Book Description
The Gates were there on Phobos when mankind first arrived. Inert, unyielding, impossibly alien constructs, for twenty years they sat lifeless, mute testaments to their long-vanished creators, their secrets hidden. Then one day, they sprang to life...
Meet Corporal Flynn Taggart, United States Marine Corps; serial number 888-23-9912. He's the best warrior the twenty-first century has to offer, which is a damn good thing. Because Flynn Taggart is all that's standing between the hell that just dropped in on Mars and an unsuspectingg planet Earth...
Customer Reviews:
good read.........2007-04-19
when i first read this book i was in 4th grade. im now 21 years old and i still think this is a good book. i bought the whole series off amazon when i remembered this book and i just had to finish the whole series since i loved the first book. all i really have to say is that the first book is entirely based off the game..the author obviously didnt wanna change to much around..which i like. unlike the doom movie which had absolutley nothing to do with the game except the BFG. hollywood totally fubar'd that movie up. anyways first book is like the game..and after that it stats to stray off for the writter to get more creative. the 2nd book is pretty god too..but the 3rd and 4th books just get way out there and at the end of the 4th book make sure you understood and remembered what you read. cuz the ending is just so...not an ending. i guess the author just got lazy and decided to leave us hanging on for more without ever making more books. dammit i want a 5th book and i want to know how the series really ends.
This is one of the best books I have ever read........2007-03-30
This is one of the best books I have ever read. This book has everything a great sci-fi book should have,
not to mention how exceptionally well it is. A book based on the most revolutionary game ever to the FPS world, this
book captures all of the elements the games story tells and goes into immense detail where the game doesn't. I first read this book
when I was younger, and I loved it then just as much as I love it now. There is a lot to take in, so reading this book 2-3 times won't
have you bored and discouraged. I tell everyone I know (that likes to read) to check this book out. Gamer or not, this is a great read.
Check it out!
Awful.......2006-08-10
I really, really hoped for something better. I am not one of those who think game-fiction is a doomed genre, but in many cases I doubt myself. When reading this book, I felt such. Not that I was expecting something well-written with a story of much complexity of substance, but I can find better fanfictions on the internet than this one. Doom the game could definitely have made an interesting book if they threw in a number of interesting characters, some kind of plot and at least a shred of writing skill. Sadly, this book has none. It is the same thing over and over again; main character goes into a room, kills monsters, finds a lever and then goes to the next room, while making snide comments.
Even the Baldur's Gate books by Philip A. were better than these, and they were horrible. Do the pubishing companies have to dig out the worst possible authors for writing books based on games, just because most of the audience happens to be young?
Avoid.
The best book i have ever read..... For REAL.......2006-03-07
...I have read VERY good books in my life. From Stephen King to Wilbur Smith and even konsalik stuff. Maybe it is because im such a huge fan of the doom game series that this hit me so hard.
Maybe if you never played the game....no actually you WILL like this book. if you havent played the game you might not think its the best book ever but it sure is still good. The story is loosely said very thin but that doesnt matter in this case and doesnt take away that you want to keep on reading. its like the video game VERY addictive. VERY more-ish. I couldnt stop reading and was annoyed everytime i arrived at my trainstop but continued reading walking the sidewalk (do not try this at home) The main character Fly is funny and i for one WANTED him to live. God i want to read it again but ill wait a couple of months.
The Book is funny, scary, and it gives your imagination a big kick. Real things from the game appear in the book. The monsters are told till in the details, surroundings, levels and even pickups and door keys. the books reads as if you play the game. Maybe you could call it a Walkthrough in bookform... :O ..Also the finding of weapons makes Fly as happy as you would be and thats adding to the suspense.
Also this book is recommended for younger people that 1. never read a book before and always play video games, or 2 say that books suck. They will like it. I am SO annoyed that the recently come out DOOM movie SUCKED bigtime and wished the makers of the Lord of the Rings would make a movie based on this book (that would ROCK) maybe ill write them an email...Anyway.
You played DOOM game? = BUY NOW!!!! HURRY!!!
You played Videogame? = Buy now!
You like horror? Buy now
U don liek boox..? = try this one
You like books in general?= Buy it youll be pleased.
one last word....DOOM ROX!!!! Semper FI!!
