Books tagged: omar

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Found: 4 results

A Friend Made Me Remember    by Paul Bennett
Price: $3.99 USD. 28200 words. Published on January 4, 2010. .

Poems from the heart, mind and soul of Paul Bennett that will climb into your heart and grip your being. His words will lyrically touch each of your senses and passionately stroke your soul. He reveals strong feelings for family, children, his pride as a black man, respect for black women and compassion for people. He expresses unique racial empathy and political insight, not politically correct.
The Other Side of the Gun    by Paul Bennett
Price: $6.95 USD. 113830 words. Published on January 8, 2010. .

This is a western about Trace Jackson a black gunfighter in the late 1870's. A stop in Colter Junction forces a fight and he kills the two sons of the man who owns the town. Wounded Trace flee's with a posse in pursuit. He is saved by an Apache maiden, but has no idea that dark vengeance is tracking him in the malevolent form of Mitchell Colter, leader of the most dangerous gang in Arizona.
The Khayyam: Love & Life & Spirit    by Sadik Yalsizucanlar
Price: $9.99 USD. 29790 words. Published by Timas Yayin Grubu  on January 28, 2011. .

A novel telling the story of the poet Omar Khayyam, "Khayyam" harnesses a literary oblivion into a slim volume. Yalsızuçanlar a narrow spiral staircase downward into the mind of one of the great geniuses of the east. In a cryptic style of cutting-edge Turkish literature, this text becomes more complex as subtleties which were previously lost in the corner of the reader’s eye are illuminated.
The Secrets of Freemasonry    by Elijah Muhammad
Price: $4.99 USD. 9200 words. Published by Secretarius MEMPS on August 8, 2011. .

Freemasonry is a cloaked mystery, baptised in symbolism; consequently, to get a clear understanding is virtually unattainable, because regardless of your finding, it will only manifest that you have still been eluded. When dealing with speculative symbolism, the concrete is not part of the equation whatsoever. Elijah Muhammad demystifies this with simplistic clarity. This is true light.