Revolutionise Your Kitchen. Home cook Chelsea Goodwin, creator of budget cookery platform $10 Meals Australia, wants to make your life a whole lot easier – and cheaper. She’s taken the stress out of getting good food on the table by curating ten weeks’ worth of dinner meal plans with their recipes and grocery lists, making budget-friendly cooking a breeze. Delicious Dinners on a Dime. Each recipe is easy to make and feeds at least four people, and the meal plans work out at $2.50 per serve or less. That’s a whole week of generous dinners for just $70! Flavourful, Affordable Family Meals. Family-friendly, nutritious and flavour-packed, Chelsea’s recipes use easy-to-find supermarket ingredients and come with bonus tips and swaps for keeping your food costs low. With eye-catching, full-colour photographs for every recipe, $10 Meals with Chelsea features: Fakeaway favourites including Buttermilk Chicken Burgers, Black Pepper Beef and Cheat’s Pad Thai 30-minute meals like Vietnamese Meatballs, Green Carbonara and Thai Basil Chicken Stir-Fry One-pot winners such as Zingy Chicken Tray Bake and Lamb Harira Healthy choices from Rainbow Minestrone and Beef Burrito Bowls to Spinach and Potato Curry. Kiss goodbye to the daily dinner dilemma and say hello to cost-saving convenience with $10 Meals with Chelsea.
Episode 5 « Une histoire magnifique, fascinante et bouleversante qui m’a captivée dès la première page. » - Jessica Sorenson , auteur « Avec My Favorite Mistake, Chelsea Cameron a trouvé pour ses héros le parfait rapport amour/haine. » - Publishers Weekly Une romance New Adult captivante dans l'univers des campus universitaires, pour les fans d'Anna Todd ou Elle Kennedy. Une erreur va changer sa vie pour le meilleur ou pour le pire. Taylor est furieuse. Comment l’université a-t-elle pu lui imposer de partager sa minuscule chambre d’étudiante avec un colocataire homme ? Et pas n’importe lequel : Hunter Zaccadelli. Un bad boy tatoué, terriblement sexy, qui joue de la guitare comme un dieu et qui ne perd pas une occasion de lui dire à quel point il a envie d’elle. Autrement dit, le genre de type trop beau et trop sûr de lui, à fuir comme la peste sous peine de tomber amoureuse et de souffrir atrocement. Elle n’a donc qu’une solution : tout faire pour qu’il déménage, avant qu’il soit trop tard... A propos de l'auteur : Chelsea M. Cameron est originaire du Maine. Passionnée de gâteaux (le red velvet !), obsédée de thé et végétarienne, elle a aussi été pom-pom girl et la plus mauvaise « gameuse » au monde. Quand elle n’écrit pas, elle aime regarder des publireportages, chanter dans sa voiture et jouer à attraper son chat, Sassenach. Elle est diplômée de journalisme, mais elle a rapidement abandonné cette carrière pour raconter la vie des personnages qui vivent dans sa tête. La plupart du temps, ces gens se révèlent aussi bizarres qu’elle...
Episode 4 « Une histoire magnifique, fascinante et bouleversante qui m’a captivée dès la première page. » - Jessica Sorenson , auteur « Avec My Favorite Mistake, Chelsea Cameron a trouvé pour ses héros le parfait rapport amour/haine. » - Publishers Weekly Une romance New Adult captivante dans l'univers des campus universitaires, pour les fans d'Anna Todd ou Elle Kennedy. Une erreur va changer sa vie pour le meilleur ou pour le pire. Taylor est furieuse. Comment l’université a-t-elle pu lui imposer de partager sa minuscule chambre d’étudiante avec un colocataire homme ? Et pas n’importe lequel : Hunter Zaccadelli. Un bad boy tatoué, terriblement sexy, qui joue de la guitare comme un dieu et qui ne perd pas une occasion de lui dire à quel point il a envie d’elle. Autrement dit, le genre de type trop beau et trop sûr de lui, à fuir comme la peste sous peine de tomber amoureuse et de souffrir atrocement. Elle n’a donc qu’une solution : tout faire pour qu’il déménage, avant qu’il soit trop tard... A propos de l'auteur : Chelsea M. Cameron est originaire du Maine. Passionnée de gâteaux (le red velvet !), obsédée de thé et végétarienne, elle a aussi été pom-pom girl et la plus mauvaise « gameuse » au monde. Quand elle n’écrit pas, elle aime regarder des publireportages, chanter dans sa voiture et jouer à attraper son chat, Sassenach. Elle est diplômée de journalisme, mais elle a rapidement abandonné cette carrière pour raconter la vie des personnages qui vivent dans sa tête. La plupart du temps, ces gens se révèlent aussi bizarres qu’elle...
