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Books with title Tru Confessions

  • Confessions

    Saint Augustine, Edward Bouverie Pusey

    Hardcover (Simon & Brown, Nov. 9, 2018)
    None
  • Confessions

    Saint Augustine, Edward Bouverie Pusey - translator, Tim Bruce, Brilliance Audio

    Audiobook (Brilliance Audio, March 3, 2020)
    In Confessions, regarded as the first true Western autobiography, Saint Augustine of Hippo lays bare his heart, body, and soul. In this unguarded prayer, a fallible Augustine admits to the indiscretions, selfishness, and licentious obsessions of his youth. He reveals a man of contradictory desires and beliefs, a regretful libertine torn between sin and morality on a spiritual journey toward his conversion to Christianity. Meditative and philosophical, personal yet universal, Confessions has a surprising modernity--more than sixteen hundred years after it was written--and still resonates, influencing and shaping our discourse on living a life filled with meaning. Revised edition: Previously published as Confessions, this edition of Confessions (AmazonClassics Edition) includes editorial revisions.
  • The Confession

    Charles Todd, Simon Prebble

    Preloaded Digital Audio Player (Sound Library, Jan. 1, 2012)
    Claiming he needs to clear his conscience, a dying man walks into Scotland Yard and confesses that he killed his cousin years ago during the war. When Inspector Ian Rutledge presses for details, the man dodges the questions, revealing only that he hails from the north of London in Essex. With little information and no body to open an official inquiry, Rutledge begins to look into the case on his own. But less than two weeks later, the would-be killer's body is found floating in the Thames, a bullet hole in the back of his head. Searching for answers, Rutledge discovers that the dead man was not who he claimed to be. So what was his real name—and who put a bullet in his head? Was the "confession" and his own death related? Or was there something else in the victim's past that had led to his murder? The Inspector's only clue is a gold locket—found around the dead man's neck—that leads back to Essex, an insular village that will do anything to protect itself from notoriety. For notoriety brings the curious, and with the curious comes change and an unwelcome spotlight on a centuries' old act of evil that even now can damn them all.
  • The Confession

    Beverly Lewis

    Paperback
    None
  • The Confession

    Beverly Lewis, Barbara Caruso

    Preloaded Digital Audio Player (Recorded Books, Nov. 1, 2008)
    None
  • Confessions

    Saint Augustine, Edward Bouverie Pusey

    Paperback (Simon & Brown, Oct. 23, 2018)
    None
  • Confessions

    JamesPatterson

    Hardcover (LittleBrownandCompany, Oct. 31, 2014)
    Title: Confessions( The Paris Mysteries) <>Binding: Hardcover <>Author: JamesPatterson <>Publisher: LittleBrownandCompany
  • The Confession

    R. L. Stine

    Paperback (Demco Media, May 1, 1996)
    All of Julie's friends had hated Al, wishing that he were dead, and shortly after his death one of her friends confesses that he is the murderer, but Julie and her friends decide to keep his secret because they believe that he will never kill again
  • The Confessions

    Jean-Jacques Rousseau

    (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, July 22, 2017)
    The Confessions By Jean-Jacques Rousseau
  • The Confessions

    Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Samuel William Orson

    (, Dec. 17, 2019)
    Rousseau begins his Confessions by claiming that he is about to embark on an enterprise never before attempted: to present a self-portrait that is “in every way true to nature” and that hides nothing. He begins his tale by describing his family, including his mother’s death at his birth. He ruminates on his earliest memories, which begin when he was five, a dawning of consciousness that he traces to his learning to read. He discusses his childhood in the years before his father left him and his own decision to run away to see the world at the age of sixteen. He often dwells for many pages on seemingly minor events that hold great importance for him.Throughout the Confessions, Rousseau frequently discusses the more unsavory or embarrassing experiences of his life, and he devotes much of the early section to these types of episodes. In one section, he describes urinating in a neighbor’s cooking pot as a mischievous child. He also discusses the revelatory experience he had at age eleven of being beaten by an adored female nanny twice his age—and desiring to be beaten again, which he analyzes as being his entry into the world of adult sexuality.
  • The Confessions

    Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Samuel William Orson

    (, March 20, 2020)
    The Confessions is an autobiographical book by Jean-Jacques Rousseau. In modern times, it is often published with the title The Confessions of Jean-Jacques Rousseau in order to distinguish it from Saint Augustine's Confessions. Covering the first fifty-three years of Rousseau's life, up to 1765, it was completed in 1769, but not published until 1782, four years after Rousseau's death, even though Rousseau did read excerpts of his manuscript publicly at various salons and other meeting places.
  • The Confessions

    Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Samuel William Orson

    (, March 12, 2020)
    The Confessions is an autobiographical book by Jean-Jacques Rousseau. In modern times, it is often published with the title The Confessions of Jean-Jacques Rousseau in order to distinguish it from Saint Augustine's Confessions. Covering the first fifty-three years of Rousseau's life, up to 1765, it was completed in 1769, but not published until 1782, four years after Rousseau's death, even though Rousseau did read excerpts of his manuscript publicly at various salons and other meeting places.