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David Young

    David Young se ponořil do světa žánru, když se zúčastnil vůbec prvního magisterského studia zaměřeného na kriminální thrillery. Jeho debutový román, oceněný za excelenci, se odehrává v komunistickém Východním Německu sedmdesátých let a stal se bestsellerem. Youngovy příběhy jsou zasazeny do historických kulis a často se zabývají temnými zákoutími minulosti. V současnosti se plně věnuje psaní ve své zahradní kůlně a nabízí čtenářům napínavé dobrodružství.

    David Young
    The Discovery of Evolution
    King Jesus and the Beauty of Obedience-Based Discipleship
    Religious Affections
    A Grand Illusion: How Progressive Christianity Undermines Biblical Faith
    Chůze po laně. Přednášky ctihodného Pemasiri Thery o meditačním rozvoji
    Dítě Stasi
    • Dítě Stasi

      • 336 stránek
      • 12 hodin čtení
      4,1(171)Ohodnotit

      U berlínské zdi je nalezeno tělo mrtvé dívky. S udanou příčinou smrti však není něco v pořádku. Východní Berlín, 1975. Nadporučici Karin Müllerové je přiděleno vyšetřování smrti náctileté dívky, která se podle všeho snažila prchnout přes zeď – ale ze Západu. Vyšetřování smrdí od počátku. Karin má jako členka Lidové policie z Východu omezené pravomoce, Stasi chce znát identitu mrtvé dívky, ale nepřeje si, aby vyšetřovatelka znala příliš mnoho odpovědí. Brzy je jasné, že místo činu někdo kompromitoval. Müllerová navzdory doporučením sleduje stopu, která překvapivě souvisí s někým jí velmi blízkým… Dítě Stasi Davida Younga vyhlásily The Times krimi knihou měsíce a The Telegraph tipem týdne. Jde o poutavý příběh, který kombinuje napínavé vyšetřování s retrospektivním vyprávěním, které mu předchází. Jde o thriller z pozadí Berlínské zdi, od kterého se nebudete moct odtrhnout. Z anglického originálu Stasi Child vydaného nakladatelstvím Twenty7 Books, imprint Bonnier Publishing Fiction v roce 2016 přeložila Eva Brožová. Obálka dle originálu René Senko. Vydání první.

      Dítě Stasi
    • A GUIDE FOR EMBRACING BIBLICAL FAITH IN THE FACE OF AMERICAN PROGRESSIVISM North American Christianity stands at a major crossroads. Hundreds of thousands of believers have begun to lose interest in apostolic Christianity: the faith of the Scriptures, the great witnesses and teachers of the faith, and the major creeds and confessions of Christianity. The challenge? Theological progressivism. A Grand Illusion exposes the dangers and contradictions of theological progressivism, revealing its North American, secular and elitist assumptions. It offers a full throttle defense of authentic Christianity. And it exposes the dim future of progressivism. If you are tempted by progressivism, if your church or family members are starting to lean progressive, or if you simply need reassurance that apostolic faith is the real deal, read this book. DAVID YOUNG is a senior pastor, author, speaker, television host, and a former teacher and visiting professor. He holds advanced degrees in religion, including a Ph.D. from Vanderbilt University. He and his family live near Nashville, Tennessee.

      A Grand Illusion: How Progressive Christianity Undermines Biblical Faith
    • Religious Affections

      • 189 stránek
      • 7 hodin čtení
      4,4(55)Ohodnotit

      You probably know him for preaching the sermon "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God"--but Jonathan Edwards had much more to say about the Christian life. The central figure in New England's first Great Awakening, Edwards offers a detailed description of the signs--true and false--of conversion, while highlighting the role truly balanced emotions play within the Christian life. He takes a long, hard look at the evidence of true saving faith--the fruit that comes from living like Christ. This newly-typeset edition of Religious Affections is updated and abridged for ease of reading.