Quick'n'dirty action novel.......2006-01-27
I bought "Knee-Deep in the Dead" because I wanted a light read and I was interested in how the authors remix a video game into literature. I read the first 100 pages in two days, enjoying the cheesy inner monologue and the hack'n'slash encounters with zombies. It was exactly what I expected after playing the game countless times. The authors stick very close to the level progression of the game, making it fun to think back to your own experience of the game and comparing it. They filled some of the gaps in the story-line by interpreting some of the visuals you encounter in the game (e.g. they theorize about why aliens use human symbols in their buildings). So all is well and good? Not quiet so. After 150 pages it sorta became a rinse-and-repeat affair. Sure, there's not much to say about a game that has "kill everything that moves" as its prime objective. Zombies increase and bigger foes appear, but I never felt any concern for the main character. Maybe because I knew there were still 150 pages to go and he was the main character. Anyway, don't expect Shakespeare but more of a dumb Clive Barker and you're set.
Product Description
A single mother is convinced her newborn child is the spawn of the devil. A teenage girl, long-thought kidnapped, is suddenly found alive and well at a service plaza on the turnpike with a mysterious traveling companion. A wannabe Goth-rocker tries to sell his soul to the Devil only to discover Satan is seeking Platinum. A Louisiana police officer shares his darkest secret with his partner as a sign of his twisted love. The final battle of two bitter sorcerers threatens to bring about the end of all creation. Welcome to NIGHTMARE WORLD. NIGHTMARE WORLD: Knee Deep in the Dead and other Tales of Terror features thirteen stand-alone stories written by Aaron Weisbrod and illustrated by a host of amazing established and up-and-coming artists. Featuring an introduction by the legendary Brian (LADY DEATH, Chaos Comics) Pulido, this is the book fans of mature yet non-gratuitous horror have been waiting for! A new era in intelligent, yet all-age friendly horror has arrived!
Amazon.com
Elisabeth Elliot's story centers around one pivotal question: "Does God want everything?" Her emphatic answer--"Yes"--is what makes Passion and Purity the foremost Christian book on dating ever written. Based on stories, journal entries, and letters chronicling her own five-year courtship with Jim Elliot, she gives frank advice, scriptural directives, and compassionate examples of what it means to follow Christ in the midst of heartache and impatience. The perfect antidote for those who flounder in the thinking that "the Bible doesn't say anything about dating," Elliot's short chapters are filled with nuggets of wisdom that spell out exactly the opposite. "Until the will and the affections are brought under the authority of Christ, we have not begun to understand, let alone accept His lordship. The Cross, as it enters the love live, will reveal the heart's truth." Whether in a dating relationship, married, or pursuing a call to single life, readers will find Elliot's message challenging them to a true faith in a Christ who lovingly calls us to surrender all. --Courtenay Kehn
Book Description
Popular author and speaker Kathy Collard Miller explores why women tend to worry and how to deal with it. Topics include fear of the future, how love casts out fear, how prayer alleviates worry, how to overcome anxiety about what might happen, and more. Conversational, practical, filled with stories, and biblically based, this will become a book women share with each other. Discussion questions in each chapter make the book ideal for small group use.
Customer Reviews:
Woman, thou art Second.......2007-09-19
If you don't believe that women are secondary receivers and helpers to men without specific purposes of our own, this book isn't for you. I originally thought this book was full of testimonies from various couples, but it's half of Elliot's recounting of her own courtship and half her own limited views of womanhood.
It's not the idea that women shouldn't do the pursuing in a relationship that bothers me, so much as Elliot's faulty attempt to tie it in with the erroneous belief that women are receivers in just about every situation! It amazes me how she manages to do this: one minute I'm hearing about how many modern women are too aggressive in relationships (which they can be) and the next I'm wading through Puritanical nonsense about how female society leaders are unnatural! Elliot polished this off with the ridiculous statement that matriarchal societies are nothing but legend. I wish people would research their subjective ideas before making erroneous statements; I have heard of many matriarchal tribes, and Elliot's assertion that such female leaders are unnatural is insulting as well as untrue. Indeed, her entire chapter on this subject is called "The Mess we've Made", lamenting over how women have dared to initiate things in the world instead of letting men do all the work. And her comment that "until recently, women leading and men following was considered unnatural"? Only to those of you complimentarians who are stuck in the past, Elliot. Most people in society now know that leaders are to be chosen based on what's in their minds and not between their legs; maybe one day you'll stop blissfully ignoring the presence of strong women (both in past and present) and will acknowledge this yourself.
