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Books published by publisher Spiritscribe Publishing, LLC

  • The Acharnians: "A man's homeland is wherever he prospers"

    Aristophanes

    language (Scribe Publishing, March 3, 2017)
    The reality is that little is known of Aristophanes actual life but eleven of his forty plays survive intact and upon those rest his deserved reputation as the Father of Comedy or, The Prince of Ancient Comedy. Accounts agree that he was born sometime between 456BC and 446 BC. Many cities claim the honor of his birthplace and the most probable story makes him the son of Philippus of Ægina, and therefore only an adopted citizen of Athens, a distinction which, at times could be cruel, though he was raised and educated in Athens. His plays are said to recreate the life of ancient Athens more realistically than any other author could. Intellectually his powers of ridicule were feared by his influential contemporaries; Plato himself singled out Aristophanes' play The Clouds as a slander that contributed to the trial and condemning to death of Socrates and although other satirical playwrights had also caricatured the philosopher his carried the most weight. His now lost play, The Babylonians, was denounced by the demagogue Cleon as a slander against the Athenian polis. Aristophanes seems to have taken this criticism to heart and thereafter caricatured Cleon mercilessly in his subsequent plays, especially The Knights. His life and playwriting years were undoubtedly long though again accounts as to the year of his death vary quite widely. What can be certain is that his legacy of surviving plays is in effect both a treasured legacy but also in itself the only surviving texts of Ancient Greek comedy.
  • Children of Color Storybook Bible Audio CD Set

    Urban Spirit! Interantional Children's Bible /editors at Urban Spriit! Co. LLC

    Audio CD (Urban Spirit Publishing Co. LLC, July 5, 2014)
    The Children of Color Storybook Bible Complete Audio CD SET is a 4-CD set based upon the Children of Color Storybook Bible. There are hours and hours of enjoyment in this true Bible experience where listeners will be taken back and hear word for word concise narration, music and special sound effects that make the stories come to life!**** It's best for use in your car, at home, during VBS or Sunday School Classes or just to take a break from the TV and telephone. **** An exciting Bible experience is in store for children and adults who listen to these 61 interesting and compelling stories taken directly from the International Children's Bible (ICB) version of the Bible****. The Children of Color Storybook Bible Audio CD Set is an exceptionally great gift that will be treasured for a lifetime. Every word in this book/ CD is spoken, written and illustrated to show African-American and other children of color that they are an important part of God's Word and His plan for the world. ****These 61 well-known stories of Biblical characters and events help children build self-esteem and serve as a foundation for Christian character and moral values. Purchase this wonderful gift for your children's church, Sunday School class and your loved ones today!**** Enjoy these well-known stories of Bible characters and biblical events as they are brought to life featuring, music, sound-effects and word-for word narration from the popular Children of Color Storybook Bible.**** Stories include****- Old Testament**** Disc #1 -The Story of Creation, Adam and Eve, Cain and Able, Noah, Nimrod and the Descendants of Ham, Sodom and Gomorrah, Abraham and Isaac, The Birth of Moses, Moses and Zipporah, The Exodus, Jethro, The Ten Commandments, Joshua and the Walls of Jericho, Gideon, Samson & Delilah, Ruth and Namoi.**** Disc #2 - Samuel in the Temple, David and Goliath, The Ethiopian Messenger, Queen of Sheba, Elijah and Elisha, The Healing of Naaman, Nehemiah, Esther, Solomon and the Shulamite, Ebed-Melech, Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego, Daniel and the Lions' Den, Jonah and the Big Fish.**** New Testament**** Disc #3 - Mary and Elizabeth, The Birth of Jesus, Jesus Grows Up, John the Baptist, Water to Wine, Jesus Disciples, Jesus Feeds Five Thousand, The Sermon on the Mount, Stories Jesus Told, The Mustard Seed, Jesus Walks on Water, The Good Samaritan, Mary and Martha, Being Lost, Raising Lazarus, The Rich Fool.**** Disc #4 - Zaccheaus, The Prodigal Son, The Good Shepherd, The Triumphant Entry, The Last Supper, The Garden of Gethsemane, The Road to the Cross, The Crucifixion, The Resurrection, On the Road to Emmaus, Doubting Thomas, Peter and John on Trial, Saul and the Road to Damascus, Philip and the Ethiopian, Paul's Journeys, Timothy**** Pick up or order your copy today! Share this with the children & adults you love!
  • Æschylus - Agamemnon: from The Oresteia Trilogy. Translaton by Gilbert Murray