      Religious Affections
    • David Young invites his readers on a journey of adventure and discovery; a journey for the mind, and an adventure in the realm of ideas. By retracing the steps of men who developed the theory of biological evolution, we see how scientists came to recognize the nature and importance of natural selection. The journey begins in the seventeenth century, when even the most accomplished naturalists knew next to nothing of biology as we understand it today. Steadily increasing knowledge and the quickening pace of research began to uncover much new evidence, and in the middle of the century Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace incorporated this evidence in a comprehensive theory of evolution. In the twentieth century biology has become steadily more specialized, so the book picks out some of the main developments that bring us to studies of evolution being carried out today.

      The Discovery of Evolution
    • Black Lab: Poems

      • 80 stránek
      • 3 hodiny čtení
      4,0(1)Ohodnotit

      Attuned to the Midwestern seasons, this collection of poems explores both emotional and physical landscapes. David Young invites readers into intimate moments with nature, from the fox at the field's edge to the first daffodils of spring. Through personal reflections, he addresses profound themes of loss, scattering his father's ashes, and mourning his wife, Chloe. Influenced by Chinese masters, Young also celebrates simple joys, like walking in a snowstorm with his black labrador, Nemo, blending beauty with the complexities of human experience.

      Black Lab: Poems
    • Tired of Falling for Mirages? These days, reasons for irritability pop up as regularly as Facebook advertisements. Of all the reasons to be irritable, this one has to be the worst: We often want things that turn out not to exist. People can spend thier lives wholeheartedly pursuing things that are unreal. These mirages burst like soap bubbles, and we are left disappointed and frustrated. The purpose of this book is to expose five things people want from God that don't exist -so that we can retrain our desires to focus on what does exist. When we pursue what does exist, we will find our souls satisfied. DANIEL J. MCCOY Daniel is happily married to Susanna, and they have 3 daughters and 2 sons. Daniel works as editorial director for Renew.org. He has his bachelor's in theology (Ozark Christian College), and his PhD in theology (North-West University). He is the co-author of The Atheist's Fatal Flaw (Baker, 2014) with Norman Geisler, as well as the general editor of The Popular Handbook of World Religions (Harvest House, 2021). His passionis to help people understand that they can totally trust Jesus.

      Mirage: 5 Things People Want from God That Don't Exist
    • Six Modernist Moments in Poetry

      • 175 stránek
      • 7 hodin čtení
      4,0(4)Ohodnotit

      Focusing on six modernist poems by diverse poets, this study illustrates the multifaceted nature of modernism. David Young emphasizes the unique qualities of each poem while highlighting their shared aesthetic that challenges traditional thought. Each chapter offers a close reading of a key poem, contextualized within its historical background and the poet's career. Young's translations of two non-English poems enhance accessibility. The blend of detailed analysis and contextual insights makes this work valuable for both general readers and scholars, enriching the understanding of 20th-century poetry.

      Six Modernist Moments in Poetry
    • A gorgeous selection of the humane and moving poetry of David Young, a celebrated poet of the midwestern landscape and the people who live in it, with an expanded section featuring sixteen new poems exclusive to the paperback edition. A newly expanded career-spanning volume from one of our most valuable living American poets, offering poems that display an exquisite ear tuned to the natural world, to love and friendship, and to the continually renewable possibilities of language, and new poems that reflect a continued artistic interest in these subjects. Young’s settings are at once local and universal—an adolescence in Omaha, late summer on Lake Erie, a sleepless night in the backyard during a meteor shower. He moves with dazzling ease between culture and nature, between the literary and the philosophical, microcosm and macrocosm. Here are poems on Osip Mandelstam and Chairman Mao, the meaning of boxcars on the track, the beautiful names of the months, and a fox at the field’s edge, charged in each case by Young’s fierce intelligence and candor in the face of grief and loss. “We float through space. Days pass,” Young writes in “The Portable Earth-Lamp.” “Sometimes we know we are part of a crystal / where light is sorted and stored.” His metaphysical reach, balancing remarkable humility with penetrating vision, is one of the great gifts of this exemplary career in poetry.

      Field of Light and Shadow