Revolutionise Your Kitchen. Home cook Chelsea Goodwin, creator of budget cookery platform $10 Meals Australia, wants to make your life a whole lot easier – and cheaper. She’s taken the stress out of getting good food on the table by curating ten weeks’ worth of dinner meal plans with their recipes and grocery lists, making budget-friendly cooking a breeze. Delicious Dinners on a Dime. Each recipe is easy to make and feeds at least four people, and the meal plans work out at $2.50 per serve or less. That’s a whole week of generous dinners for just $70! Flavourful, Affordable Family Meals. Family-friendly, nutritious and flavour-packed, Chelsea’s recipes use easy-to-find supermarket ingredients and come with bonus tips and swaps for keeping your food costs low. With eye-catching, full-colour photographs for every recipe, $10 Meals with Chelsea features: Fakeaway favourites including Buttermilk Chicken Burgers, Black Pepper Beef and Cheat’s Pad Thai 30-minute meals like Vietnamese Meatballs, Green Carbonara and Thai Basil Chicken Stir-Fry One-pot winners such as Zingy Chicken Tray Bake and Lamb Harira Healthy choices from Rainbow Minestrone and Beef Burrito Bowls to Spinach and Potato Curry. Kiss goodbye to the daily dinner dilemma and say hello to cost-saving convenience with $10 Meals with Chelsea.
The Radical Mind is a groundbreaking analysis of the origins of the Christian Right, whose political victories are radically reshaping the landscape of American society. Scholars and the public alike have traditionally regarded the New Right and the Christian Right as separate movements. The New Right is supposedly a secular right-wing operation with purely political goals, while the Christian Right is an evangelical Protestant movement largely motivated by religious convictions. Insofar as both are conservative efforts, most people view them as reactionary and driven by a culture-war backlash against liberal changes to society. Chelsea Ebin’s The Radical Mind aims to overturn this consensus. Through a close analysis of New Right architects Connaught Marshner and Paul Weyrich (who is often seen as secular but was a committed Catholic), this book explores the way conservative Catholics and Protestants overcame their long-standing antipathy to form a political coalition—what Ebin calls the New Christian Right. Drawing on extensive archival research, Ebin shows how the movement’s key architects infused right-wing activism with religion. Rather than working to conserve the past, this book argues that the New Christian Right is fundamentally a forward-looking and proactive movement focused on remaking the political landscape in the United States. The radical aims of the New Christian Right have been obscured by the way they cultivated a shared identity of victimhood and manipulated the discourse about backlash to create a nostalgic idea of the past that they then leveraged to justify their right-wing policy goals. The Catholic-Protestant alliance constructed an imagined past that they projected into the future as their ideal vision of society. Ebin calls this strategy “prefigurative traditionalism”—a paradoxical prefiguring of a manufactured past. Using this tactic, the New Christian Right coalition disguised the radicality of its politics by framing their aims as reactionary and defensive rather than proactive and offensive. An interdisciplinary work informed by the fields of history, religious studies, public law, and American politics, The Radical Mind offers a new and convincing explanation for the recent gains of the Christian Right and the morally supercharged political landscape we face today.
