Friday, January 17, 2014

Knight of the Dixie Wilds by K-Trina Meador on The Writers Showcase



 
Author K-Trina Meador stops by to discuss her Historical Fiction novel Knight of the Dixie Wilds and much more writers talk

http://thewritersshow.wordpress.com/2014/01/17/knight-of-the-dixie-wilds-by-k-trina-meador/


You can purchase Knight of the Dixie Wilds at the link below.
http://www.amazon.com/The-Knight-Dixie-Wilds-Meador/dp/1484992830/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1389917105&sr=8-1&keywords=knight+of+the+dixie+wilds

The Phil Naessens Show: Mark Gasol Returns to the Memphis Grizzlies

http://phillipnaessens.wordpress.com/2014/01/17/the-phil-naessens-show-mark-gasol-returns-to-the-memphis-grizzlies/

philvegas1
 
On this edition of the Phil Naessens Show we’re focusing on the Memphis Grizzlies , Oklahoma City  Thunder  and the San Antonio Spurs.
 
Segment 1: Memphis Flyer reporter Kevin Lipe joins Phil to discuss the return of Marc Gasol, Courtney Lee’s monster game against the Thunder, what the Grizzlies need to do to make the playoffs and much more       
 
Segment 2: Welcome to Loud City Managing Editor J.A. Sherman joins Phil to discuss PG Reggie Jackson’s defense, Serge Ibaka losing his temper on the bench in Denver, whether or not Kevin Durant is playing too many minutes and much more
 
Segment 3: Pounding the Rock Managing editor J.R. Wilco joins Phil to discuss possible trades for Milwaukee rookie Giannis Antetokounmpo, the Bucks Ersan Ilyasova and why the majority of the Spurs fan base wants to see Matt Bonner get traded plus much more

History Trivia - Etruscan Roman Emperor Otho commits suicide

January 17

 38 BC Octavian married Livia Drusilla.

69 Etruscan Roman Emperor Otho committed suicide after a night of meditation in his tent. A companion of Nero, it is believed that he died to prevent civil war.

395 the Roman Empire was split into eastern and western parts upon the death of Emperor Theodosius I, whose will provided that his two sons would inherit the two parts.

1377 Pope Gregory XI moved the Papacy back to Rome from Avignon.

1501- Cesare Borgia returned in triumph to Rome from Romagna.

1648 England's Long Parliament passed the Vote of No Addresses, which broke off negotiations with King Charles I, setting the scene for the second phase of the English Civil War.

Thursday, January 16, 2014

The Wizard of Notts Recommends: Nottingham Hidden History Team

 
A view of the old Saxon Borough (Lace Market) and Narrow Marsh below
Credit: Ray Teece
 
 

A Brief History of Narrow Marsh

by Joe Earp
Nottingham was originally founded on a sandstone outcrop, below which to the south, were flood meadows towards the River Trent. St. Mary’s Church was established on the eastern end of this outcrop, and the Saxon town developed here. In the 11th century, the Normans built a castle on the western side.


To aid the defence of this castle, they diverted The River Leen to flow below The Castle Rock, and from there it continued in an easterly direction, before turning south to meet the River Trent. It flowed below the eastern end of the town, it left marshy ground between it and the sandstone rock. The western and wider area was called Broad Marsh, and the narrowest part, Narrow Marsh. The road running parallel with the river was called
Leenside.
In the late 18th century, The Beeston Canal was cut and this roughly followed the line of The River Leen from The River Trent towards Nottingham and below the town on the sandstone. The River Leen was yet again diverted.
The areas of Broad Marsh and Narrow Marsh were therefore freed from flooding problems and they were built on.  There was a thoroughfare named Narrow Marsh, as well as the whole area being so called, and this was changed at one time to Red Lion Street, after the eponymous public house.
As has been said before, the Narrow Marsh area became notorious in the early 20th century as a very rough area. The area was notorious for its crime, poverty and slums, but that history is for another article as they say. It was reported that  policemen when patrolling Narrow Marsh would only venture in pairs.