At one point, Elliot tells of a time in which she invited four men over for dinner and asked them all what they wanted from women. It didn't surprise me a bit that one of the dopes said, "If the woman's smart, she'll know her place is submission" and that more than one of them called a woman asking them out "Shocking. A turnoff". It also didn't surpise me that Elliot took these four men's opinions and tried to pass them off as what most men would want. (Sure that's what most men want, if you're living in a conservative circle with little fresh air; thank God these men are in a minority!) What DID surprise me, even after my experience with Elliot's views, was her comparison of these men's insecure descriptions of a woman asking a man out to what Eve did! Elliot claims Eve's sin was taking the initiative by offering Adam the apple and, by doing this, she damaged God's design! Funny how only people of Elliot's mindset see this as the main problem with the Eden incident. Leave it to people like that to twist Adam and Eve's sin in an attempt to turn it into yet another story of what happens when good submissive girls go bad and try to lead for a change. I will say this is the first time, though, that I've ever heard someone describe the action of offering a man fruit as a dominant thing.
Granted, some women CAN be too dominant. As Elliot says, this is usually because we have such a hard time doing nothing. However, even I wasn't expecting the rather horrifying story that Elliot shared about a woman who would probably fit every man's description of a nightmare. I was expecting Elliot to describe a liberal feminist. Instead, she described a Christian woman who prayed constantly, wanted to be a missionary..and told a man she knew that God told her they were going to get married! I'm not sure who was more horrified, me upon reading this or Elliot when she heard it personally. Naturally, when the woman first told her what God said, Elliot advised her to not tell the man anything until he heard from God too. The ditz responded by saying, "Oh no, I ran home and called him right away! I just wanted him to understand that this was God's will". Elliot ended this story with the wry words "That man has my sympathy", and I have to say I admired her incredible patience. If it had been me, I would have smacked the woman and asked her what the devil she was thinking. It's fascinating to me that the single most aggressive woman I've ever heard of is not a feminist, but a Christian who fits the term "passive aggressive" better than anyone I've ever heard of. I wish Elliot had given a follow-up on those events. Still, you've got to admit that most women aren't that, well, unstable. This is why I like the modern allowance of women to simply ask guys out for coffee or what have you; I hardly think any reasonable man would find that as repulsive as Elliot's four neurotic male friends. (I wish that it had been one of those friends who was stuck with the woman in that story. It would served them right, and I would have laughed my socks off)
You might appreciate this book for the sweet (and very unusual) courtship tale about Elisabeth and Jim. Just please don't buy her views of manhood and womanhood as Gospel. The Bible is for all times; the practices in this book are not.
Important for those who think dating is a write..........2007-09-05
It was about three years ago when I began contemplating whether or not it was right to date or kiss people (before marriage). I hadn't read any books on dating or relationships let alone Christian ones. I was beginning to walk in obedience to the Lord, and the first thing he wanted surrendured was my love life. It wasn't a foreign concept to me, but still he led me to this very book "passion and Purity" by Elizabeth Elliot (The former wife of missionary Jim Elliot).
This book is very personal. It includes letters that Jim Elliot wrote, as well as Elizabeth's own diary entries from the time that Jim and Elizabeth were cinsidering courtship. It is not a picture perfect romance, there are hurts and mistakes. However, you should be able to learn from their own mistakes and at times inability to be obedient to God. Let it be a lesson and a reminder to you that God does want out love life. He wants our thoughts of marriage, family, and committment to someone else besides him.
This is a book about learning to put God first. This gives concrete examples of how we sometimes put God on the back-burner to pursue our own ideal of a partner. In the end we find that that when Jim and Elizabeth learned to surrendur their lives to Christ, he led them together, even though Jim only lived five years to enjoy it before he died at the hands of the Auca indians.
If you are struggling with remaining pure, and whether or not marriage is right for you, or whether or not it is possible to remain single and Holy, than please read "Passion and Purity" by Elizabeth Elliot today. You were not led to this very page for no reason, God led you here for a reason, pick up this bok today!!!!
God Bless & *ENJOY* ~Amy
Read this book.......2007-07-15
This book is biblically based and excellent. Before I read it, I had already made up my mind to stay pure until marriage. Elisabeth Elliot's book re-enforced the importance of that decision and challenged me to live selflessly each day. I'm sad that several people have written negative reviews--if you're a Christian and believe the Bible is truth, you will love this book. I highly recommend it.
Must read before marriage...........2007-07-15
If you are dating or engaged, please read this book. At church we kept hearing how great this book was because there was a class for engaged couples that was going through this book together. I purchased it after we were married and I still enjoyed it and learned. My husband and I recommend this book.
