Dr. Peter Scardino's Prostate Book
- 496 pages
- 18 hours of reading
A pioneering doctor tells how to beat the top three prostate problems and recover health and vitality.






A pioneering doctor tells how to beat the top three prostate problems and recover health and vitality.
A predator on the A self-proclaimed recovered child molester is the subject of Dana Saunders’s controversial talk show, Back Talk . Though Dana deftly handles the tangled debate over the possibility of real reform, by the end of the taping she’s certain her guest, whose identity is concealed by a disguise, is a very dangerous man. And perhaps a personal threat, as a staffer’s slip creates a breach in the wall of anonymity Dana has built to protect her adolescent daughter, Becky, a gifted violinist.A child in A rapist is operating in the area, preying on girls not yet in their teens. Firefighter Lennie Finn finds herself involved in the case when she comes to the aid of a distraught young victim, Kitty Dolan. Getting in deeper than she knows is wise, Lennie fights to put Kitty’s life back together—and to confront the painful secret she’s kept hidden for the attack that shattered her own childhood, and the emotional scars she still bears.A life in the Both women will risk everything to track down a human monster. But as they take each step in the direction of danger, the stakes keep rising. For the attacks are growing more violent, and coming closer together. And the rapist is nearing Dana’s posh New York home . . . and twelve-year-old Becky.
John Adams and Benjamin Rush were two remarkably different men who shared a devotion to liberty. Their dialogues on the implications of fame for their generation prove remarkably timely—even for the twenty-first century. Adams and Rush championed very different views on the nature of the American Revolution and of the republic established with the United States Constitution; yet they shared one of the most important correspondences of their time. John Adams and Benjamin Rush met in 1774 as members of the Continental Congress—Adams from Massachusetts, Rush from Pennsylvania. In 1805, after Adams was defeated in his quest of a second term as the new republic's second President, the two men self-consciously commenced an exchange of letters. Their recurring subject was fame. This emphasis on fame was crucial, Adams and Rush believed, because on the fame attached to individual leaders of the Revolutionary generation would depend the view of the Revolution and of the Constitution and republican government that would be embraced by generations to come, including our own. The new Liberty Fund edition of The Spur of Fame reproduces a text originally published by the Huntington Library. Douglass Adair (1912–1968) edited the William and Mary Quarterly from 1947 to 1955, and was a greatly influential professor and writer. Adair co-edited Origin and Progress of the American Rebellion with John A. Schutz in 1961.
Some fears you learn to live with. Some just might scare you to death. Kelman probes our darkest fears in a chilling tale of murder and deception in this riveting story about a doctor whose phobic patients die in the ways which scare them most.
Die aufwühlende Geschichte eines Alptraums: zwei Frauen im Kampf gegen die Gewalt eines Kinderschänders.
„Judith Kelman ist richtig gut!“ Mary Higgins Clark Talkmasterin Dana Saunders geht neue Wege und lädt einen „geheilten“ Sexualverbrecher in ihre Show ein. Bald darauf versetzt eine Mordserie an Kindern die Gegend in Angst und Schrecken. Dana und ihre Freundin Lennie versuchen alles, um dem Grauen ein Ende zu bereiten. Beide sind persönlich betroffen: Dana hat selbst eine Tochter, und Lennie kämpft gegen das Trauma einer lange zurückliegenden Vergewaltigung. „Schnell, spannend und äußerst unterhaltsam.“ Dean Koontz
Emily Archer a toujours craint son père, Hillard Fowler. Alors pour en finir avec son enfance, son passé et ce patriarche infernal, elle se rend une dernière fois à Ashby, petite localité du Massachusetts, où cet artiste de génie vient de décéder. En mourant après de longues années de folie, Hillard ne laisse autour de lui que ruine, malheur et mort. Dès son arrivée, Emily croit à un cauchemar. Son héritage semble compromis par de curieuses malversations. Ses enfants, qui l'accompagnent, paraissent terrorisés. Une voisine tyrannique tourmente et subjugue sa fille. Et puis, comble de l'angoisse, elle découvre cette lettre inquiétante dans les affaires paternelles, une lettre de menaces. De qui émane-t-elle ? Quelle malédiction pèse sur la famille d'Emily ?
Son nom, c'est Eldon Weir, dit " Ellie le Dingue " ou " Professeur Souffrance ". A douze ans, il a assassiné une de ses camarades de classe. Il a séjourné dans un centre de redressement, puis il a recommencé. Des meurtres avec mutilation. Des enfants. Des petites filles blondes et filiformes... jusqu'au jour où on l'a arrêté. Mais, vice de forme et coup du sort, il sort après douze ans de réclusion. Aujourd'hui, il commence sa conditionnelle. Les autorités ont tout prévu : elles l'ont installé dans une petite bourgade du Vermont. " Aucun danger ! " clament-elles. Aveugle, il est relié par une sorte de laisse à des appareils de contrôle et ne peut sortir de la propriété sans déclencher un concert d'alarmes. Pourtant, peu après son arrivée, une petite fille de onze ans, blonde et filiforme, disparaît...