narrowmarsh
A sky view of Narrow Marsh, Nottingham
Credit: Nottingham Hidden History Team
J Holland Walker (1926) in the Transactions of the Thoroton Society, briefly discusses the early history of Narrow Marsh:
“ONE hardly recognises Narrow Marsh under its modern name of Red Lion Street which was bestowed upon it in an access of zeal in 1905. I think the authorities must have come to the conclusion that the cup of wickedness of Narrow Marsh was full, and that the very name had something unholy about it and so they thought that by changing the name they could change the character of the inhabitants. Well, their intentions no doubt are very praiseworthy, but in attempting to get rid of the name of Narrow Marsh they have attempted to destroy an extremely interesting relic of the past, and in spite of the official and very prominent notice board displaying the brand new name of Red Lion Street, the name of Narrow Marsh holds its own pretty firmly to-day, and this is not to be wondered at. It is the natural name of the thoroughfare situated between the river Leen and the foot of St. Mary’s cliff, and it has been called Narrow Marsh with an astonishing variety of spelling ever since 1315, or the year after the battle of Bannockburn. In those far off days it was called “Parvus Mariscus,” “The little marsh,” and rather dignified it looks in its cloak of Latin. It was part of the route from south to north, thrust aside by the fortifications of Edward the Elder’s burgh and also perhaps is one of the oldest thoroughfares in Nottingham. Its age is very great and it must have existed for centuries before its debut into history in 1315. Its physical features are, of course, the great 70ft. precipice which overhangs it on the north, and the river Leen which alas ! has now vanished, on the south”.
In the late 18th century, The Beeston Canal was cut and this roughly followed the line of The River Leen from The River Trent towards Nottingham and below the town on the sandstone. The River Leen was yet again diverted.
The areas of Broad Marsh and Narrow Marsh were therefore freed from flooding problems and they were built on. There was a thoroughfare named Narrow Marsh, as well as the whole area being so called, and this was changed at one time to Red Lion Street, after the eponymous public house.
Broad Marsh and Narrow marsh areas were demolished in the 1930′s but redeveloped was piecemeal due to the intervention of The War.
Red Lion Street Demolitions, Narrow Marsh, Nottingham, 1933
Red Lion Street Demolitions, Narrow Marsh, Nottingham, 1933
Credit: Nottingham Hidden History Team
Leenside was renamed Canal Street, which still exists and is a major road in Nottingham. If you stand outside the BBC Nottingham building at the top of London Road and look towards St. Mary’s church, there is a cliff of sandstone, and the Narrow Marsh area was here, running eastwards towards what is now the Tram viaduct (see top image).
http://nottinghamhiddenhistoryteam.wordpress.com/2013/05/07/a-brief-history-of-narrow-marsh/
 

Mystery of Atlit Yam

Atlit Yam is an ancient submerged Neolithic village off the coast of Atlit, Israel.




For more information, click on the link:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlit_Yam

Free on Kindle: Emprise and The Juice and Other Stories by Bill Jones Jr

Free on Kindle - January 16 - 17, 2014 Emprise by Bill Jones, Jr.

Free on Kindle January 16 -20, 2014   The Juice and Other Stories

Need Something to Read this Weekend?


