Title | : | Church Girl and the Company She Keeps 2: Redemption, Death, & Confession |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.50 (855 Votes) |
Asin | : | B00NE1Q196 |
Format Type | : | - |
Number of Pages | : | 0 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2014-09-06 |
Genre | : |
You never know what type of impact your life can have on those around. It is always wise to monitor the company that you keep.
In Church Girl and the Company She Keeps 1 readers met teenager C Marvelous Brown who pledged to get on the right track and develop a better relationship with God. At the same time her friends endured their own life challenges. There was Kee-Kee who takes no crap from a man, Nikki the man hustler with an alcohol dependency, and C’s very best friend, Sequoya, who was down to replace her no good baby's daddy. Through the midst of their drama, their friendship circle was strained because C has kept herself in the company of her abuser. Wesley has taken C for the roller coaster ride of her life including abuse, infidelity, and the ultimate betrayal.
Now each girl is battling her own spiritual war. Sequoya has a price to pay for the things she's done in the past. Kee- Kee is determined to walk the walk and talk the talk but her faith is
Editorial :
And just like the hired "scientists" we have gotten used to in the political pig-sty, his answer to the problem is simple - shoot the uncooperative clouds with cannon.
The "philosopher" explained everything to the villagers. Some of the errors are plain typo's, admitted. Jack wrote well, dreamed better and made a story for all time. I thought the story was sweet and the characters very likeable. Every time I sit down and re-read some of this book it always reminds me of the type of things that happen every day when working at Microsoft.
This is a real peek at a real guy, who also happens to be a very nice guy.
I think it's a good read if you're someone who actually wants to get to know the people behind the corporate 'shield'.
I've been fortunate enough to spend some time working with Stephen (Stepto as we like to call him), and this book is very much a good reflection of who he is.
I'd say enough so that I was able to definitely i
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