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Books with author A.S. Hutchinson

  • If Winter Comes

    A.S.M. Hutchinson

    Unknown Binding (Hogger & Stoughton, Jan. 1, 1922)
    None
  • Under Siege: Religious Freedom and the Church in Canada at 150

    Don Hutchinson

    Paperback (Word Alive Press, Feb. 21, 2017)
    Writing from the perspective of a student of life, history, law, politics, and theology, Don Hutchinson draws on all of these areas in Under Siege to offer perceptive insight into the Christian Church of today's Canada. The reader will receive the benefit of his thirty years of church leadership, Christian witness, constitutional law, and public policy experience to gain a practical understanding of how we, the Church, may cast the deciding votes on the future of Christianity in our constitutionally guaranteed "free and democratic society." How did we get here? What happened to "Christian" Canada? Do we not have Charter rights like everyone else? What does the Bible say? Many Christians sense that an advancing secularism is trying to force upon Canadians a culture in which faith is meant to be private. Hutchinson presents historic, legal, and theological grounds for us not to hide our faith in stained-glass closets, but instead to enter Canada's contested public space with confidence. Together as individual Christians, congregations, denominations, and para- congregational ministries, we are the Church in Canada. And together we have the capacity to impact the nation for God's good, the good of our neighbours, and the good of ourselves. Will we?
  • If Winter Comes

    A. S. M. Hutchinson

    Hardcover (Hodder, Jan. 1, 1948)
    None
  • Improving My Lie: Golf Fiction in Verse

    Dave Hutchinson

    eBook (Trafford Publishing, July 5, 2013)
    Dave Hutchinsons selection of poems is centred on three fictional short stories that are written in verse. The author uses a wide range of fictional characters that inhabit the same seedy and despicable side of golf as they lie, cheat and in the final short story resort to murder on the course.
  • If Winter Comes

    A. S. M. Hutchinson

    Paperback (BiblioBazaar, Jan. 30, 2007)
    To take Mark Sabre at the age of thirty-four, and in the year 1912, and at the place Penny Green is to necessitate looking back a little towards the time of his marriage in 1904, but happens to find him in good light for observation. Encountering him hereabouts, one who had shared school days with him at his preparatory school so much as twenty-four years back would have found matter for recognition.
  • If Winter Comes

    A.S.M. Hutchinson

    Hardcover (Blakiston Triangle, Jan. 1, 1946)
    Hutchinson, A.S.M., If Winter Comes
  • The Limit of Wealth

    Alfred Hutchinson

    eBook
    The Limit of Wealth. 313 Pages.
  • Extinct Monsters: A Popular Account of Some of the Larger Forms of Ancient Animal Life

    H. N. Hutchinson

    language (Library of Alexandria, July 29, 2009)
    Natural history is deservedly a popular subject. The manifestations of life in all its varied forms is a theme that has never failed to attract all who are not destitute of intelligence. From the days of the primitive cave-dwellers of Europe, who lived with mammoths and other animals now lost to the world; of the ancient Egyptians, who drew and painted on the walls of their magnificent tombs the creatures inhabiting the delta of the Nile; of the Greeks, looking out on the world with their bright and child-like curiosity, down to our own times, this old, yet ever new, theme has never failed. Never before was there such a profusion of books describing the various forms of life inhabiting the different countries of the globe, or the rivers, lakes, and seas that diversify its scenery. Popular writers have done good service in making the way plain for those who wish to acquaint themselves with the structures, habits, and histories of living animals; while for students a still greater supply of excellent manuals and text-books has been, and still continues to be, forthcoming. But in our admiration for the present we forget the great past. How seldom do we think of that innumerable host of creatures that once trod this earth! How little in comparison has been done for them! Our natural-history books deal only with those that are alive now. Few popular writers have attempted to depict, as on a canvas, the great earth-drama that has, from age to age, been enacted on the terrestrial stage, of which we behold the latest, but probably not the closing scenes. When our poet wrote “All the world’s a stage,” he thought only of “men and women,” whom he called “merely players,” but the geologist sees a wider application of these words, as he reviews the drama of past life on the globe, and finds that animals, too, have had “their exits and their entrances;” nay more, “the strange eventful history” of a human life, sketched by the master-hand, might well be chosen to illustrate the birth and growth of the tree of life, the development of which we shall briefly trace from time to time, as we proceed on our survey of the larger and more wonderful animals of life that flourished in bygone times. We might even make out a “seven ages” of the world, in each of which some peculiar form of life stood out prominently, but such a scheme would be artificial.
  • The Metalhead Hero

    Sean Hutchinson

    Paperback (Independently published, Aug. 21, 2017)
    Logan is more or less just like any other shop boy, and his dog Laddy is just like any other boy's best friend. Except that their ho-hum life in retail is occasionally interrupted by alarms signaling that monsters have come out of the black forest to attack his friend Viviane's chickens. When that happens, the two do what any self-respecting Americans would. They adopt rocking super-hero identities and kick some monster butt!
  • the happy warrior

    a. s. m. hutchinson

    Hardcover (Grosset & Dunlap, Jan. 1, 1912)
    None
  • Dylan's Day

    Tim Hutchinson

    eBook (Pinwheel Books, Oct. 14, 2013)
    Dylan is a playful and curious dog who has many things to do with his time, including the most important thing of all: finding the big fat cat that lives next door. This beautifully illustrated book follows Dylan as he chases, sniffs, catches and follows birds, flowers, pots, neighbors and more, all the while frantically looking for the big fat catuntil he finds it, that is. Dylans Day is a funny and endearing story that teaches kids its OK to sometimes be a little scared.
  • Cora: The Unwilling Queen

    Amy Hutchinson

    (Amy Hutchinson, Dec. 22, 2012)
    What if the ancient story of Persephone and Hades wasn't just a myth? Cora Dell has, up until her junior year, lived the ordinary life of an ordinary teenager. But that was before the dreams started—vivid dreams of another world and a darkly seductive stranger who whispers intriguing promises into her ear. When her dreams turn into nightmares, however, she suspects that her nightly journeys into this foreign world may be more than fantasy. With the help of her two best friends—and an unexpected ally—Cora struggles to find a solution that will keep her safely in the world she calls home.