Have a 3-day weekend coming up and nothing planned? How about curling up with a good (virtual) book? I have two free Kindle book promotions starting tomorrow. Why not grab a copy?
For fans of fantasy adventure who have time to jump into a novel, why not curl up with Emprise?
stream_emprise_med
Emprise is the standalone follow-up to Discovery and Awakening, the first two books of The Stream series. It’s full of adventure, laughter, spirituality, and romance.
Sixteen-year-old Charlie is hunting creatures trying to have a normal life. It would be easier were he not tasked with hunting carnivorous rabbits, rapidly evolving dragons, and much more dangerous creatures from the world of dreams, The Stream. Something is destroying the gateway that separates dreams from reality and life from the afterlife. Only Charlie and his best friend, Robin can save the universe from chaos, and the dark enemies determined to bring it about.
There is another complication — Robin has begun to realize that she’s falling in love with Charlie, just when he no longer seems interested. Both teens’ worlds are about to get very complicated. Follow them through a fantastic, spiritual journey through worlds of mythical creatures, powerful beings from the Heaven Plane, to Africa, and back to small-town Virginia, where the multiverses seem destined to collide.
Emprise will be free tomorrow, 16 January 2014 through 17 January 2014.
For those of you who don’t have time to (or interest in) reading an entire novel, I’m offering my short story collection, The Juice and Other Stories for free, starting tomorrow, 16 January, through Monday, 20 January. There’s something here for everyone.
Juice Cover Web
The Juice and Other Stories brings together a collection of 13 tales of romance, science fiction, urban fantasy, and suspense from the imaginative author of The Stream trilogy and the Sci Fi adventure, Hard as Roxx.
In “Remembering,” beings from another world find themselves herded along their own trail of tears. Their leader, Tofray, has the unenviable job of remembering their stories and their suffering. “Mrs. What’s-Her-Name” details a woman’s struggle to regain her memory, and her life, after a devastating brain injury. In “The Juice,” a woman of the street searches for her next client, and promises him surprises. “The Clown Man” visits a beautiful child’s dreams and turns them to nightmares; however, Cruz, a dream walker, is there, and he means to keep the girl safe.
The novelette “Manhattan Transference” details the story of Luce, a vaporous visitor from a dying planet, who must find the only robotics expert who can help save the alien race from destruction. Luce’s sun will go supernova soon, and without Dr. Roman’s help, all of Luce’s people will die with it. There is only one problem: Luce’s new human form, and the raw emotions that come with it. “Fool O’clock” details a stressful day in the life of Jim Pyle, Deputy Director of the Bureau of Fool Abatement, a government agency tasked with keeping the U.S. safe from fools of all sorts.
In the novelette “Days of the Never Was,” three pairs of arguing friends disappear into a strange fog bank and reemerge with their entire worlds turned upside down.
Other stories are “Crazy Magnet,” about an investigator with a gift for attracting crazy people; “He Ain’t Heavy,” a suspense story about twin brothers. “From the Black, the Blues,” Sci Fi romance about lovers from two time periods; “The Utopian / Dystopian Compass,” Sci Fi; “Reggie and Rocky Vs. Space Monsters from Beneath the Bed,” a contemporary fantasy starring 3 and 5-year-old dream walkers; and “Set Fire to the Rain,” an excerpt from Emprise.
Note: Some stories contain adult language and situations.
If you’re interested, but don’t own a Kindle, don’t worry. Amazon offers free Kindle software for the PC, Mac, and iPad. Links to download can be found on the sidebar to the right of this page.

The Phil Naessens Show: The Anthony Bosch is a Scumbag Edition

philvegas1
 
 
On this edition of the Phil Naes
sens Show we’re focusing on the Oakland A’s, Cincinnati Reds and New York Mets Hot Stove baseball.
Segment 1: Athletics Nation Lead Writer Alex Hall joins Phil to discuss Masahira Tanaka possibly signing with the A’s and whether or not Sonny Gray will be the next Athletic’s ace plus much more.
Segment 2: Red Reporter Managing Editor Brandon Kraeling joins Phil to discuss the lethargic Reds off-season, what losing Shin Soo Chu actually means, Billy Hamilton and much more
Segment 3: Blogging Mets Mark Berman joins Phil to discuss Mike Piazza’s snub by the BBWAA and whether or not he’ll ever get elected to the Hall of Fame and 60 Minutes recent interview with PED dealer Anthony Bosch and lots more.
 
