Books tagged: gibraltar

The adult filter is active; content marked as adults-only by the author is not listed.

Full Search
Found: 4 results

Warren! The Bond of Brotherhood    by Colin Macdonald
Price: $9.99 USD. 64720 words. Published on May 7, 2010. .

General Sir Charles Warren's incredible adventures and struggles, which he undertook in true Masonic spirit, and how he managed to change the world as we know it, through the invisible Bond of Brotherhood... An example of Masonic leadership, to inspire Freemasons all over the world to look into the strengths of our organization and acknowledge the moral support received from our Brotherhood.
Train Time    by J. Daniel Sawyer
Price: $0.99 USD. 2840 words. Published by AWP Books  on June 14, 2011. .

You've seen him before: the man sitting at the airport or the train station, waiting for someone who will come...sometime. And you wondered, "Who is he waiting for?" Have you ever met someone who took your breath away, only to realize it was because you breathed the same air? Maybe that's who he's waiting for. Spending his days and nights in the station waiting...for Train Time.
My Father's America - Volume One - The New World    by Walter Lorenz
Price: $4.99 USD. 171800 words. Published on July 12, 2011. .

The first of an eight book series by the late Walter Lorenz about the history of America. The first volume begins by focusing on the formation of the continent, the migration of the Cro-Magnon, and the vast array of Native Americans. Also a look at the world outside the continent. It continues with the voyage of Columbus and those that followed, with special focus on the Conquistadors.
My Father's America - Volume Two - The Colonies    by Walter Lorenz
Price: $4.99 USD. 175370 words. Published on November 7, 2011. .

England was ready. Of all the nations in Europe, 17th-century England was most peculiarly suited to succeed in peopling the North American continent. This was a strange turn of events. England had been the very last of the Western powers to show any kind of interest in the world beyond Europe. Yet once they got started, the English were destined to succeed in the most spectacular way.