Terri Blackstock - Published Books

Published Books

Moon lighter series

  1. Truth Stained Lies (2013)
  • The Intervention Series
    • Intervention (2010)
    • Vicious Cycle (2011)
    • Downfall (2012)
  • The Cape Refuge Series
    • Cape Refuge (2002)
    • Southern Storm (2003)
    • River's Edge (2005)
    • Breaker's Reef (2005)
  • Seasons Series (co-written with Beverly LaHaye)
    • Seasons Under Heaven (2001)
    • Showers in Season (2001)
    • Times and Seasons (2002)
    • Season of Blessing (2003)
  • Newpointe 911 Series
    • Private Justice (1998)
    • Shadow of Doubt (1998)
    • Word of Honor (1999)
    • Trial by Fire (2000)
    • Line of Duty (2003)
  • Restoration Series
    • Last Light (2006)
    • Night Light (2006)
    • True Light (2007)
    • Dawn's Light (2008)
  • Sun Coast Chronicles
    • Evidence of Mercy (1995)
    • Justifiable Means (1996)
    • Ulterior Motives (1996)
    • Presumption of Guilt (1997)
  • Second Chances
    • Never Again Good-bye (1996, reprinted edition)
    • When Dreams Cross (2000, reprinted edition)
    • Blind Trust (2000, reprinted edition)
    • Broken Wings (2000, reprinted edition)
  • Other Books
    • Shadow in Serenity (2011)
    • Predator (2010)
    • Double Minds (2009)
    • Emerald Windows (2001)

Read more about this topic:  Terri Blackstock

Famous quotes containing the words published and/or books:

    Each class of society has its own requirements; but it may be said that every class teaches the one immediately below it; and if the highest class be ignorant, uneducated, loving display, luxuriousness, and idle, the same spirit will prevail in humbler life.
    —First published in Girls’ Home Companion (1895)

    In an extensive reading of recent books by psychologists, psychoanalysts, psychiatrists, and inspirationalists, I have discovered that they all suffer from one or more of these expression-complexes: italicizing, capitalizing, exclamation-pointing, multiple-interrogating, and itemizing. These are all forms of what the psychos themselves would call, if they faced their condition frankly, Rhetorical-Over-Compensation.
    James Thurber (1894–1961)