    Æschylus, Gilbert Murray

    (Scribe Publishing, March 10, 2017)
    Æschylus is often regarded as the father of Greek tragedy; he moved play writing from the simple interaction of a single character and a chorus to one where many characters interact and thereby create more dynamic and dramatic situations. Æschylus, was the son of Euphorion, and a scion of a Eupatrid or noble family. He was born at Eleusis 525 B.C., or, as the Greeks calculated time, in the fourth year of the 63rd Olympiad. He first worked at a vineyard and whilst there claimed to have been visited by Dionysis in a dream and told to turn his attention to the tragic art. It was a dream that would deliver a rich and incredible legacy through his writing talents. His earliest tragedy, composed when he was twenty-six years of age, failed to win the fabled Dionysia, (a revered festival of theatre) and it was not until fifteen years later that he gained this victory in 484BC going on to win it again in 472 BC (for The Persians), 467 BC (for Seven Against Thebes) and 463 BC (for The Suppliants). Æschylus was also known for his military skills and was ready to fight in defence of Athens whenever the call was made. He and his brother, Cynegeirus, fought against Darius's invading Persian army at the Battle of Marathon in 490 BCE and, although the Greeks won against overwhelming odds, Cynegeirus died in the battle, which had a naturally had a profound effect on Æschylus. He made several visits to the important Greek city of Syracuse in Sicily at the invitation of the tyrant Hieron, and it is thought that he also travelled extensively in the region of Thrace. His writing continued to be the envy of others. With the series of plays of which Seven Against Thebes was a part, his supremacy was undisputed. He was the "father of tragedy." Æschylus made many changes to dramatic form. The importance of the chorus was demoted and a second added to give prominence to the dialogue and making that interchange the leading feature of the play. He removed all deeds of bloodshed from the public view, and in their place provided various spectacular elements, improving the costumes, making the masks more expressive and convenient, and probably adopting the cothurnus to increase the stature of the performers. Finally, he established the custom of contending for the prize with trilogies, an inter-connecting set of three independent dramas. The closing years of the life of Æschylus were mainly spent in Sicily, which he had first visited soon after his defeat at the Dionysia by Sophocles. Æschylus returned to Athens to produce his Orestean trilogy, probably the finest of his works, although the Eumenides, the last of the three plays, revealed so openly his aristocratic tendencies that he became extremely unpopular, and returned to Sicily for the last time in 458 BCE and it was there that he died, while visiting the city of Gela in 456 or 455 BCE.
  • Aristophanes - The Acharnians: "A man's homeland is wherever he prospers"

    Aristophanes

    (Scribe Publishing, March 10, 2017)
    The reality is that little is known of Aristophanes actual life but eleven of his forty plays survive intact and upon those rest his deserved reputation as the Father of Comedy or, The Prince of Ancient Comedy. Accounts agree that he was born sometime between 456BC and 446 BC. Many cities claim the honor of his birthplace and the most probable story makes him the son of Philippus of Ægina, and therefore only an adopted citizen of Athens, a distinction which, at times could be cruel, though he was raised and educated in Athens. His plays are said to recreate the life of ancient Athens more realistically than any other author could. Intellectually his powers of ridicule were feared by his influential contemporaries; Plato himself singled out Aristophanes' play The Clouds as a slander that contributed to the trial and condemning to death of Socrates and although other satirical playwrights had also caricatured the philosopher his carried the most weight. His now lost play, The Babylonians, was denounced by the demagogue Cleon as a slander against the Athenian polis. Aristophanes seems to have taken this criticism to heart and thereafter caricatured Cleon mercilessly in his subsequent plays, especially The Knights. His life and playwriting years were undoubtedly long though again accounts as to the year of his death vary quite widely. What can be certain is that his legacy of surviving plays is in effect both a treasured legacy but also in itself the only surviving texts of Ancient Greek comedy.
  • William Shakespeare - The Merchant of Venice: "But love is blind, and lovers cannot see".