 

History Trivia - first edition of El ingenioso hidalgo Don Quijote de la Mancha is published in Madrid.

January 16

 27 BC The title Augustus was bestowed upon Gaius Julius Caesar Octavian by the Roman Senate.

 550 during the Gothic War (535–552), the Ostrogoths conquered Rome after a long siege, by bribing the Isaurian garrison.

1120 The Council of Nablus was held, establishing the earliest surviving written laws of the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem.

1219 Floods in Northern Netherlands after storm, 1,000s killed.

1245 Edmund Lancaster was born. Edmund was the founder of the House of Lancaster and son of King Henry III of England and Eleanor of Provence.

1362 a storm tide in the North Sea destroyed the German city of Rungholt on the island of Strand (North Frisian Islands).

1412 the Medici family was appointed official banker of the Papacy.

1572 Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk was tried for treason for his part in the Ridolfi plot to restore Catholicism in England.

1581 The English Parliament outlawed Roman Catholicism.

1605 The first edition of El ingenioso hidalgo Don Quijote de la Mancha (Book One of Don Quixote) by Miguel de Cervantes was published in Madrid.

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

JLB Creatives Publishing is now accepting submissions


jlb creatives 

 
 JLB Creatives Publishing FL team

"There is more treasure in books than all the pirate's loot on treasure island."

~ Walt Disney ~
 
 
Genres Include
True life stories, creative fiction, westerns, non-fiction, fantasy, sci-fi, science "faction," fairy tales, steampunk, books by children authors, and fully illustrated/full color children's books





For more information, click on the link
http://www.jlbcreatives.com/home.html

Coming Soon - Hank of Twin Rivers Book Two: The Eagle's Nest by M.C. Arvanitis

Announcing

COMING IN 2014

Hank of Twin Rivers

 Book Two: The Eagle's Nest 




We find Hank three years later. Hank finds a perch at the top of a tall cottonwood tree where he watches as Twin Rivers grows into a trading post. Wagon trains on both the Oregon and the Mormon Trails stop for supplies. Among his many adventures are helping a family of slaves escape from bounty hunters, making friends with a Pawnee boy, tangling with a wild woman, and falling for the preacher's daughter. His conflict with his pa renews when his new stepmother insists that they send him away to an eastern school to further his education. He joins the horse wranglers passing through and learns the hard way how to break a horse. When he comes back to Twin Rivers, he fined Becca gone. 






Book One, 'Journey of Change' takes readers into the dangerous adventures of a pioneer boy on the first step of his journey to adulthood. Hank lives with his over-protective mother and a overly strict  father. who believes that harsh discipline will make his son into a man. When cholera takes his mother, Hank's only comforts are his wisecracking, fiddle-playing Irish uncle; and his pet cow, Clementine. He feels Pa's disappointment in him and  hides in daydreams and book reading. What else can he do? He can't make himself grow taller, and now that the cholera has weakened his leg and he finds himself limping, he feels even more inadequate. 



When Hank’s father decides to find a new home, Hank rebels. Pa’s discipline is quick and painful and Hank has to obey. Crossing sandbur-infested prairies, fording raging rivers, and eating dust while walking behind the slow wagon fill Hank's days. He withstands the unpredictable mid-western weather of hailstorms, dust storms, an early blizzard and flash floods. Stampeding buffalo, murdering claim jumpers, rattlesnakes, and a belligerent goose provide plenty of challenges.

His troubles are lightened when he finds friends along the trail: Rusty, a southern boy from Missouri, Nora, a teasing eight-year-old girl from Wisconsin, and Moses, an escaped slave who makes his living as a trapper. When an itinerant preacher and his large family join them, Hank meets the most important challenge of his life when the preacher’s daughter, Becca comes into his life



  • Note from author, M. C. Arvanitis 

So many boys quit reading for pleasure at the age of 10, the phenomenon has a name — the Fourth-Grade Slump. It has been said that forty per cent of boys are “reluctant readers” in school, but the problem isn’t intelligence. Boys are simply less motivated to read. Give them a look into the exciting and dangerous world of Hank Heaton's Journey on the Oregon Trail. They'll put themselves in Hank's shoes and want to read the series. 
 
