


Hutband Trockenblumen apricot Lavendel
Marsoni
M251S
Get it in 3 business days with 1 day shipping.
Friday, May 29
Hutband Trockenblumen apricot LavendelDieses Hutband aus Trockenblumen mit Ruskus und Glixia kommt in zarten apricot Farben und natrlichen wei Tnen. Durch ihr filigranes Erscheinungsbild ist es ein tolles Highlight fr eine Berghochzeit oder zur Oktoberfestzeit im Herbst. Aber auch die Festival Saison geht wieder los und hier darf der coole Festival Look mit Hut und Trockenblumen nicht fehlen. Flowercrowns oder auch Hutbnder aus Trockenblumen sind beim Festival Look nicht mehr wegzudenken.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 27, 2026
★★★★★ 5
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I took a long time to read this book so I could soak in and apply the principles laid out from God's Word. We have all been stolen from in some way or another, whether it has been failed relationships, finances, health, or even what we feel is our calling or destiny. The good news is that we can stand on God's Word and take back what the thief has stolen. I am still applying what I have learned to have faith that God will restore the years that the locusts have eaten
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Reviewed in the United States on July 13, 2025
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I love this book. I purchase the audiobook, I wish I had purchased the hardcopy instead. It has so much information that you must read and re-read each chapter in order to gleam all the knowledge it provides.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 16, 2026
★★★★★ 5
A penetrating discussion of important books by Black authors.
Format: Kindle
Atcho’s choice of texts is smart: each has survived many decades in print, fascinates modern readers, and probes profound and current themes. Most are well known. Each one is worth your while to read or reread. Fiction, in particular, makes the Black experience in our country accessible to others. Living inside the head of Bigger Thomas (Native Son) offers a more personal understanding than any essay can.
The church has always been part of the story, and Atcho does justice to this by examining African-American literature in a theological light. He is sensitive to what each text is saying on a spiritual level, discerning the subtext and bringing it to light. Over and over, as I read his analyses, I had the experience of seeing more clearly what I had only vaguely intuited. The readings he discusses are not one-dimensional or didactic, and I found having a Virgil at my side was invaluable.
This book is a gift to us all.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 14, 2022
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Our church read this book together, and I can't recommend enough that your church do the same!
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I am so grateful to Claude Atcho for inextricably weaving together a spacious reformed theology with the heights and depths of great African American literature. Thanks to his gracious, nuanced, and substantive guidance, I can no longer separate the two. For example, I will no longer be able to read the Exodus account of liberation without imagining Zora Neale Hurston's "Moses, Man of the Mountain." Where the themes of great African American literature (and indeed, great theology) do not short-cut suffering, death, lament, and evil, Atcho manages to do this heavy lifting in a way that welcomes uninitiated readers like me. Our church read this book together, and I can't recommend enough that your church do the same!
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