Plain text ebooks from the authors and publishers at Smashwords. They lack much formatting, but they're readable on virtually anything.
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Change of Heart: A Black Man A White Woman A Heart Transplant, and A True Love Story | by Mitchell Fink Dec. 12, 2011 | $2.99 | 26906 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Mitchell Fink is a celebrated journalist and writer best known for his three decades of breaking stories at the New York Daily News, People magazine, the Los Angeles Herald Examiner, CNN, Fox and CBS. He is also the author of The Last Days of Dead Celebrities and the co-author of the New York Times bestselling book, Never Forget: An Oral History of September 11, 2001. Fink became like a brother to Robert Dunn during last two years of his life, absorbing his journey, from his childhood experiences of racism to his membership in the Nation of Islam and its world of black supremacy and beyond through college and law school, and eventually to the crushing realization that the enemy all along was the enemy within. He spent more than a year with Dorothy’s family, chronicling her story. |
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True Life - The Soldier who Served Under Three Flags | by Brian Comerford Dec. 03, 2011 | Free! | 1228 words | Read a sample |
| Author bio: Resident in Ireland, Brian Comerford has written for the theatre, screen, audio dramas and poetry. Please come back to Brian's Smashwords pages as new work is constantly being added. |
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Who am I Really? | by Anna Rosenburg Oct. 12, 2011 | $6.95 | 36952 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Anna Rosenburg was brought up by her father in a two-room flat in north west London. Life was simple but happy, and though adopted she was healthy, loved and secure. Then one day when she was seven years old, a neighbour across the road and told her she was taking her for a ride in the country. It was a one-way trip. The woman, a right-thinking pillar of society who felt it wasn’t appropriate for a little girl to be brought up by a poor father on his own, had arranged for her to live in a Barnardo’s home a 90-minute journey away. The devastation of this betrayal and the loss of regular contact with her father destroyed Anna’s young world. She became desperately unhappy and insecure and started to rebel against the strict regime. Her misery was compounded by her confusion over her own identity. What did her black skin mean? Why wasn’t it the same colour as her father’s? Anna remained a Barnardos’ child until she was 19 years old, only finally securing her freedom by seeking work abroad. After her return to the UK she stayed at a YMCA hostel, where she was raped by another inmate. After a variety of jobs ranging from cleaning and nursing to working in a zoo, Anna married a well-bred Englishman who turned out to be a violent alcoholic. She finally left him, taking their two young children, and made a new life for herself in Jamaica, where at last she felt the colour of her skin made her fit in. But her new life was not to last – she had to flee back home to England to escape political rebellion and rioting. Back home, Anna got a job with the Salvation Army helping to resettle homeless people. Today she lives and works in Bristol, helping people who have been in care to cope with social and other issues. |
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In Black In White | by L.T. Woody Aug. 19, 2011 | $3.99 | 104902 words | Sample 15% |
| Author bio: Larry (L.T.) Woody is native of Baltimore, MD and a product of the very mean streets of Harlem Park on Baltimore’s West Side. At the age of 13, through an academic scholarship program called A Better Chance (ABC) he received a scholarship to attend the prestigious St. Paul’s Episcopal School in Concord, NH. His boarding school education was a life altering experience for him, one of the most pivotal in his life. From there, he went on to receive a B.S. degree in 1976 in Therapeutic Recreation from Temple University in Philadelphia, PA. After that, some real-life drama began. Woody spent a few summers working at Variety Club Camp for Disabled Children in Worcester, PA and for two years, he was an Educational Associate (non-classroom teacher) for the Baltimore City Schools. However, a few years before, a chance audition and subsequent portrayal of Jesus in a college production of the play Godspell had given him the acting bug, and in 1981, he moved from Philadelphia to NYC to pursue acting. Woody became a member of SAG and AFTRA. His very first professional on-screen scene was as a doctor in a scene with John Travolta in the film Blowout. While looking for work as an actor, Woody worked at Windows On the World restaurant on the 107th Floor, Tower One World Trade Center (sigh). He also worked as a house manager at the NYC Negro Ensemble Company, where he saw many now prominent black actors begin their careers. For nearly fifteen years, Woody performed in numerous television commercials, print, voiceover, film, stage, etc. Some of his favorite roles include Carlyle in Streamers, Dracula, Henry in Ed