 

Mr. Chuckles stops by The Wizard's Cauldron to meet the courageous Jasmine Bath


If a reader is an abuse survivor, I would want to encourage them to do what they feel is needed in order to protect themselves from the people who have hurt them in the past, even if that requires cutting all ties with them, even if their abuser was/is family. Again, reaching out to a professional for help can work wonders.
..............Jasmine Bath
 
Click on the link to read more
 

The Wizard of Notts Recommends: London skulls reveal gruesome evidence of Roman head hunters

London skulls reveal gruesome evidence of Roman head hunters

Improved forensic techniques have shed new light on 39 skulls excavated near Museum of London in 1988
theguardian.com,
 
Skulls found at crossrail excavation
 
 
The work of Redfern and Bonney may force archaeologists to have another look at more recent skull finds such as the one above, excavated during work on a new Crossrail station. Photograph: The Guardian
Scores of skulls excavated in the heart of London have provided the first gruesome evidence of Roman head hunters operating in Britain, gathering up the heads of executed enemies or fallen gladiators from the nearby amphitheatre, and exposing them for years in open pits.
"It is not a pretty picture," Rebecca Redfern, from the centre for human bioarchaeology at the museum of London, said. "At least one of the skulls shows evidence of being chewed at by dogs, so it was still fleshed when it was lying in the open."
"They come from a peculiar area by the Walbrook stream, which was a site for burials and a centre of ritual activity – but also very much in use for more mundane pursuits. We have evidence of lots of shoe making, so you have to think of the cobbler working yards from these open pits, with the dog chewing away – really not nice."
"We believe that some of the heads may be people who were killed in the amphitheatre. Decapitation was a way of finishing off gladiators, but not everyone who died in the Roman amphitheatre was a gladiator, it was where common criminals were executed, or sometimes for entertainment you'd give two of them swords and have them kill one another. Other heads may have been brought back by soldiers from skirmishes, probably on the Hadrian or Antonine walls – again, it would have taken weeks to bring them back, so not a nice process."
The 39 skulls were excavated at London Wall almost within sight of the Museum of London in 1988, and deposited at the museum, but the scientists have only recently applied improved forensic techniques to them. Redfern and her colleague Heather Bonney, from the Earth Sciences Department of the Natural History Museum, publish their results for the first time this week in the Journal of Archaeological Science.
The tests revealed that almost all the skulls are of adult males – some could not be identified – and most bear scars and slash marks of many wounds inflicted around the time of death. Many also have multiple healed wounds, one with the shattered cheek bone typical of a violent punch in the face, showing their lives were not tranquil. On some there is clear evidence of decapitation with a sword: possibly all were killed in that way, but if the fatal blow was through the neck the proof has vanished with the rest of their bodies.
"Whether they died in the amphitheatre or in battle, decapitation with a sword is a very efficient way of ending a life – somebody very much wanted these people dead," Redfern said.
The evidence suggests that they were left for years decomposing in the open pits.
"There is none of the fracturing you'd expect if they'd been put on spikes, so it looks as if they were just set down and left – though of course you could have had a nice shelf to display them on."
There is evidence of head taking from across the Roman empire, including Trajan's column in Rome which shows clean shaven Roman soldiers presenting bearded barbarian heads as trophies to the emperor. Heads are also shown being held up in triumph on tomb stones of cavalry officers in Britain and elsewhere. Although pits of body parts have been found in Britain, the London skulls, deposited over several decades, are an unprecedented find from the Roman capital.
Hundreds of skulls have been found for centuries along the course of the long vanished Walbrook – most recently by the team working on the new Crossrail station just outside Liverpool Street station.
They have often been interpreted either as washed out of Roman cemeteries, or as victims of Boudicca's revolution, when the East Anglican leader of the Icenii tribe swept south to London in AD60, torching Roman settlements and towns.
However the work of Redfern and Bonney may force archaeologists to have another look at the skull finds.
The London Wall skulls are far too late for Boudicca: they have been dated to the 2nd century AD, a time of peace, prosperity and expansion for the Roman city.
"These were all young men, very untypical of what we usually find in Roman burials, where we tend to get the very young and the old," Redfern said.
"Most people in second century London lived peaceful quiet lives – but as we now know, not everyone. This is a glimpse into the very dark side of Roman life."

