At the age of five, Steve Conroy saw his seven-year-old brother kidnapped from the very bedroom they shared. His brother was never found. And the guilt of his silence that night has all but destroyed Steve’s life.Now thirty years old with a failing law practice, Steve agrees to represent convicted criminal Johnny LaSalle, an arrangement sweetened by a lucrative retainer. It’s not long until he discovers that this con man might just be his missing brother.Desperate for his final shot at redemption, Steve will do anything to find the truth. But Johnny knows far more than he’s telling, and the secrets he keeps have deadly consequences. Now Steve must depend on an inexperienced law student whose faith seems to be his last chance at redemption from a corrupt world where one wrong move could be his last.
In David Baldacci's first international thriller, these characters face a catastrophic threat that could change the world as we know it.
The audience for this book is twofold: (1) teacher programs in colleges that are training the next generation of Christian school teachers and (2) instructors already practicing their vocation in the Christian academy.
After killing her attacker, Seelie must prove in court and in the hallways of her high school that she acted in self-defense.
It is 1932.
-------- Authors can't get enough of The Whole Truth 'A masterclass in twists, deception and modern crime writing' Jo Spain, The Last to Disappear 'This book is nail-biting, gasp-out-loud, brilliant' John Marrs, The Vacation '[Gives the] ...
It is quite true that we cannot share personal grief, but we can and should share happiness or success. P.S. It is not true that I have been knighted. Gene * * * When they got back, Red bought Gene a car to say his thanks, but Gene ...
Rather than giving brief introductions to a wide variety of topics, this book provides an in-depth introduction to the field of Number Theory.
The Whole Truth
Bobby Brown: The Truth, The Whole Truth and Nothing But
Where for certain groups of people, it was illegal to learn how to read and write or even own property. This isn't an imaginary world...this is the 20th century in the UNITED STATES OF AMERICA...allow me to explain.