was served up raw and ghost stories weren’t told for their sad and scary parts.

  • My Story: the Life of Yeshua by Elizabeth Beckett

    My Story is an alternative account of the life of the man the world knows as Jesus the Christ. There are an overwhelming number of accounts of the life of this man who was born Jehovah and was later called Yeshua, or one who brings love. Somewhere within this worldly multitude of perspectives, of a man who certainly did exist, lies the truth. The truth of who he really was and ultimately what he accomplished in his life of renown as a human being in the Holy Land two millennia ago.

    My Story channels his true voice and the real life behind the legend. Yes, he was exalted, and special, but Yeshua was also mortal, flawed, and at times weak and egotistical. He was real and relatable. Eccentric, brilliant, and powerful, he was also unstoppable in his messages of love, light, and truth.

    Until he was stopped; persecuted, and crucified for his beliefs that challenged the corrupt and disintegrating order of the day, and the powers that were, within his homeland. Although Yeshua survived his crucifixion it was the crisis point of his life that taught him surrender. Surrender to a much higher power than himself—to a far more exalted order, and to the celestial forces that worked through him but were not necessarily of him.

  • Mystic Tea by Rea Nolan Martin

    YIKES – a Vatican investigation!!! Whatever shall we do?

    Mystic Tea is the inspirational and sometimes comical story of six quirky women living in a rural monastery—all that remain of a community that once thrived. Lost in an emotional and spiritual fog, they struggle daily with faith, friendship, loyalty, obedience, crushing debt, and now an official Vatican investigation. Only a miracle can save them. So where are the miracles?