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Nathaniel mkombola

Magical Realism
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What is Nathaniel mkombola

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Wrong Karma

Stephanie is a young girl of six years who is constantly abused by her father and elder brother. Going, crying to her mother, she tells her about this but her mom believes she is just young, and making up stories. Stephanie has no choice but to silently bear this alone. One day she escapes from the house and runs to the police station to make a report, but on getting there she loses her courage and imagines that the wouldn’t believe her just like her mom didn’t. Turning back and trudging slowly home, she stumbles upon an abandoned and tattered doll in a trash bin. Unbeknownst to her that this is not just an ordinary doll but a demonic doll. Reasoning that she and the doll were alike in so many ways, she picks it up takes it home and patches it up. An act which drastically changes the lives of her and those around her. What happens when she makes a pact with the doll and suceeds in killing her family members expect she elder brother and what happens when she sets her eyes on a familiar face five hundred years later after she is set free from bondage This is a horror novel that centers on an event which took place centuries ago. When an unknown man steals a hunted artifact in form of a golden mirror from his girlfriend after a breakup, only for it get broken on his way home. It is said that the sin of men lives with them but that is not the case for scott who is being hunted for something which he neither committed nor know anything about.

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The Book of Jonah

The story of Jonah has great theological import. It concerns a disobedient prophet who rejected his divine commission, was cast overboard in a storm and swallowed by a great fish, rescued in a marvelous manner, and returned to his starting point. Now he obeys and goes to Nineveh, the capital of Israel’s ancient enemy. The Ninevites listen to his message of doom and repent immediately. All, from king to lowliest subject, humble themselves in sackcloth and ashes. Seeing their repentance, God does not carry out the punishment planned for them. At this, Jonah complains, angry because the Lord spares them. This fascinating story caricatures a narrow mentality which would see God’s interest extending only to Israel, whereas God is presented as concerned with and merciful to even the inhabitants of Nineveh, the capital of the Assyrian empire which brought the Northern Kingdom of Israel to an end and devastated Jerusalem in 701 B.C. The Lord is free to “repent” and change his mind. Jonah seems to realize this possibility and wants no part in it. But the story also conveys something of the ineluctable character of the prophetic calling. The book is replete with irony, wherein much of its humor lies. The name “Jonah” means “dove” in Hebrew, but Jonah’s character is anything but dove-like. Jonah is commanded to go east to Nineveh but flees toward the westernmost possible point, only to be swallowed by a great fish and dumped back at this starting point. The sailors pray to their gods, but Jonah is asleep in the hold. The prophet’s preaching is a minimum message of destruction, while it is the king of Nineveh who calls for repentance and conversion; the instant conversion of the Ninevites is greeted by Jonah with anger and sulking. He reproaches the Lord in words that echo Israel’s traditional praise of his mercy. Jonah is concerned about the loss of the gourd but not about the possible destruction of 120,000 Ninevites. This book is the story of a disobedient, narrow-minded prophet who is angry at the outcome of the sole message he delivers. It is difficult to date but almost certainly is postexilic and may reflect the somewhat narrow, nationalistic reforms of Ezra and Nehemiah. As to genre, it has been classified in various ways, such as parable or satire. The “sign” of Jonah is interpreted in two ways in the New Testament: His experience of three days and nights in the fish is a “type” of the experience of the Son of Man (Mt 12:39–40), and the Ninevites’ reaction to the preaching of Jonah is contrasted with the failure of Jesus’ generation to obey the preaching of one who is “greater than Jonah”

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