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Karen Lacey

    This author delves into fiction with a passion where his heart and soul reside. His extensive global travel experiences, including seven years as a wildlife photographer in southern Africa and periods spent in London, Spain, Australia, and Argentina, likely inform his writing. Having honed skills in non-fiction, from financial analysis to self-help books, he now masters the craft of fiction. A graduate of a prestigious writing workshop and author of several novels, his current work promises a deep and engaging read.

    A class apart
    The Orphan Gospels: Reflections on Orphan Care and Ministry to the Poor
    • What makes a country like Haiti so poor? Why are there so many orphanages? What can those of us from a place a privilege do to help in a country where the poverty seems relentless, systemic, and complicated? Are there better options than building more orphanages to help children in poverty? All of these questions and more are addressed in Shelley’s newest book, “The Orphan Gospels” where she wrestles with the complicated solutions to child abandonment and orphan care in an attempt to bring hope to the plight of the orphan both in Haiti and worldwide.

      The Orphan Gospels: Reflections on Orphan Care and Ministry to the Poor
    • A class apart

      • 244 pages
      • 9 hours of reading

      The military man has long been one of literature’s archetypal figures. Using a comparative framework, this book traces the transformation of the military man in eighteenth-century British and French literature as this figure moved from noble warrior to nationalised professional in response to changes within the military structure, the role of empire and the impact of an expanding middle class. The author examines the way in which the masculinity of the military man was reimagined at a time when older models of military service persisted alongside emerging models of patriotic nationalism, inspired by bourgeois morality, the cult of sensibility and a new understanding of the role of violence in both public and private domains. Through a corpus of canonical and lesser-known literature, the book explores the military man’s relationship to the state and to his fellow citizens, even in the domestic setting. With the role of the «nobleman» in decline, the military man, not a «civilian» and no longer associated with the ‘aristocrat’, became a separate class of man.

      A class apart