A man Jess had never seen before stood holding the flyscreen door open. 'Do you own an Appaloosa pony?' he asked. 'Yes.' 'It's stuck in the cattle grid down near the old drovers' yards.' Jess's blood ran cold. At the start of the summer holidays, the unthinkable happens when Jess's beloved pony Diamond has a terrible accident. Why won't Shara, Jess's closest friend, tell her what happened down on the river flats that day? Jess suspects the worst, and feels as though she's lost not just one best friend, but two. But new friends and new horses come into Jess's life, along with the chance to compete in the Longwood campdraft. And there's one little filly who needs her help... Can Walkabout heal Jess's broken heart in return?
DIAMOND SPIRIT (DIAMOND SPIRIT 1).
Jess's friend Luke goes bush with the brumbies to find out who he is and where he belongs.
... her dreams brimmed with images of Chelpie, a skeletal white ghost horse, splashing through swampy river flats, hunting for prey. 4 Jess staggered around in a white haze. The wind 31.
Examines why recent efforts to promote democracy around the world have been ineffective, calling for a rule of law, security, protection of individual rights, shared economic prosperity, and free civic organizations to promote the ...
When Shara decides to join her friends in a protest against wild horse racing at the local show it sounds fun, even heroic.
Jess ran out to the front gate.
The Diamond Spirit Trilogy: Adventure horse stories bundle - Diamond Spirit; Moonstone Promise; Opal Dreaming
After teaching you to consider (while drumming) how this practice represents the movement of life, this book explains how to apply these feelings to various areas of your life.
The realistic spirit, a nonmetaphysical approach to philosophical thought concerned with the character of philosophy itself, informs all of the discussions in these essays by philosopher Cora Diamond.
1 One of the main concerns of ethics, as ordinary good people do it, is the activity that we may call imaginative identification: ... doing the right thing for the right reason(s) is impossible—not just instrumentally but constitutively ...