Manipulating the Last Pure Godly DNA, by E.A. Jensen, guides readers through mysteries and controversies involving religion and science. Jensen’s goal is to meld scientific fact and biblical knowledge to bring together the worlds of... Read More
For American archaeologist Don Carter, the football-sized golden cylinder embedded in the rock of the Peruvian Andes is a rare find. Just how rare he doesn’t realize until tests show he may have discovered an alien’s... Read More
This fresh twist on the quest fantasy novel is done with charm and humor. In "The Silver Sphere", Michael Dadich writes fantasy for a youthful audience in a literate, lively, and entertaining manner. Dadich’s short quest novel makes... Read More
Nasr Saad is a man who asks weighty questions: How was the universe created? Is there life after death? Most importantly, he asks, Why have the disciplines devoted to such issues—religion, philosophy, and science—failed to provide... Read More
For nearly forty years, Jim Christy had been tossing odds and ends—the memorabilia of his peripatetic life—into an old tin box that had at one time held a “Sweet Assorted” selection of Peek, Frean & Co.-brand cookies. The... Read More
It’s not uncommon for a woman to find love in the autumn of her life, but when that woman is a Roman Catholic nun committed to living in solitude as a hermit, and the man is a Roman Catholic priest, their story becomes a rare spiritual... Read More
Jens Jensen (1860-1951) is considered one of America’s most distinguished landscape architects, known for his contributions to both the prairie style of landscape architecture and the land conservation movement. Perhaps best remembered... Read More
Alice Breon, author of Green Gravy, Monster Bread and Other Adventures, adds another volume to her memoir with her new offering, "Holes in My Shoes". This is actually a prequel to Green Gravy, in which she discussed her life over the... Read More