Morgan James Publishing is excited to announce these Hot New Releases for this week!
Each of these are available at your favorite bookseller or online starting this week.
Never Again: A Never Before Told Insight Into the 1992 Los Angeles Riots
Contributor: Weiss, Bill C
Annotation: Never Again offers first hand insight into the hours leading up to, during, and after the Los Angeles riots, telling detail by detail how closely the L.A. County Sheriff s Department was to changing the course of history. The L.A. Police Department is thrust into the limelight and finds itself totally unprepared to deal with this deadly and dynamic crisis. Bill Weiss, the Watch Commander, copes with his internal instinct to take action, waged against his self-discipline to follow orders, leading up to the final moment when he is ready to put his daring plan into action. This chaotic and rapidly evolving disturbance engulfed the city and portions of the surrounding metropolitan area. Its effect would be felt throughout the nation and observed throughout the world. Many of the scars still remains today, and something lost still lingers within Weiss as he tries to come to terms with what could have been.
The Skeleton Code: A Satirical Guide to Secret Keeping
Contributor(s): Campanella, Alla (Author); Massey, Ken (Author)
Annotation: A humorous and provocative look at the skeletons we hide and the integrity we hope for.
Spark: Take Your Business from Struggle to Significance
Contributor(s): Hilton, David A (Author); Hilton, Alexander (With)
Annotation: Lead Your Business from Struggle to Significant—The Key Strategies
Imprint: Morgan James Kids
Contributor(s): Goodman, Eli (Author); Fisher, Brenda Beck (Illustrator)
Annotation: Based on a real-life revelational experience that is described in the substantial Afterword section, The White Horse teaches that one should not judge another by superficial characteristics. In a rural setting whose exact time and setting are purposely undefined, a family of four young children and their parents rejects a horse because of his skin color. The horse initially resigns himself to his outcast status, but when the children find themselves in danger, he emerges as a confident rescuer. The horse s heroic act proves to the family, and to the horse, himself, that their preconceived prejudices about him were, for many reasons, entirely wrong.