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Jay Stringer

    Jay Stringer crée des romans noirs percutants, des comédies sombres et de la fiction sociale. Abordant l'écriture comme une seconde langue, son style est façonné par les bandes dessinées, la musique, l'humour et son expérience de la dyslexie. Ses récits explorent les profondeurs politiques et criminelles de la société, examinant les aspects les plus sombres de la nature humaine. La voix singulière de Stringer offre aux lecteurs un regard cru et sans concession sur la vie contemporaine.

    Old Gold
    Unwanted: How Sexual Brokenness Reveals Our Way to Healing
    • Outreach magazine 2018 Resource of the Year--Counseling & Relationships Unwanted: How Sexual Brokenness Reveals Our Way to Healing is a ground-breaking resource that explores the "why" behind self-destructive sexual choices. The book is based on research from over 3,800 men and women seeking freedom from unwanted sexual behavior, be that the use of pornography, an affair, or buying sex. Jay Stringer's (M.Div, MA, LMHC) original research found that unwanted sexual behavior can be both shaped by and predicted based on the parts of our story--past and present--that remain unaddressed. When we pay attention to our unwanted sexual desires and identify the unique reasons that trigger them, the path of healing is revealed. Although many of us feel ashamed and unwanted after years of sexual brokenness, the book invites the reader to see that behavior as the very location God can most powerfully work in their lives. Counselors, pastors, and accountability partners of those who experience sexual shame will also find in this book the deep spiritual and psychological guidance they need to effectively minister to the sexually broken around them.

      Unwanted: How Sexual Brokenness Reveals Our Way to Healing
      4,6
    • Old Gold

      • 236pages
      • 9 heures de lecture

      Half-gypsy detective Eoin Miller finds people for a living--usually people who would do anything to remain hidden. Ironic considering Eoin has done all he can to lose himself in a downward spiral that has cost him his job, his respect, his wife, and anything else that ever mattered. But he's not inclined to dwell on what he's given up, and Eoin prefers it that way. Then he meets Mary, a hard-drinking woman on the run who confides that she's stolen a valuable item, one that certain people would kill to get back. The two of them seek a temporary--and incomplete--solace in each other's arms, only for Mary to turn up as a corpse in Eoin's bed the next morning, him asleep on the sofa. Recalling his father's aversion to authority, Eoin runs from the body, but he hates a mystery and is driven to discover the truth behind Mary's murder, even if it means putting his own life on the line. Before long, Eoin's tangled up in a ferocious turf war that has him playing his former allies and employers--crime lords, drug dealers, cops, and politicians--against each other. Review "Jay's writing has the streetwise toughness, social awareness and pop culture savvy of George Pelecanos and Richard Price." -somethingyousaid.com

      Old Gold
      3,6