I was born in Connecticut in 1973, during a brief blip in my family's otherwise western U.S. existence. We were settled in Phoenix by the time I was four, and I think of myself as a native. The unusual spelling of my name was a gift from my father, Stephen (+ ie = me). Though I have had my name spelled wrong on pretty much everything my entire life long, I must admit that it makes it easier to Google myself now.I filled the "Jan Brady" spot in my family--the second of three girls; however, unlike the Bradys, none of my three brothers are steps, and all of them are younger than all the girls. I went to high school in Scottsdale, Arizona, the kind of place where every fall a few girls would come back to school with new noses and there were Porsches in the student lot. (For the record, I have my original nose and never had a car until I was in my twenties.) I was awarded a National Merit Scholarship, and I used it to pay my way to Brigham Young University, in Provo, Utah. I majored in English but concentrated on literature rather than creative writing, mostly because I didn't consider reading books "work." (As long as I was going to be doing something anyway, I might as well get course credit for it, right?)I met my husband, Pancho (his real name is Christiaan), when I was four, but we were never anywhere close to being childhood sweethearts; in fact, though we saw each other at least weekly through church activities, I can't recall a single instance when we so much as greeted each other with a friendly wave, let alone exchanged actual words. This may have been for the best, because when we did eventually get around to exchanging words, sixteen years after our first meeting, it only took nine months from the first "hello" to the wedding; of course, we were able to skip over a lot of the getting-to-know you parts. (Many of our conversations would go something like this: "This one time, when I was ten, I broke my hand at a party when--" "Yeah. I know what happened. I was there, remember?") We've been married for ten-and-a-half years now and have three beautiful, brilliant, wonderful boys who often remind me of chimpanzees on crack. I can't write without music, and my biggest muse is, ironically enough, the band Muse. My other favorite sources of inspiration are Linkin Park, My Chemical Romance, Coldplay, The All American Rejects, Travis, The Strokes, Brand New, U2, Kasabian, Jimmy Eat World, and Weezer, to mention a few....
Joyce Meyer
Joyce Meyer
Joyce Meyer
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Das flipchart ist das ideale prasentationsmedium fur teambesprechungen und workshops, aber auch fur viele seminare, prasentationen oder vortrage.
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Part thriller, part superhero fantasy, here is the fiercely awaited sequel to the new york times-bestselling renegades by marissa meyer, author of the lunar chronicles.
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Epic, heartbreaking, and darkly atmospheric, into the heartless wood is the story of impossible love between a monstrous tree siren and a boy who lives at the edge of her wood.
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The second installment in mary jo bang’s exhilarating, innovative translation of dante’s the divine comedyaward-winning poet mary jo bang’s new translation of purgatorio is the extraordinary continuation of he.
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About the contributor(s): yung suk kim is associate professor of new testament and early christianity at the samuel dewitt proctor school of theology, virginia union university in richmond.