A very enlightening book.......2007-03-08
This is not another "don't have sex until you get married" book. During all the pages, Elisabeth Elliot explains God's point of view concerning love life through her own love story with Jim Elliot, her first husband. It has some concepts, but they are deeply explained in a very simple and beautiful way, and of course it makes the reader to think about when he/she has done it right and when not.
It's very helpful to get inside your heart, your intentions with one person or another, to see and maybe even judge your past and encourage you to take what God has to offer -no matter at what cost. I definitely recommend this book!
Book Description
Inspiring stories of couples who discovered love in God's timing through the lost art of courtship.
Customer Reviews:
Companion book to "passion and Purity"........2007-09-05
If you have read or are planning on reading "Passion and Purity" by Elizabeth Elliot, you NEED to purchse this book as well and read it with it. If you think that Elizabeth Elliot's standards are archaic and outdated (As she herself seems to imply people think they are), then read this book. "Quest for Love" will give clear examples of what it means to surrendur your love life to Christ. It is not about a strict set of "rules" and guidelines, but rather it is about a fluid relationship with Jesus Christ based upon the Bible.
One of my favorite stories was about the man who went to China as a missionary, but before he did he kept pursuing different women that he "felt" were the perfect match for him. It was wasn't until he was surrenduring his life to God and living in obedience by being a missionary to China, did he meet the woman who would become his wife. The other tale in here that I enjoyed was about God testing one man's patience and concept of God's timing. He was "ready" to get married when he was 22, but God kept saying no. He would date and try to find someone, but it didn't work. Finally he began handing it over to the Lord, and ten years later he met the woman who would be his wife, who was ten years younger than him!!! When he thought he was ready to get married, well, his wife wasn't!
I loved this book because through the stories and Elliot's narration, she teaches that singleness is a gift from God. We should not view it as a curse whether we are called to singleness for a life-time or for a season, but rather as an opportunity to grow in the Lord and into our God-given gifts. So, that we will not live to get married, but live in Christ. It is a beautiful thing to see a young or old man or woman surrenduring their life to Christ. Do not begrudge your state if you are single, marriage isn't a magic happiness pill, but harder work than you will ever bargain for. Enjoy your singleness and solitude while you have it. That is what this book is about, enjoying Christ in singleness so that if we marry, we can enjoy him in that too.
God Bless & *ENJOY* ~Amy
A Textbook This is Not.......2002-09-18
If you're looking for a book about Elisabeth Elliot's personal quest for love, then this text is not what you are looking for. Quest for love is a compilation of stories and excerpts about those who are now in the Faith who have searched for love at some point in the breadth of their lives. Not all the stories end happily in a romantic sense, and not all of them are model relationships. They are all real however, and Elliot leaves us with a bit of observation and application at the end of every chapter.
If you've read my other review under the book Passion and Purity, then you know that I really do enjoy reading about other peoples' lives. I sincerely want to stress the fact that the examples given to us in this book are not all great examples of what a godly relationship ought to be. In my opinion, Elisabeth Elliot has done a great job in giving us glimpses in not-so-exemplary relationships so that we might learn from other peoples mistakes. What you see here is a lot of life testimony regarding the pain and personal anguish that results in a broken world through the means of human relationships.
Elisabeth Elliot puts forth challenging questions and the occasional quotation of scripture. She offers insightful observations of what may or may not have been done correctly in a relationship. She also offers insight into situations in life that may not result in relationships at all. It's a pretty well rounded book, and it doesn't glamourize Christian relationships, nor does it assume that all Christian relationships are okay. You see some very destructive and painful occurences in here, and it is absolutely worth the read.
I guess the only reason that I gave the book four stars is because I wish that there were more letters from those who God chose to remain single. Love doesn't always have to be relegated to human relationships as the triune God is a very lovable and relational person. I'd give this book a 4.5 if I could, but we live in a broken world, so nothing is ever perfect;-).
wonderful guidance!!!.......2002-02-06
This book is great for helping you find real stories of encouragement with Letting God be your Guide. This will help you see that you should let your relationships into Gods hands and let him be the only one to guide you into the RIGHT relationship for you.
Inspiring follow-up to Passion and Purity.......2001-12-29
After reading "Passion and Purity" I couldn't wait to read her follow-up "Quest for Love." It was better than I expected. Her stories are touching and real. He advice is honest and straight forward. She approaches everything from a Biblical persepective, presenting undeniable truths. If you haven't read "Passion and Purity," I recommend that one first. "Quest for Love" is a fantastic book that you won't want to put down!
