The Mid-South Cartoonists Association's second comic anthology. Includes the work of several different artists living in Memphis, TN and surrounding areas.
The Mid-South Cartoonists Association's second comic anthology. Includes the work of several different artists living in Memphis, TN and surrounding areas.
The book is a social novel that tries to show the industrial North and its conflicts in the mid-19th century as seen by an outsider, a socially sensitive lady from the South. The story: the heroine,... More > Margaret Hale, is the daughter of a Nonconformist minister who moves to the fictional industrial town of Milton after leaving the Church of England. The town is modelled after Manchester, where Gaskell lived as the wife of a Unitarian minister.< Less
The first of a four part series by Marian Publications examining the great American conflict of the mid-19th century. A unique examination and presentation from a traditional Catholic historical... More > perspective wherein author Adam Miller examines the cultural, political, and circumstantial causes of what is known as the Civil War, and does so from the Catholic and biblical view of authority. He demonstrates that the idea of the "sovereignty of the people" does not justify the right of secession as most Southerners hold. But a true principle in accord with God's revelation and Natural Law does justify the Southern cause. This book explains what it is. Mr. Miller also addresses numerous questions such as:
- Who actually began the aggression?
- Who was constitutionally in the right?
- Was the war really fought over slavery as most
Americans think?
- Was it a "Civil War" in the true sense of the
term?
An eye-opening book that will cause a stir in many quarters< Less
The first of a four part series by Marian Publications examining the great American conflict of the mid-19th century. A unique examination and presentation from a traditional Catholic historical... More > perspective wherein author Adam Miller examines the cultural, political, and circumstantial causes of what is known as the Civil War, and does so from the Catholic and biblical view of authority. He demonstrates that the idea of the "sovereignty of the people" does not justify the right of secession as most Southerners hold. But a true principle in accord with God's revelation and Natural Law does justify the Southern cause. This book explains what it is. Mr. Miller also addresses numerous questions such as:
- Who actually began the aggression?
- Who was constitutionally in the right?
- Was the war really fought over slavery as most
Americans think?
- Was it a "Civil War" in the true sense of the
term?
An eye-opening book that will cause a stir in many quarters< Less