Bookbot

Steve Coleman

    Stephen B. Coleman, Jr. ist ein Autor, dessen vielfältige Lebenserfahrungen sein Schreiben durchdringen. In seinen Werken, die oft actionreiche Erzählungen beinhalten, teilt er seine Philosophie, sein Wissen und seine Leidenschaft für Menschen, das Leben und Abenteuer. Mit dem Glauben an den von Gott gegebenen freien Willen des Menschen, trotz Umständen und Einschränkungen Gutes zu tun, bringt er eine einzigartige Perspektive in seine Prosa ein. Coleman ist kein Akademiker, sondern ein großzügiger Lehrer, der seine Leser mit Begeisterung und Weisheit inspiriert.

    The End of Irish History?
    Talking method. Book 2
    The Navigator III
    That's Not My Lion
    • That's Not My Lion

      • 10 Seiten
      • 1 Lesestunde

      A mouse searches for his lion friend. On board pages.

      That's Not My Lion
      4,2
    • The Navigator III

      Repossession

      • 176 Seiten
      • 7 Lesestunden

      A former CIA agent and naval officer embarks on a daring mission to reclaim a spy ship from Havana, Cuba. Complications arise when his engineer and smuggler are arrested, jeopardizing the operation. Meanwhile, his girlfriend Mary, upset with his CIA involvement, visits Cuba as a tourist with her quirky friend Frances, leading them into unexpected trouble. Joe must navigate a blend of danger and humor as he races against time to rescue them while completing his mission.

      The Navigator III
    • The End of Irish History?

      Reflections on the Celtic Tiger

      • 224 Seiten
      • 8 Lesestunden

      Ireland appears to be in the throes of a remarkable process of social change. The purpose of this book is to systematically scrutinize the interpretations and prescriptions that inform the deceptively simple metaphor of the "Celtic Tiger." The standpoint of the book is that a more critical approach to the course of development being followed by the Republic is urgently required. The essays collected here set out to expose the fallacies that drive the fashionable rhetoric of Tigerhood. Four of these fallacies--that Ireland has cast off the chains of economic dependency, that everyone is benefiting from the economic recovery, that personal freedom and liberty are at an unprecedented level for all citizens, and that Ireland is also experiencing a period of strong cultural renaissance--are vigorously challenged.

      The End of Irish History?