Another Elliot Winner.......2001-03-02
If you liked Elisabeth Elliot's "Passion and Purity," the earlier book on singleness, you'll like "Quest for Love." Passion and Purity is about Elisabeth Elliot's incredible romance with a man she loved for five years before he asked her to marry him.
"Quest for Love" is based on the same principles, but tells the success stories of other happy couples.
Book Description
Build a more intimate relationship with your spouse
"This book is mind expanding, inspirational, motivational, and full of hope
a beautiful love story with an eternal dimension for every couple," writes Ardeth Greene Kapp. The book is Purity and Passion, and its practical suggestions on how to make positive changes in marriage have helped thousands of couples. Newly available in a paperback edition, this groundbreaking book clears away obstacles and misconceptions about sexual intimacy by examining them in the light of eternal principles. If you long for more emotional, spiritual, and physical intimacy in your marriage, this book is for you!
Customer Reviews:
I guess this book is ok if you want to know about intimacy.......2007-03-17
For those of you who want to buy this book and you think by intimacy, the title is alluding to sex, you're wrong it's not. Very few things, like 2 or 3 can be found in this book about the church's view on marital sex. Those 2 or 3 things couldn't be farther apart from each other or more vague. If you really want to know what the church thinks and you can't wait until right before you get married, ask a couple who was married in the temple or some one who has received instruction about such matters from a bishop or someone like that.
great book.......2006-01-22
This book really opened my eyes on marital intimacy. I new that sex was supposed to be a special thing between you and your spouse, but I had no idea how much more it could be. I grew up in a good LDS family that taught me the gospel, but I was never taught how sex is between the husband, wife, and the lord and how sacred it is and how amazing it could be. I learned so much from this book and I am very glad that I read it.
Customer Reviews:
Not Best Book On the Topic.......2006-01-05
This book has merit but I have a mixed viewpoint about recommending it. [read my last line if don't read entire review]The book is primarily about Marital Sexual Intimacy and making such in Marriage a Unified and more holy entity/practice, by purifying ourselves and discarding what we have come to believe and been taught, preached and even practiced regarding sex, sexuality, and intimacy. It is written in an LDS religious and cultural viewpoint.
There are useful concepts including re-focusing marital sexual intimacy as a "holy sacrament" and striving to change it and us so it becomes a spiritual activity and experience. It also contains some new concepts (a few strange?) such as changing the "language" of sex/intimacy as it becomes more pure and unified with Holiness. Thus, the common description "having sex", which when it is more loving, would be called "making love". But by the principles taught in the book it progresses to the author's newly coined nomenclature of "co-creating love". A similar concept changes "Foreplay" to "Prelude". While this concept has merit, there should also be concern that we are just adding more euphemisms/generalities in nomenclature when more specifics might be more beneficial. It rings of the concepts of LDS teen morality talks when the speaker's message came out as "don't do, well, `you know", leaving the youth saying "what is `you know' and how do I really understand? No doubt "foreplay" is a term of "the world", but to me "Prelude" ("brief" music "playing" before church meeting starts) is more widely confused (humorously) with a successful automobile made by Honda; and that is not the image we need as my spouse and I engage in the preparatory/anticipatory activities (i.e. "foreplay") prior to our "co-creating you know". We can all conceptualize asking our spouse "honey, wanna have sex?", or "honey, lets make love", or maybe "honey, I would really like to co-create love with you", but can we conceptualize taking it forward to: "honey, would you care to `partake with me in becoming one flesh"? It seems over the top-or maybe not, perhaps labeling sex in such a religious activity frame is just what a couple needs to release barriers, and enable them to be more active in building this aspect of their marriage and intimacy.
I am Married,and to me the author has a serious credibility issue, as what wise person would prefer to be taking marriage advice from someone who is not, nor never was, and who has never been, married? She writes on pg 4: "Though I've never been married myself". For me, her studying the theories of marriage (her PhD) and talking marriage (couples/marriage therapy-therapist) while signficantly noteworthy, do not make up for the credibility lost for never actually doing so herself (being married-a rather widespread almost universal experience). The concept skirts on hypocrisy. Sex life advice from someone who has never had Sex or a Sex life herself? The author even comes clean on this point and is open and honest stating readers may think: "I'll bet [the author] wouldn't have written that if she [personally had the experience of being] married", and writing "You can chalk those ideas up to the sweet dreams of a never-married woman if you want" (pg. 9).
