Marcella Denise Spencer


Books

Just in Time    by Marcella Denise Spencer
Price: $4.99 USD. 60430 words. Published on March 12, 2012. Fiction.

Sheila Martin, a twenty-eight-year-old secretary living in Northern California, is convinced that every woman on the planet is better off than she is: better looking, thinner and richer. When Sheila first meets Hubert Daniels, she thinks he is gay. When he asks her out, she wonders what he wants. When he proposes marriage, Sheila vows to enjoy the ride while it lasts.
The Horus Women - Short Stories    by Marcella Denise Spencer
Price: $0.99 USD. 12600 words. Published on February 15, 2012. Fiction.

As the new monarch in Kham (ancient Egypt), Sobekkara Sobekneferu has two fears. One is that the noblemen in her court would murder her, because after all, she is a woman on a man's throne. Her second fear is the rise of the warriors, a class with the training and means to topple the throne if they wished to. Sobekkara enlists the aid of a sau, an amulet maker, who curses the monarch's scepter.
The Horus Scrolls - A Short Story    by Marcella Denise Spencer
Price: $0.99 USD. 10070 words. Published on February 15, 2012. Fiction.

Mariam Bayan, Professor of History at Cambridge University in England, is hired to translate an ancient Egyptian scroll. The parchment lists a royal dynasty, that never was, and a murder.
The Spiritual Root of Slavery    by Marcella Denise Spencer
Price: $4.99 USD. 17030 words. Published on February 15, 2012. Nonfiction.

Think about the word "slave" for a moment. What comes to mind? An African woman in rural Mississippi, balancing a basket of freshly picked cotton on her head, or a child struggling to carry tobacco leaf bushels in Virginia? These are images from the African slave trade from 1440-1870 AD.
And the Sons of Ham - Short Stories    by Marcella Denise Spencer
Price: $2.99 USD. 29920 words. Published on February 15, 2012. Fiction.

Cush, Mizraim, Phut and Canaan - all built long-lived kingdoms with their bare hands. Stone temples, massive pyramids, and palaces galore...but as the centuries unfolded, spiritual idolatry became an integral part of their cultures. Then, during the eighth century BC, God's servant Isaiah uttered a prophecy: the Hamites' idolatry would soon lead to chastisement.

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