A new Dr Lance Elliot mystery from the author of the John Eisenmenger and Helena Flemming series - October, 1975. When Dr Lance Elliot receives a call from his elderly father to say he has been arrested for arson, he can hardly believe it. Especially when he discovers that the intended victim was his father's neighbour, Oliver Lightoller, with whom his father has a long-running feud. But things take an even darker turn when Lightoller is slain with a sword, and the police seem certain that Lance and his father are involved. Can Lance get to the bottom of the mystery and prove their innocence?
The book is also designed as a resource that links the reader to a vast range of services and organisations u everything from mortician's courses to statutory information about Wills.
A teenager discovers his voice in this contemporary love story from “one of young adult literature’s greatest living writers” (Booklist).
Written directly to the person facing the end of life, it compassionately but frankly clarifies the mystery of dying by describing the physical, psychosocial and spiritual changes that may be encountered and how best to understand and ...
Within this enhanced e-book, Anita recounts—in words and on video—stories of her childhood in Hong Kong, her challenge to establish her career and find true love, as well as how she eventually ended up in that hospital bed where she ...
In this story told mostly through letters, children's book author I. B. Grumply gets more than he bargained for when he rents a quiet place to write for the summer.
In this story told mostly through letters, children's book author, I.B. Grumply, gets more than he bargained for when he rents a quiet place to write for the summer.
This powerful book confronts these questions with stories of the author's near-death experience, a daughter's suicide attempt, mental illness, and numerous other gripping stories that demonstrate not only that God is present when we need ...
BACK HOME , Jack went out onto the deck, leaving Lila on the sofa, arm around Cooper, the TV playing a cheesy movie. ... The spaniel refused to leave her side, his doggy intuition picking up that something was wrong the second they had ...
Sasha didn't think her life could get any worse. She was wrong. Her dad decided to move she and her brother to a new town whose residents didn't seem very glad to have a new policeman - never mind his kids-in town.
What happened to Sadie Nettleton's twin sister at the psychiatric hospital all those years ago?