All Cole has to do is survey the property, and find any areas of weakness the perimiter might have, posing a security risk. Cole is sent on an “easy” case… Just a quick recon of a property that is supposed to be abandoned. “Back In Black”, the next adventure in Cole McGinnis’ life, is even better than I could have imagined.Ĭole and Jae are now married, settled, and comfortable. Her prose takes me on roads that makes everything I can imagine come to life. I am a HUGE fan of Rhys Ford’s writing style. Related – Back in Black by Rhys Ford ePub
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Forced to confront the man who betrayed her, Tate must ask herself if it’s possible to do the wrong thing for the right reason… and whether “once in a lifetime” can come around twice. Yet here Sam is, the same charming, confident man she knew, but even more alluring than she remembered. When she steps onto the set of her first big break, he’s the last person she expects to see. So when it became clear her trust was misplaced, her world shattered for good.įourteen years later, Tate, now an up-and-coming actress, only thinks about her first love every once in a blue moon. Sam was the first, and only, person that Tate-the long-lost daughter of one of the world’s biggest film stars-ever revealed her identity to. Including her first heartbreak.ĭuring a whirlwind two-week vacation abroad, Sam and Tate fell for each other in only the way that first loves do: sharing all of their hopes, dreams, and deepest secrets along the way. Sam Brandis was Tate Jones’s first: Her first love. I discuss with particular emphases the Welsh Calvinistic Methodist movement, the antiquarian movement, the revived eisteddfod literary festival, and the influences of Welsh women in Welsh society and as Welsh mothers. I place the Blue Books in a larger nineteenth-century Welsh context, focusing especially on how rising rates of literacy and religiosity across the country countered the Blue Books’ primary claims. Through the Welsh language, the Blue Books also inveighed against Welsh motherhood, Wales’s increasing Nonconformity, and its recharged and growing literary culture. The Welsh language was the primary target, and it was deemed antiquated and unfit for commercial and imperial life. These factors were said to be compromising the country’s modernization while also, in more quiet ways, threatening British society more broadly. This essay considers the 1847 Reports of the Commissioners of Inquiry into the State of Education in Wales, better known as the “Blue Books,” which alleged that Wales’s Welsh-speaking population was benighted, immoral, superstitious, and barbarous, and in need of English-language education. |