Shockley’s Liars’ Contest, and Cowboy in Steve Yeager’s independent film The Connection. In 1993, he became a father, and stayed at home for the next three years serving as the primary care giver to his son Colin, an invaluable experience. Woody has full custody of his son now, and views his role as a father as probably his biggest role to date. Out of his experiences caring for his son, came a five-year stint as a Lead Teacher in the infant room of a corporate day care center; an anomaly in a profession where there are few men. Woody then began working for a national pediatric literacy program called Reach Out and Read at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP), encouraging a love of books in children aged 0-5 years old. He worked for the Early Head Start program at CHOP as an Infant Toddler Specialist doing home visits, helping disadvantaged families with child development activities for their children, and now works with Focus on Fathers, an initiative to get fathers involved in the lives of their children. Woody enjoys playing guitar and songwriting. He has written more than fifty original songs and has performed his songs on the streets and in the clubs of Philadelphia, Baltimore, in Washington Square in NYC and NYC open stages, including the stage at Gerde’s Folk City, where musicians like Hendrix and Bob Dylan once played. Woody has also written a play with (original) music called Rockaway, based on a fictional Hendrix-like rock musician, which received a workshop production at Columbia University in 1983. He has written short stories, most of which have been lost, but he very much enjoys that medium. IN BLACK IN WHITE is Woody’s first book. He is currently researching his next book about his experiences working with disadvantaged men, women and children in Philadelphia. "What a long strange trip it’s been!" |
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When God Made Martin Luther King Jr. Smile: The Man, The Leader, The Dreamer | by LOVE WORKS Aug. 18, 2011 | $1.99 | 2586 words | Sample 5% |
| Author bio: Raymond Sturgis a author by talent and trendsetter by day. Raymond Sturgis has so many books that have touched the hearts of so many people. Mr. Sturgis is on a mission of breaking the Guinness Book of records for most books published in a year. Although the record is important, however, nothing pleases him more than sharing quality work with people all over the world. |
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All about Charlie Chaplin | by Raja Sharma Aug. 11, 2011 | $1.50 | 8548 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Raja Sharma M.Sc.(Physics), M.Tech.(Metallurgy),M.A.(English), is a retired college lecturer. He has taught English Literature to University students for more than two decades. His students are scattered all over the world, and it is noticeable that he is in contact with more than ninety thousand of his students. |
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Mahendra Lal Bose, The Great Philanthropist | by Sandip Mitra July 29, 2011 | Free! | 2409 words | Read a sample |
| Author bio: I am a Ph. D. in History from the University of Calcutta, a free lance journalist and a researcher on history of Bengal, especially its tradition, culture, economic transition and great personalities. |
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Can Anything Good Come From Englewood | by Hannah Faye July 05, 2011 | $0.99 | 8190 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: I was born in Chicago, Illinois. My love and passion will always be there even though my feet may take me some where else. I became a teacher, hoping it would assist me in my goal to make the world a better place. But after spending nearly seven years in the public school setting I realized pushing papers wasn't going to do it. Read my story in "Thirteen Years Old in the Fourth Grade," a ventilation on my experience. Now I am spreading my love through writing as an author and fictional biographer. I want to encourage, bring truth, realization, and awe to all my readers. |
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While I Run This Race | by Pocahontas Gertler July 04, 2011 | $4.99 | 92876 words | Sample 12% |
| Author bio: Pocahontas Gertler, MEd, born in the Deep South, got her primary and secondary education in Georgia and Florida, and graduated from National College with a BA in Sociology. She later went on to earn her Masters Degree from Chestnut Hill College. As a student, she helped integrate a college in a segregated environment. She has been a social worker, a chaplain's assistant in the United States Air Force, a trained singer of classical music, a mother, a lecturer, a teacher, an entrepreneur and an author. Now retired and living in Northern Arizona, Pocahontas and her husband Gene have devoted much of their time to volunteer work on two Indian reservations in Arizona. |
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Latinalogue, Puerto Rican Nonfiction Part I | by Odilia Rivera-Santos June 27, 2011 | $2.99 | 13530 words | Sample 5% |