Provides a practical, research-based roadmap for developing and applying twelve key competencies to multiply an individual’s impact, elevate the performance of others, and accelerate progress toward mission-oriented goals, generating greater value.
If you are struggling to find your footing in the coming out process, these pages will take you by the hand and gently guide you to overcoming your fear, embracing your spirit and learning to live your life out loud." - Karen McCrocklin This uniquely powerful book by Chelsea Griffo is a guiding light in the darkness. It will give you hope and encouragement and lead you on a journey of self-discovery, forgiveness, and the joy and peace that only unconditional self-love can bring. It provides understanding and insight into the internal mental and emotional process of coming out as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or queer, not only for the LGBTQ community but for their family and friends as well. While helping you unlearn the damaging and false beliefs that have been subconsciously ingrained into the self-images of so many LGBTQ people, this guide will teach you relevant and practical strategies for: * Coming out to yourself, your family, and friends * Overcoming internalized homophobia * Releasing harmful negative emotions through forgiveness * Navigating religion and spirituality as an LGBTQ person * Coping with bullying and standing up for yourself * Healthy ways to approach sex and dating * And much more A closet is a lonely prison of the soul. Self-love will set you free.
Rapid change calls for informed leadership. The goal of Donham’s text has always been to help school library professionals make a difference in the educational experience and academic attainment of students in their schools. With the addition of new co-author Sims, a junior high school librarian, this newly revised fourth edition rises to the challenge with updates and enhancements that confirm its value as an important resource for both LIS students and current school librarians. Covering all aspects of the school system, including students, curriculum and instruction, principals, district administration, and the community, it demonstrates how to interact and collaborate in order to integrate the school library program throughout these environments. Inside, readers will find myriad real-world examples of issues in school librarianship and evidence-based practice; discussion of such urgent topics as the educational needs of the iGen (those born between 1995 and 2012), changing reading habits, the influence of the media, and news literacy and other issues related to the proliferation of fake news; updates which touch upon the new AASL Standards, inquiry-based learning, assessment, and library program evaluation; specific tactics for establishing the library program as an active player in teaching and learning; an overview of education-related technology such as course management systems, the virtual library, makerspaces, information presentation and data representation tools like ScreenCast and Google Maps, online home-school communication, and online student safety and privacy; and end-of-chapter discussion scenarios that explore opportunities for the practical application of concepts. Reflecting changes—professional, theoretical, legal, and political—in both the library field and education, this new edition of a groundbreaking school library text will equip readers to be leaders at their schools and in their communities.
Health and science journalist Chelsea Conaboy explodes the concept of “maternal instinct” and tells a new story about what it means to become a parent. Conaboy expected things to change with the birth of her child. What she didn’t expect was how different she would feel. But she would soon discover what was behind this: her changing brain. Though Conaboy was prepared for the endless dirty diapers, the sleepless nights, and the joy of holding her newborn, she did not anticipate this shift in self, as deep as it was disorienting. Mother Brain is a groundbreaking exploration of the parental brain that untangles insidious myths from complicated realities. New parents undergo major structural and functional brain changes, driven by hormones and the deluge of stimuli a baby provides. These neurobiological changes help all parents—birthing or otherwise—adapt in those intense first days and prepare for a long period of learning how to meet their child’s needs. Pregnancy produces such significant changes in brain anatomy that researchers can easily sort those who have had one from those who haven't. And all highly involved parents, no matter their path to parenthood, develop similar caregiving circuitry. Yet this emerging science, which provides key insights into the wide-ranging experience of parenthood, from its larger role in shaping human nature to the intensity of our individual emotions, is mostly absent from the public conversation about parenthood. The story that exists in the science today is far more meaningful than the idea that mothers spring into being by instinct. Weaving the latest neuroscience and social psychology together with new reporting, Conaboy reveals unexpected upsides, generations of scientific neglect, and a powerful new narrative of parenthood.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.