http://www.theguardian.com/science/2014/jan/15/london-skulls-roman-head-hunters

Memoir author Jasmine Bath...Around The Cauldron



 
From the pen of the Great Wizard:


Jasmine Bath, author of the widely acclaimed No-One's Daughter, speaks to the Wizard from somewhere in the United States. Due to the sensitive nature of her book, - a harrowing memoir of child abuse and poverty throughout her childhood in the nineteen seventies, her true identity is obscured, and she relates to the world through the medium of a Jasmine leaf



Click on the link to read more:  Memoir author Jasmine Bath...Around The Cauldron

The Phil Naessens Show: The NBA Arrives in London and That’s a Bad Thing

http://phillipnaessens.wordpress.com/2014/01/14/the-phil-naessens-show-the-nba-arrives-in-london-and-thats-a-bad-thing/


philvegas1
 
 
On this edition of the Phil Naessens Show we’re focusing on the San Antonio Spurs, NBA Globalization and the Atlanta Hawks meet up with the Brooklyn Nets in London England
 
Segment 1: Pounding the Rock Lead Writer Aaron Stampler joins Phil to discuss the injuries to the San Antonio Spurs and whether or not it’s a good idea to sign Andrew Bynum plus much more.       
 
Segment 2: Rush Olson joins Phil to discuss thoughts he has in regards to the NBA and the WNBA establishing teams worldwide plus much more.
 
Segment 3: Welcome to Loud City Lead Writer Zeb Benbrook joins Phil to discuss whether or not it’s a good idea to play regular season NBA games outside of America and preview Thursdays Brooklyn Nets vs. the Atlanta Hawks being held in London England and much more

History Trivia - Henry VIII declares himself head of English Church

January 15

 588 BC Nebuchadnezzar II of Babylon lay siege to Jerusalem under Zedekiah's reign. The siege lasted until July 23, 586 BC

69 the Emperor Galba was murdered in the streets of Rome. Otho (Marcus Salvius Otho Caesar Augustus) seized power and proclaimed himself Emperor of Rome, but ruled for only three months before he committed suicide.

1535 Henry VIII declared himself head of English Church.

1559 Elizabeth I was crowned Queen of England in Westminster Abbey, London by Owen Oglethorpe, Bishop of Carlisle.

1759 British Museum opened in Montague House, London

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

The Phil Naessens Show: Dennis Rodman the Diplomat and Kevin Love and J.R. Smith are Knuckleheads

http://phillipnaessens.wordpress.com/2014/01/14/the-phil-naessens-show-dennis-rodman-the-diplomat-and-kevin-love-and-j-r-smith-are-knuckleheads/

philvegas1
 
 
 
On this edition of the Phil Naessens Show we’re focusing on the Utah Jazz, Phoenix Suns, Denver Nuggets, Dennis Rodman, Kevin Love, J.R. Smith and much more more NBA talk.
Segment 1: SLC Dunk Managing Editor Amar joins Phil to discuss the recent success of the Utah Jazz, life for the Phoenix Suns without Eric Bledsoe, should the Denver Nuggets consider trading Ty Lawson in order to tank and much more
Segment 2: SLC Dunk Managing Editor Amar joins Phil to discuss Dennis Rodman’s recent trip to North Korea, Kevin Love and public statements he’s made about his teammates, J.R. Smith’s erratic season and behavior and much more.
 