| Author bio: Odilia Rivera Santos was born in Arecibo, Puerto Rico and moved to the Bronx at six years of age. She holds a degree in Comparative Literature, with a minor in Creative Writing, from Smith College. Her fiction, nonfiction, and poetry, in Spanish and English have appeared in various print and online magazines. Ms. Rivera-Santos is a writer, editor, translator and creative writing instructor. She lives in New York City and is thinking of getting a teacup chihuahua. |
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The Devil's Waiting Room | by berry burgess June 23, 2011 | $1.99 | 41169 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Few people, least of all myself, would have thought that after nearly 30 years in the advertising business I would end up owning my own design agency Armadillo Creative on the very playground I ran on when I was an innocent child the Fish Quay in North Shields. The River Tyne has witnessed many changes through the years: from the demise of the once proud fishing fleets and the mighty Swan Hunters to the erection of designer Quayside luxury apartments and the influx of new style progressive businesses and developments. The Devils Waiting Room started out as playful meanderings through one summer in 1969, the last summer before the ‘gang’ broke up and went off in different directions to secondary schools. It was time of innocence and change. Racism was very strong and had an iron grip on Shields, and coming from one of the few coloured families in the town that isolation and undercurrent was a major factor in my childhood. The late sixties was a time for change, and when you’re young and three-foot-odd it seems too big and of no relevance to pocket money and comics. Where are my friends now? Who knows? Many may have left the area for good. When I was 15 I ran away from my foster parents and went to London; but something dragged me back to North Shields a few day later. That magnet has kept me here ever since, and I’m proud of my small town. I still live in North Shields with my beautiful and understanding wife Judi, and I have two children although not that small; Rachel who is a Director at Armadillo and keeps me on a short leash, and my son Lewis who from being a cute innocent bundle of fun, since becoming a teenager now just engages in a dialogue of grunts and snorts in-between sequences of Gears of War and Call of Duty. Both grew up in my childhood playground but neither ran with such freedom or the wind on their faces like I did many years ago. For that I am blessed. Few people, least of all myself, would have thought that after nearly 30 years in the advertising business I would end up owning my own design agency Armadillo Creative on the very playground I ran on when I was an innocent child the Fish Quay in North Shields. The River Tyne has witnessed many changes through the years: from the demise of the once proud fishing fleets and the mighty Swan Hunters to the erection of designer Quayside luxury apartments and the influx of new style progressive businesses and developments. The Devils Waiting Room started out as playful meanderings through one summer in 1969, the last summer before the ‘gang’ broke up and went off in different directions to secondary schools. It was time of innocence and change. Racism was very strong and had an iron grip on Shields, and coming from one of the few coloured families in the town that isolation and undercurrent was a major factor in my childhood. The late sixties was a time for change, and when you’re young and three-foot-odd it seems too big and of no relevance to pocket money and comics. Where are my friends now? Who knows? Many may have left the area for good. When I was 15 I ran away from my foster parents and went to London; but something dragged me back to North Shields a few day later. That magnet has kept me here ever since, and I’m proud of my small town. I still live in North Shields with my beautiful and understanding wife Judi, and I have two children although not that small; Rachel who is a Director at Armadillo and keeps me on a short leash, and my son Lewis who from being a cute innocent bundle of fun, since becoming a teenager now just engages in a dialogue of grunts and snorts in-between sequences of Gears of War and Call of Duty. Both grew up in my childhood playground but neither ran with such freedom or the wind on their faces like I did many years ago. For that I am blessed. |
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HIDDEN GENIUS,Frank Mann, the Black Engineer Behind Howard Hughes | by H.T. Bryer May 12, 2011 | $5.99 | 26638 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: 5.0 out of 5 stars Brings light to one of the heroes of modern aviation, highly recommended, June 12, 2011 By Midwest Book Review (Oregon, WI USA) - This review is from: Hidden Genius (Paperback) Racism has withheld credit where credit is due. "Hidden Genius: Frank Mann, The Black Engineer Behind Howard Hughes" looks at one of the many minds behind the success of Howard Hughes. A lifelong friend of Hughes, Mann worked well with Hughes to help Hughes forward many sciences, and his credentials are not with Hughes alone, serving in World War II and instructing the Tuskegee Airmen. Written by a friend of Mann, "Hidden Genius" brings light to one of the heroes of modern aviation, highly recommended. |
