David Horn
1) Saving Fiona
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A bored sysadmin at a government facility picks up a stray cat. Little does he know what fate has in store for him as he reaches down to pet the mewing ball of fur.
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Sex and violence - what more can a mover want?Possibly, surviving it all."Dystopian Literature at it's worst" (Random Gazette)"I didn't read it." (George W. Briar)"Seriously, don't you have something better to do with your time?" (Your Mother)A dystopian journey into a bleak universe, not so far away from our own as we might hope.
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A fast-paced pulp sci-fi novelette. An occasionally bloody roller-coaster ride through a very fictional version of the United States. Are there extraterrestrial beings infiltrating society? Or is the protagonist just plain nuts?The truth is out there, and John Jackson, Private Detective, has his work cut out for him. He just hopes his work won't cut him apart and eat him.
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What does it mean to develop true community in our churches-and how do we get there? For all the vast talk about the nature of the church over the years, our understanding of the actual relationship we euphemistically call "Christian community" is rather thin and incomprehensible. Peel away the institutional hard shell around what we understand to be the church and what fleshy relationship lies within?
In Soulmates, David Horn addresses the above...
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"…An entertaining, laugh-out-loud elementary children's book..." - ReadersFavorite.com, 5 Stars
The first in a new series of hilariously funny, early reader sci-fi chapter books perfect for elementary-aged kids. Meet Eudora Jenkins, the math and science whiz who lives in SPACE!
Eudora is a normal 3rd grader. A normal 3rd grader who lives on a 36 deck AstroLiner. In space. A normal girl adopted by what you might call . . . aliens. Whose mom is a...
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David G. Horn is Assistant Professor of Comparative Studies at Ohio State University.
Using as his example post-World War I Italy and the government's interest in the size, growth rate, and "vitality" of its national population, David Horn suggests a genealogy for our present understanding of procreation as a site for technological intervention and political contestation. Social Bodies looks at how population and reproductive bodies came to be the...