    William Shakespeare

    Paperback (Scribe Publishing, May 26, 2016)
    The life of William Shakespeare, arguably the most significant figure in the Western literary canon, is relatively unknown. Shakespeare was born in Stratford-upon-Avon in 1565, possibly on the 23rd April, St. George’s Day, and baptised there on 26th April. Little is known of his education and the first firm facts to his life relate to his marriage, aged 18, to Anne Hathaway, who was 26 and from the nearby village of Shottery. Anne gave birth to their first son six months later. Shakespeare’s first play, The Comedy of Errors began a procession of real heavyweights that were to emanate from his pen in a career of just over twenty years in which 37 plays were written and his reputation forever established. This early skill was recognised by many and by 1594 the Lord Chamberlain’s Men were performing his works. With the advantage of Shakespeare’s progressive writing they rapidly became London’s leading company of players, affording him more exposure and, following the death of Queen Elizabeth in 1603, a royal patent by the new king, James I, at which point they changed their name to the King’s Men. By 1598, and despite efforts to pirate his work, Shakespeare’s name was well known and had become a selling point in its own right on title pages. No plays are attributed to Shakespeare after 1613, and the last few plays he wrote before this time were in collaboration with other writers, one of whom is likely to be John Fletcher who succeeded him as the house playwright for the King’s Men. William Shakespeare died two months later on April 23rd, 1616, survived by his wife, two daughters and a legacy of writing that none have since yet eclipsed.
  • A Charming Fellow: In Three Volumes

    Frances Eleanor Trollope

    eBook (Scribe Publishing, Dec. 14, 2015)
    Frances Eleanor Trollope, nÄ—e Ternan, was born in August 1835 on board a paddle steamer in Delaware Bay in the United States. After an introduction by Charles Dickens she became the governess to the child of Thomas Adolphus Trollope, the brother to the more famed Anthony. Within months they had married and settled on a new life together in Rome. It was from here that Frances elevated her talents to become a full member of the Trollope writing dynasty. Her fiction is peopled by eccentric cosmopolitan Londoners, Italian and French visitors, and motherless, bright, and educated young women trying to carve out niches for themselves within the boundaries of the middle and upper-middle classes, with varying degrees of success. Although her work was fashionable at the time it fell into obscurity after her death but is now becoming the subject of growing interest and deservedly so.
  • Aristophanes - The Clouds: "High thoughts must have high language"

    Aristophanes

    Paperback (Scribe Publishing, March 10, 2017)
    The reality is that little is known of Aristophanes actual life but eleven of his forty plays survive intact and upon those rest his deserved reputation as the Father of Comedy or, The Prince of Ancient Comedy. Accounts agree that he was born sometime between 456BC and 446 BC. Many cities claim the honor of his birthplace and the most probable story makes him the son of Philippus of Ægina, and therefore only an adopted citizen of Athens, a distinction which, at times could be cruel, though he was raised and educated in Athens. His plays are said to recreate the life of ancient Athens more realistically than any other author could. Intellectually his powers of ridicule were feared by his influential contemporaries; Plato himself singled out Aristophanes' play The Clouds as a slander that contributed to the trial and condemning to death of Socrates and although other satirical playwrights had also caricatured the philosopher his carried the most weight. His now lost play, The Babylonians, was denounced by the demagogue Cleon as a slander against the Athenian polis. Aristophanes seems to have taken this criticism to heart and thereafter caricatured Cleon mercilessly in his subsequent plays, especially The Knights. His life and playwriting years were undoubtedly long though again accounts as to the year of his death vary quite widely. What can be certain is that his legacy of surviving plays is in effect both a treasured legacy but also in itself the only surviving texts of Ancient Greek comedy.
  • Frances Milton Trollope - Domestic Manners of the Americans

    Frances Milton Trollope

    Paperback (Scribe Publishing, Aug. 17, 2018)
    Frances Milton Trollope was born on March 10th, 1779 at Stapleton in Bristol. The mother of the world famed Anthony Trollope, and his brother Thomas Adolphus Trollope, she was a late entrant to the ranks of authors being fifty when she embarked upon this new career, and even then more by necessity for income than by design. Her first book, in 1832, Domestic Manners of the Americans, gained her immediate notice. Although it was a one sided view of the failings of Americans, it was also witty and acerbic. But much of the attention she received was for her strong novels of social protest. Jonathan Jefferson Whitlaw, published in 1836, was the first anti-slavery novel, and was a great influence on the American writer Harriet Beecher Stowe and her more famous Uncle Tom's Cabin in 1852. Michael Armstrong: Factory Boy began publication in 1840 and was the first industrial novel to be published in Britain. These were followed by three volumes of The Vicar of Wrexhill, which examined the corruption in the Church of England and evangelical circles. However her greatest work is more often considered to be the Widow Barnaby trilogy (published between 1839–1843). In later years Frances Milton Trollope continued to write novels and books on wide, varied and miscellaneous subjects, writing in all in excess of a quite incredible 100 volumes. Frances Milton Trollope died on October 6th, 1863.