 

History Trivia - Pope Leo X issues a papal bull against slavery.

January 14

 973 Ekkehard I, monk of St Gallen, distinguished as a poet (Vita Waltharii manu fortis), died.

1131 King Valdemar I of Denmark was born. In addition to winning independence from the Holy Roman Empire, he also gained the approval of the church for the dynastic rule of his family, the Valdemars.

1236 Henry III of England married Eleonora of Provence.

1501 Martin Luther (age 17) entered the University of Erfurt (founded in 1379, it was the first university in modern day Germany, and for some time was the largest university in the country).

1514 Pope Leo X issued a papal bull against slavery.

Monday, January 13, 2014

Yonkers, New York - MY HOMETOWN









Proud Graduate of Gorton High School

 
 
 
 

Kathy Krantz Stewart - Getting in the excitement of the SAG and Academy Awards 2014!

 
Getting in the excitement of the SAG and Academy Awards 2014! Love being at the Red Carpet and being up for awards. It's like the Superbowl to me. Last ones we were invited to, 2013, and were up for award, was the Beverly Hills Film Fes...tival, Las Vegas Film Festival, and the IFFF Film Festivals. Loved it! Also,2 nominations at the San Diego Black Film Festival 2012 - Best Film Documentary and Best Religious film - Kathy Krantz Stewart Executive Producer/Actress ...Last time here we won for Best Film! I am keeping my fingers crossed that my films being released and distributed this coming year will be up for awards at the great festivals and Film awards! "Best Actress" awards for me are exciting as well. Had some of those, looking forward to new ones.
 
 

Cecilia Spark's countdown on the launch of her latest adventure - Dragon's Star


Coming Soon:  The Adventures of Cecilia Spark - Dragon's Star

 “The creature had been disturbed. Swishing its tail, it sailed effortlessly towards the noise source. It could clearly see something at the edge of the water ...The giant water creature was getting closer and closer to its substantial meal. With one final flick of its powerful tail, it would be over.”

 Cecilia Spark is in a race against time.  Her challenge is to save the last Millennium Dragon, captured by a hideous Knight of Darkness, and reunite him with the star that gives him his power. With Orson, Ractus and Pacha by her side, Cecilia must rescue Fuego and save the Land of Dragons from an endless, desperate gloom.

Harassed by crooked imps, captured in the lair of a giant spider, lost in the darkest of dungeons and threatened by a hidden river monster, will Cecilia and her brave friends succeed in their quest?

Illustrated novel.  Age range 4 to 9 year old boys and girls.

 

The Phil Naessens Show: Three Reasons WHY the Golden State Warriors the Hottest Team in the NBA

http://phillipnaessens.wordpress.com/2014/01/13/the-phil-naessens-show-three-reasons-why-the-golden-state-warriors-the-hottest-team-in-the-nba/

philvegas1
 
 
 
On this edition of the Phil Naessens Show we’re focusing on the Indiana Pacers, Fantasy Basketball and the Golden State Warriors.  
 
Segment 1: Indy Cornrows Managing Editor Tom Lewis joins Phil to discuss the Indiana Pacers loss against Atlanta, David West, Roy Hibbert, what teams in the East have a chance to knock off the Pacers in a four game series, and the weeks home games with Sacramento, New York, the Los Angeles Clippers and much more.       
 
Segment 2: Rotowire NBA Editor Kyle McKeown joins Phil to discuss the injuries to Jrue Holiday and Eric Bledsoe, a proposed trade of Tim Duncan and Gordon Hayward for J.J. Hickson and Goran Dragic and advice about what to do with all the injured players on your roster and much more
 
Segment 3: Welcome to Loud City Managing Editor Kyle McKeown joins Phil to discuss why the Golden State Warriors are the hottest team in the NBA and take a closer look at each player on the roster and much more.