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Doorways to Significance: Finding Peace, Power, Passion | by Pat Holland Conner April 01, 2011 | $4.99 | 46778 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Pat Holland Conner, writer, family therapist and substance abuse counselor, lives in Reno. She is owner of Peaceful Path Consulting, established to promote local education, self-growth and awareness events. She teaches self-esteem classes and has worked as a counselor, trainer and educator in USA, Asia and the Middle East. Pat spends most of her time writing, traveling, networking and attending personal retreats. |
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The Sudden Death Of Michael Jackson: The Coroner's Report and Other Medical Facts About The Causes Of | by Andrew Dolan March 10, 2011 | $3.99 | 23601 words | Sample 7% |
| Author bio: Andrew Dolan is the author of several nonfiction books |
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As The Waffle Burns | by Jay M Horne March 04, 2011 | $7.99 | 15439 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Jay grew up in a wealthy family as a young child. His parents however would see to it that their kids attended public school so that they would not feel they were better than the other children. As a boy, jay was particularly neat. He always had things planned out, or a schedule to stay fit, but never let those qualities interfere with his over active imagination. He started writing at the age of ten. Tall tales he would construct from movies he would see or stories he would hear from his father. As he grew into a teenager his family settled quaintly into southern middle class, and his father's work abroad would have them move many times among the South East United States. This gypsy like attribute to his teen years colored him culturally, as he was forced to change high schools more than 4 times. At 17 his interest in school work had dimiinshed completely and he was already a budding entrepeneur. Getting his G.E.D. and serving in the U.S. Navy along side BuDS class 243 was but one adventure of his youth. Constantly he stayed engulfed in the art ninjutsu and practical Earth magics. Tinkering in phoilosopshy and religion, and finding adequate similarities across the globe, though gaping distances separated their past, he became intrigued in connecting these strange occurences. His writting career, especially his earliest works, reflects this in every sense. From works on martial arts to joke books, he genuinely longs to bring humanity into harmony on the planet, and see in his lifetime the world speaking with a single voice of praise and love. |
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El Rufián Ambulante | by Karlheinz Paulsen Jan. 19, 2011 | $2.95 | 6203 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Karlheinz Paulsen is the nom de plume of an expert on the expat scene found on Margarita Island who publishes partially fictitious biographies of the characters he meets. His inspiration to put pen to paper came after several encounters with these colorful characters ended with him holding the short end of the stick, which led him to believe that newbies should be offered a realistic impression of what their fellow islanders are capable of. Sometimes, in the interest of storytelling, it proved necessary to add second-hand information, but care was taken in such cases to ensure that the sources were reliable. Karlheinz Paulsen is a dyed-in-the-wool ‘Margariteño’, constantly on the lookout for the marooned and the shipwrecked of Europe, on the ready to chronicle their follies. |
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Der Strizzi | by Karlheinz Paulsen Jan. 19, 2011 | $2.95 | 5650 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Karlheinz Paulsen is the nom de plume of an expert on the expat scene found on Margarita Island who publishes partially fictitious biographies of the characters he meets. His inspiration to put pen to paper came after several encounters with these colorful characters ended with him holding the short end of the stick, which led him to believe that newbies should be offered a realistic impression of what their fellow islanders are capable of. Sometimes, in the interest of storytelling, it proved necessary to add second-hand information, but care was taken in such cases to ensure that the sources were reliable. Karlheinz Paulsen is a dyed-in-the-wool ‘Margariteño’, constantly on the lookout for the marooned and the shipwrecked of Europe, on the ready to chronicle their follies. |
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The Strizzi | by Karlheinz Paulsen Jan. 19, 2011 | $2.95 | 7040 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Karlheinz Paulsen is the nom de plume of an expert on the expat scene found on Margarita Island who publishes partially fictitious biographies of the characters he meets. His inspiration to put pen to paper came after several encounters with these colorful characters ended with him holding the short end of the stick, which led him to believe that newbies should be offered a realistic impression of what their fellow islanders are capable of. Sometimes, in the interest of storytelling, it proved necessary to add second-hand information, but care was taken in such cases to ensure that the sources were reliable. Karlheinz Paulsen is a dyed-in-the-wool ‘Margariteño’, constantly on the lookout for the marooned and the shipwrecked of Europe, on the ready to chronicle their follies. |
