
Healing Foods
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Over 2 000 years ago Hippocrates wrote: "Let your food be your medicine and your medicine be your...

How to Overcome Eating Disorders: Breaking Free for a Better Life
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If you want to gain a better understanding of eating disorders, including anorexia, bulimia and...

Occupational Health Psychology
Irvin Schonfeld and Chu-Hsiang Chang
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Occupational Health Psychology (OHP) is a rapidly expanding interdisciplinary field that focuses on...

The Autoimmune Solution: Prevent and Reverse the Full Spectrum of Inflammatory Symptoms and Diseases
M.D. Amy myers and Amy M D Myers
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A leader in the paleo and functional medicine worlds introduces an accessible, easy-to-follow, and...
Who are You, Really?
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Dr Brian Little challenges what we think we know about how our personality works and is shaped. It's...

Dams and Development in China: The Moral Economy of Water and Power
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China is home to half of the world's large dams and adds dozens more each year. The benefits are...

Earth's Deep History: How it Was Discovered and Why it Matters
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Earth has been witness to mammoths and dinosaurs, global ice ages, continents colliding or splitting...

TravelersWife4Life (31 KP) rated Love and a Little White Lie (State of Grace, #1) in Books
Feb 23, 2021
Tammy L. Gray writes this story from a first-person perspective and it was fascinating. I loved the raw emotions, and actions of the characters; they felt real and not cushioned by the reader’s expectations. January is a very well-developed character whom I could totally relate too (I mean honestly, how many of us have not dressed up for someone we hoped to impress and had less than satisfactory results?). But January takes it all in stride and turns her misfortunes around without even realizing that she is doing it. I also really enjoyed the slow build romance in this story, it was not the focus, but it was a great side-benefit.
The setting of this book was in Texas, which was awesome, as I know many of the places that were mentioned in this book. It was just the right amount of small-town charm mixed with the feeling of being apart of something bigger. I enjoyed the offhanded humor and the amazing message of accepting people as they are and letting the Lord work. Truly a great portrayal of the gospel.
I give this book 5 out of 5 stars for the great story-line, the real and edgy characters, and for the underlying themes throughout the whole book! I highly recommend picking this book up to read.
*I volunteered to read this book in return for my honest feedback. The thoughts and opinions expressed within are my own.

Phillip Youmans recommended City Of God (2002) in Movies (curated)

Leanne Crabtree (480 KP) rated Becoming Red (The Becoming #1) in Books
Jan 7, 2021
love the cover of this and its sequel Becoming Bad; both are amazing and grab your attention straight away.
As for the story, well, I have to admit it took me a while to get into it. I think it was down to all the description and the changes in time at the beginning; Connal’s POV and then switching to Ash’s but it occurring before Connal’s. It was a bit confusing to start with, but it got better as the two met and interacted.
I was intrigued where the story was going from early on and it wasn’t until nearly half way through where I figured it out (maybe I was just slow :S) but after that point I was really into it. The whole chemistry between Connal and Ash was quite fun to read about, how she’d rather not have him following her but at the same time she was attracted to him. The authors’ reference’s to “Little Red” and “Big Bad” also added a bit of humour.
Ash was a woman who didn’t mess around; she carried a knife and told people what she thought of them if they messed around with her and I liked her attitude. Though sometimes, her actions were a bit questionable.
Connal; a dread haired mountain of a man, just seemed to ooze sex and I liked how protective he was of Ash, if only, at the start, because his employer told him to.
It was an interesting story and something different to what I normally read, or should I say a different take on it, and I enjoyed it: A woman being the last carrier of a gene that could mean the repopulation of a dying breed.