The author's story accounts of couples and their problems seems biased and unbalanced. A number of examples are gender neutral. Though my general findings identifed 10 male major examples vs. 15 accounts about women; in contrast, it was very clear to me, with the primary exception of accounts describing a wife having an adulterous affair, that the women's faults were diminished as minor, or of lesser seriousness and transgression, and in some cases with subtle message that "its not her fault". Whereas, it seemed the men's outlining failings or destructive behavior of men/husbands were described much more grievious matters or behaviors (Pornography, physical abuse, Anger, Abandonment), and certainly with the message that it "is all his fault" without like fair perspective of outside conditions or spouse's behaviors that contribute. Thus it impressed subtlely like the tone of feminist man bashing, or impressing that men are or in almost all cases, the fault, or much more at fault for lack of intimacy in marriage and that husband's faults are grievous, whereas women are rarely so at fault and if so, their fault is diminished in seriousness, etc). I do not know if it seems biased because the author is a woman, because I as a reader am a man, and/or some other factor. But, I would like to have seen or further ask: Where are the stories to match? Where her "omissions" are along with his "commissions"? Wive's destructive influences on the intimacy, such as where wives didn't control their motherly appetites and desires and passions, neglected their husbands/marriages, let themselves and their marriages be deunified by partaking of pro-feminism messages in afternoon TV talk shows, soaps and dramas, and women's magazines etc.? She does "hint" at this last point on pg. 59 (soaps/talk shows-women) but keeps it covert and does not develop the concept and certainly does not give the topic (nor others except wife-adultery) equal press, depth or focus to her portrayal of men's failings and transgressions.
A positive , pro-relationship building book on the topic, is "And they were not Ashamed" by Laura M. Brotherson. . Read that first before you ever consider buying "purity and passion".
Some good insights, but..........2005-07-27
Dr. Watson shares some fabulous insights in this book about becoming one. She has a large amount of experience from counseling and this is helpful. However, as an LDS author, writing to primarily and LDS audience, she presents many of her opinions as doctrine without any quotes or references from general authorities to substantiate her claims. If you can look past the declarations of doctrine there are some valuable points made in this book.
Average customer rating:
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Passion and Purity
Elisabeth Eliot
Manufacturer: Authentic Lifestyle
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General
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| Christianity
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ASIN: 1850781478 |
Product Description
In this powerfully insightful book, Carla Stephens reveals the meaning of, and God's original purpose for virginity. By showing girls that their mind is where virginity starts, readers will be ready to fight temptation by taking control of their thoughts. Through Scripture, personal testimony, and practical illustrations, she shatters the stigma of being a virgin and outlines the steps necessary to keep readers focused on God and all that He has for them.
Customer Reviews:
Book Description.......2004-05-08
From the Back Cover:
PURITY
She was Purity, a maddeningly beautiful woman who wanted to save herself for the one man she had always loved--the man who rescued her from the horror of the French Revolution, who found her a place in England's highest aristocracy and who refused, because of a painful secret in his past, to open his heart to her longings.
PASSION
And she was Passion, a woman who drove men wild with desire, who submitted to cruel tormentors, a blackmailer's demands, a hypnotist's powers and an innocent young man about to die. But she, while giving her body, steadfastly refused to give her heart.
ECSTASY
Average customer rating:
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Virtues Of The Flesh: Passion and Purity In Early Islamic Jurisprudence (Studies in Islamic Law and Society)
Zeev Maghen
Manufacturer: Brill Academic Publishers
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
General
| Interior Design
| Architecture
| Professional & Technical
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General
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| Home & Garden
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General
| Islam
| Religion & Spirituality
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Law
| Islam
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Islamic
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All Titles
| Qualifying Textbooks - Fall 2007
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ASIN: 9004140700 |
Average customer rating:
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Passion and Purity
Elisabeth Elliot
Manufacturer: Fleming H Revell Co
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Elliot, Elisabeth
| ( E )
| Authors, A-Z
| Religion & Spirituality
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: B000NY4AT0 |
Books:
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- Miracle Math: How to Develop a Calculator in Your Head (Flowmotion Book Ser.)
- Mona Lisa Overdrive
- Mostly Harmless
- My Teacher Is an Alien (My Teacher Books)
- Nebula Awards Showcase 2005 (Nebula Awards Showcase)
- Nightfall
- Number of the Beast
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