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Sitting On The Gatepost: The Story Of Zora Neale Hurston | by Waln Brown Jan. 05, 2011 | $4.99 | 4851 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Waln K. Brown was born in York, Pennsylvania, October, 1944, a "surprise" child of ill-matched parents who did the "right thing" and got married. For the next 11 years, they fought constantly, creating an unhealthy environment that adversely affected Waln emotionally and behaviorally. Rejected by his father for "ruining his life," and confused by his mother's obsessive-compulsive disorder of washing him in her "crazy clean" solution of Lysol and ammonia, Waln began a pattern of acting out that led to placement in an orphanage, juvenile detention home, state psychiatric hospital and juvenile reform school. A terrible student who spent eighth grade in special education and failed the ninth grade, Waln earned an A.S. degree from York College of Pennsylvania, B.S. from the Pennsylvania State University (summa cum laude) and M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Pennsylvania. He held positions with the Pennsylvania Department of Education, the National Center for Juvenile Justice and the Orthogenic School at the University of Chicago. Waln is the CEO of the William Gladden Foundation, and the author of over 230 books, scholarly articles and popular publications about youth and family issues. |
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Satchmo: The Story of Louis Armstrong | by Waln Brown Jan. 04, 2011 | $4.99 | 5051 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Waln K. Brown was born in York, Pennsylvania, October, 1944, a "surprise" child of ill-matched parents who did the "right thing" and got married. For the next 11 years, they fought constantly, creating an unhealthy environment that adversely affected Waln emotionally and behaviorally. Rejected by his father for "ruining his life," and confused by his mother's obsessive-compulsive disorder of washing him in her "crazy clean" solution of Lysol and ammonia, Waln began a pattern of acting out that led to placement in an orphanage, juvenile detention home, state psychiatric hospital and juvenile reform school. A terrible student who spent eighth grade in special education and failed the ninth grade, Waln earned an A.S. degree from York College of Pennsylvania, B.S. from the Pennsylvania State University (summa cum laude) and M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Pennsylvania. He held positions with the Pennsylvania Department of Education, the National Center for Juvenile Justice and the Orthogenic School at the University of Chicago. Waln is the CEO of the William Gladden Foundation, and the author of over 230 books, scholarly articles and popular publications about youth and family issues. |
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Still I Rise: The Story of Maya Angelou | by Waln Brown Jan. 03, 2011 | $4.99 | 4320 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Waln K. Brown was born in York, Pennsylvania, October, 1944, a "surprise" child of ill-matched parents who did the "right thing" and got married. For the next 11 years, they fought constantly, creating an unhealthy environment that adversely affected Waln emotionally and behaviorally. Rejected by his father for "ruining his life," and confused by his mother's obsessive-compulsive disorder of washing him in her "crazy clean" solution of Lysol and ammonia, Waln began a pattern of acting out that led to placement in an orphanage, juvenile detention home, state psychiatric hospital and juvenile reform school. A terrible student who spent eighth grade in special education and failed the ninth grade, Waln earned an A.S. degree from York College of Pennsylvania, B.S. from the Pennsylvania State University (summa cum laude) and M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Pennsylvania. He held positions with the Pennsylvania Department of Education, the National Center for Juvenile Justice and the Orthogenic School at the University of Chicago. Waln is the CEO of the William Gladden Foundation, and the author of over 230 books, scholarly articles and popular publications about youth and family issues. |
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Sacred Journey | by Red Jordan Arobateau Dec. 18, 2010 | $8.00 | 140228 words | Sample 50% |
| Author bio: Red Jordan Arobateau is an artist/writer who lives and works in San Francisco. He paints in acrylics & oils. See Blurb.com for his art books A Small Retrospect Of My Art Paintings, #1, Statement Of The Art -- Retrospect #2, and Desire Of Art -- Retrospect #3. Go to Amazon.com and Lulu.com for 80-titles of his books (novels, plays, short story, & poetry collections. and Journals). Red is a person of mixed-race heritage, including African-American, Native, & Hispanic; a transgender man, an Outsider Artist with little formal training. He is 65 years old. Red is an inspired soul. He attends church & temple infrequently, from which he draws great encouragement. |
