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When the murder of Andy Cornell's brother is still unsolved after two and a half years, Andy enters Albuquerque's hidden worlds of cartel violence, street people, and Pueblo secrets to find justice. Andy is determined as a newspaper's police reporter to help the cold-case unit find a breakthrough on the murder of his detective brother. A former girlfriend, an ex-wife, a homeless man, a divorced ex-wife, and a Pueblo Indian seem unlikely allies, but they help him.
Military science fiction in which humans fight extinction in War of the Planet Burners, when remorseless aliens invade Earth in a near-future sci-fi novel. The Master Intelligence came to harvest what it needed from Earth. It sent its slave warriors to fight anyone who resisted. The aliens killed nearly all humans in an initial attack, and destroyed technology by eliminating electricity and nuclear weapons. That tactic had suppressed resistance on other planets. But humanity wouldn't give up
House guests might not have time to read a novel, but this collection of short stories in your guest bedroom will give them hours of reading one title at a time. Keep a copy in your guest bedroom, or leave it as a gift to friends who put you up for a night (or more) so they can share the collection with their future guests.
Sending missionaries to convert Native people in "discovered" lands to the conquerors' religion has been common on Earth for thousands of years. But how might Earth receive missionaries from another planet who arrived to convert Humans to the interplanetary religion? Missionaries from a planet 30 trillion miles away arrive on Earth. They conceal their reason for coming at first. Humans find the mysterious arrivals to be compelling, but they aren't sure why.
In this work Herrick dispels the myths and outright lies about Esteban. His biography emphasizes Esteban rather than the Spaniards whose exploits are often exaggerated and jingoistic in the sixteenth-century chronicles.
When Pueblo Indians say, "The first white man our people saw was a black man", they are referring to Esteban, who came to New Mexico in 1539. After centuries of negative portrayals, this book highlights Esteban's importance in America's early history.
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