James H. Davis Reihenfolge der Bücher
Dieser Autor taucht in die dunklen Ecken der Genres Horror und Fantasy ein, oft mit einem Hauch von Science-Fiction. Seine Werke erkunden ungewöhnliche und häufig humorvolle Situationen, die vielleicht aus seiner Vorliebe für Logikrätsel und Spiele herrühren. Mit einer ausgeprägten, leicht schelmischen Weltsicht zieht er die Leser in Geschichten voller Überraschungen und unerwarteter Wendungen.






- 2022
- 2022
Driving a shift in the way we think about entrepreneurial and teacher education, this book invites teachers to think and act as entrepreneurial innovators and lead meaningful change in everyday school contexts.
- 2020
Club Q is a book of mid-American yearning for both exceptionalism and belonging. Beginning as a coming-out narrative, the poems track the story of a gay boy growing up in Colorado Springs, under the spectres of the U.S. military, megachurch Christianity, and chain-restaurant capitalism. As the speaker ages, he examines his complicity in his isolation and struggles to define community on his own terms. Through formal invention, high- and low-culture references, and deep wordplay, Club Q invites the reader to inhabit the precise imprecision of our human situation.
- 2018
The Cream Packard
- 128 Seiten
- 5 Lesestunden
A collection of viewpoints all centring in one fabulous place, The Cream Packard is a rounded tale of scandal and manipulation in the golden era of fifties America. Nick Carter, an impressionable young man, leaves South London and travels to Excelsior in beautiful Minnesota for a family wedding. It's only two weeks. How much can a man change?
- 2018
Eric Walrond
- 440 Seiten
- 16 Lesestunden
- 2017
Forbearance
- 240 Seiten
- 9 Lesestunden
Offers a faithful, constructive way to deal with dissent What happens when we approach disagreement not as a problem to solve but as an opportunity to practice Christian virtue? In this book James Calvin Davis reclaims the biblical concept of forbearance to develop a theological ethic for faithful disagreement. Pointing to Ephesians and Colossians, in which Paul challenged his readers to "bear with each other" in spite of differences, Davis draws out a theologically grounded practice in which Christians work hard to maintain unity while still taking seriously matters on which they disagree. The practice of forbearance, Davis argues, offers Christians a dignified, graceful, and constructive way to deal with conflict. Forbearance can also strengthen the church's public witness, offering an antidote to the pervasive divisiveness present in contemporary culture.
- 1994