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Catwalk Supermodel | by Keith Hoare Dec. 02, 2010 | $1.50 | 97738 words | Sample 20% |
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EEOC: The Real Deal - Do They Really Support Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act? | by Phillip Duse Sr. Nov. 17, 2010 | $6.99 | 188726 words | Sample 10% |
| Author bio: The author is a native of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and a U.S. Army Chief Warrant Officer (CW2) Retired. He traveled extensively throughout the U.S. Europe and Asia, and attended five universities during off duty hours State side and during overseas assignments. The effort earned in excess of 100 credit hours resulting in the award of an AA degree from the "University of Maryland" European Division. After retiring from the US Army, his initial civilian employment was as a logistical supervisor with "Bendix Field Engineering" outside of Baltimore Md. Then he held a Government position, Property Administrator with the Defense Logistics Agency's Contract Management Command, Silver Springs, Md. Next assignment was with the US Navy's Naval Air Systems Command, VA, where he served as the senior Property Manager. Then he returned to the Defense Logistics Agency's Contract Management Command employed in the "Special contract [Black Box] office, retiring from Government employment in 1997. He continued his writing education through completion of courses offered by the "Institute of Children's Literature" and a Free Lance Writing Course offered by "Hardcourt Learning Direct" before publishing his first book "Phil Duse Versus the Tyranny of DOD/DOJ and its Intelligence and Investigative Agencies". He has written or contributed to authorship of several logistics related manuals, published by the Department of Defense. He is also the author of "EEOC: The Real Deal" (Equal Employment Opportunity Commission) and "New Short Stories and Three Hand Pinochle" before authoring this book "False Color of Authority" all published by Xlibris. Phillip Duse is the author of "EEOC: The Real Deal - Do They Really Support Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act?, "False Color of Authority - Government Hit Men" and "US Government Quacks and Dolts - Engaging in Defamation/Entrapment Strategies to Get Phil Duse." |
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The Gordons of Tallahassee | by Sarah Weathersby Oct. 04, 2010 | $2.99 | 16321 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Sarah Gordon Weathersby is a graduate of Drew University in Madison, NJ. She holds an MBA from Meredith College in Raleigh, NC. She is a retired Information Technology professional. Sarah lives in Raleigh with her husband, when they are not traveling from Agadir to Maui, riding camels or bicycles. |
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Inside Out: Book One | by Rae McCall Sep. 23, 2010 | $5.99 | 15160 words | Sample 10% |
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God Has Smiled on Me: A Tribute to a Black Father Who Stayed and a Tribute to All Black Fathers Who Stay | by Daniel Whyte III March 30, 2010 | $2.99 | 26708 words | Sample 30% |
| Author bio: Daniel Whyte III has spoken in meetings across the United States and in twenty-three foreign countries. He is the author of ten books. He is the President of Torch Ministries International, which publishes a magazine called The Torch Leader. He is also the chairman of the National Association to Save Young Black Men. He holds a Bachelor's Degree in Theology from Bethany Divinity College and a degree in Religion from Texas Wesleyan University. He is married to the former Meriqua Althea Dixon, of Christiana, Jamaica. God has blessed their union with seven children. |
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Journey of Hope, Memoirs of a Mexican Girl | by Rosalina Rosay Feb. 28, 2010 | $12.95 | 40682 words | Sample 13% |
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Black Not Blind | by Bryant K. Smith Jan. 05, 2010 | $5.95 | 21502 words | Sample 25% |
| Author bio: For more than two decades Bryant K. Smith has been teaching people to tap into their potential in order to maximize their work, school, athletic, or personal experiences for the benefit of themselves, their community, team, or organization. A seasoned college administrator and professor Bryant is an expert at helping people examine issues of difference. Bryant has spoken and presented at hundreds of national conferences, colleges, universities, and corporate events. |
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Is Your Father Black ? | by Joseph Baraba Sep. 24, 2009 | $0.99 | 35641 words | |
| Author bio: Author Joseph Frank Baraba was born in Brooklyn, New York. He has been writing for the past thirty years. His next two books to be published are: " Clara Lyaten - The Chelsea Murders and " Visions Of Freedom" |
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