Never Give Up!: Relentless Determination to Overcome Life's Challenges
"People who are called to greatness meet great challenges," writes Joyce Meyer in this essential new book. She reminds us that we have the potential for greatness and provides practical, useful information about how to overcome the challenges we face.
In classic Joyce Meyer style, she provides proven "how-to's" and practical methods along with her encouragement. Joyce has been there. She offers us the benefit of her own experience and helps us avoid the hazards on the way to realizing our dreams.
Added by: arcadius | Karma: 2802.10 | Fiction literature | 6 October 2009
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Moral thinking pervades our practical lives, but where did this way of thinking come from, and what purpose does it serve? Is it to be explained by environmental pressures on our ancestors a million years ago, or is it a cultural invention of more recent origin? In The Evolution of Morality, Richard Joyce takes up these controversial questions, finding that the evidence supports an innate basis to human morality.
Edited by: Pumukl - 6 October 2009
Reason: file details edited (refer to my PM pls!) Pumukl
Joyce sees and knows things she should not know. And it all started after her accident. Wanting to get to the bottom of things, to discover the reason for her newfound knowledge, Joyce tracks down her blood donor…
This is a heartwarming, laugh out loud romantic comedy that has everything you could want: laughs, strong characters, excellent writing, wonderful plot twists and a happy ending.
Joyce and the Victorians By Tracey Teets Schwartze
Joyce and the Victorians excavates the heretofore largely unexplored territory of the late Victorian and Edwardian cultural contexts of Dubliners, Portrait, Ulysses, and Finnegans Wake.
1939 Dublin In the Age of William Butler Yeats and James Joyce, by Richard M. Kain.
This book says the best contemporary account of Easter Week is The Insurrection in Dublin by James Stephens, which was published in London in 1916. Among other things, this book talks of Tom Kettle, who has a bust at St. Stephen's Green in Dublin. Some good descriptions and great accounts of Dear Old Dublin.