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Go Green Earth Central
Whole Earth Wellness Now
Love's Face
Eternal Dreamer
 
 
 
 

        

The Battle for Humankind's Survival Explodes!
Bryon Diamond and associates must battle climate change catastrophies, mutant beasts, and foreign agencies to rescue Dr. Shoshutzin, the inventor of the Green Gem, from the Russian Federation in time for the Green Gem to provide it's powerful life enhancing Sparks.  Can he delivier humanity from the snarling face of death?
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From Booklist
Mortality is much on the mind of the longtime chronicler of Michigan's Upper Peninsula, and in his new novel, he gives eloquent expression to death and the grieving process through the character of Donald. A man of few words, Donald suddenly finds himself compelled to spill out his family history after being diagnosed with Lou Gehrig's disease at the age of 45. His wife, Cynthia, sits at his side, recording his words for their two children. And the stories he tells about his Chippewa-Finnish father and grandfather, the "kind of people gone forever," are tales of restlessness and the hard work of mining and ranching. By contrast, his own life has been more centered, revolving around his marriage and children and his Anishnabeg religion, although he feels a powerful connection to his people through their mutual reverence for the natural world. He faces his death with the same dignity with which he has lived his life. As the narrative shifts to record how Donald's family members cope with their grieving in the year after his passing, Harrison sounds the themes he has been working out over the course of his long and prolific career, including the healing power of nature and the deep connection between the sensual and the spiritual. In the tradition of Louise Erdrich and Thomas McGuane, Harrison displays a seemingly effortless ability to present abstract issues in earthy, muscular prose. Joanne Wilkinson
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