Education plays a crucial role in our society. Parents send their kids to school to learn, which will enable them to find a job and earn a living when they become adults. Several students face challenges in school and are not able to get good grades. Through this short story, young students will find the right habits they need to develop in order to do well in school.
Soccer is the most popular sport in Brazil. Brazilian young children love playing soccer in the streets, and several people in Brazil gather every week in stadiums and pubs to watch soccer matches. The purpose of this fiction book is to inspire kids to follow their dreams regardless of other people’s opinions and turn their passion into a profession. This book will influence you in various ways: - It will help you become the best version of yourself - Encourage you to chase your dreams - Motivate you to work hard in order to become successful
Awa Is Fighting Depression is an astounding fiction book for people who are struggling with depression and for those who have relatives, friends or acquaintances who are also fighting with depression. It’s a story of young woman called Awa who grew up in Ivory Coast, Abidjan and had a normal life until life circumstances made her depressed. She had a big family and worked really hard to support them as most of them were unemployed, but she faced lots of challenges and hardships due to her depression. Her family and her never thought that she could become depressed because she was a joyful person. Awa was a strong person but her depression made her weak at some point in life. Fortunately, she was able to overcome her depression in the end. Do you want to know how she did it? This book reveals the secrets to overcoming depression.
The Golden Rules Of Friendship is an outstanding book for people who are facing challenges in their friendships and desire to know how to choose the right friends. There is no such thing as a perfect friend but there are genuine friends. Friendship is such an important part of our lives, and this book will give you a deeper understanding of how it works and the types of friends you should or shouldn't have. Through this book, you will find out the true meaning of friendship and its advantages. Most friendships don't last long due to many factors which are explained in the book. Knowing how to choose the right friends will have a positive impact on your life. This book reveals the rules of friendship and the secret to a successful friendship.
The Golden Rules Of Friendship is an outstanding book for people who are facing challenges in their friendships and desire to know how to choose the right friends. There is no such thing as a perfect friend but there are genuine friends. Friendship is such an important part of our lives, and this book will give you a deeper understanding of how it works and the types of friends you should or shouldn't have. Through this book, you will find out the true meaning of friendship and its advantages. Most friendships don't last long due to many factors which are explained in the book. Knowing how to choose the right friends will have a positive impact on your life. This book reveals the rules of friendship and the secret to a successful friendship.
Awa Is Fighting Depression is an astounding fiction book for people who are struggling with depression and for those who have relatives, friends or acquaintances who are also fighting with depression. It’s a story of young woman called Awa who grew up in Ivory Coast, Abidjan and had a normal life until life circumstances made her depressed. She had a big family and worked really hard to support them as most of them were unemployed, but she faced lots of challenges and hardships due to her depression. Her family and her never thought that she could become depressed because she was a joyful person. Awa was a strong person but her depression made her weak at some point in life. Fortunately, she was able to overcome her depression in the end. Do you want to know how she did it? This book reveals the secrets to overcoming depression.
Education plays a crucial role in our society. Parents send their kids to school to learn, which will enable them to find a job and earn a living when they become adults. Several students face challenges in school and are not able to get good grades. Through this short story, young students will find the right habits they need to develop in order to do well in school.
Soccer is the most popular sport in Brazil. Brazilian young children love playing soccer in the streets, and several people in Brazil gather every week in stadiums and pubs to watch soccer matches. The purpose of this fiction book is to inspire kids to follow their dreams regardless of other people’s opinions and turn their passion into a profession. This book will influence you in various ways: - It will help you become the best version of yourself - Encourage you to chase your dreams - Motivate you to work hard in order to become successful
Nigeb Fortrute, a young flen living in secluded Ullantown, is invited with seven other flens by Dominum's son to go on a journey that will make them a part of the battle against the evil Hondaloom. During their quest from Ullantown to Flenvinhum and from there to a hidden temple on a lonely island, the flens encounter opposition and are pursued by their enemies, the fearsome luns. But as the stages of their adventure unfold, Nigeb discovers the role that he has to play in history, and that he has the key to the flens becoming Azoons, the mighty warriors of Old.
Everything you ever needed to know about the St. Louis Rams is right here. Facts, history, stats, and trivia questions interlaced with photos fill this essential book for any Football fan.
A collection of short stories that covers several genres and several poems. A few stories are bases on several experiences and there's sci-fi, horror and characters getting their just desserts. Keywords: Imaginative, Possible, Frightening, Thought Provoking, Short Stories
This accessible and topical book offers insights to policy makers in both industrialized and developing countries as well as to scholars and researchers of economics, development, international relations and to specialists in migration."--BOOK JACKET.
Two and a half years after the devastation of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, New Orleans and south Louisiana continue to struggle in an unsettled gumbo of environmental, social, and rebuilding chaos. Citizens await the fruition of four successive recovery and reconstruction planning processes and the realization of essential infrastructure repairs. Repopulation in Orleans Parish has slowed considerably; the parish remains at best two-thirds of its former size; thousands of former residents who wish to return face barriers of many kinds. Heroic efforts at rebuilding have occurred through the efforts of individual neighborhood associations and voluntary associations who have attempted to address serious losses in affordable housing and health care services. Walking to New Orleans traces how a dominant but paradoxical model of the relation between the human and natural worlds in Western culture has informed many environmental and engineering dilemmas and has contributed to the history of social inequities and injustice that anteceded the disasters of the hurricanes and subsequent flooding. It proposes a model for collaborative recovery that links principles of ethics and engineering, in which citizens become active, ongoing participants in the process of the reconstruction and redesign of their unique locus of habitation. Equally important, it gives voice to the citizens and associations who are desperately working to rebuild their homes and lives both in urban New Orleans and in the villages of coastal Louisiana.
Specifically created to complement the Third Edition of the APSAC Handbook on Child Maltreatment, this collection of 23 carefully selected articles on child abuse and neglect parallels the structure of the Handbook. It is also a great companion to other Sage books, such as Barnett’s Family Violence Across the Lifespan and Miller and Perrin’s Child Maltreatment.
Investigating and litigating cases of interpersonal violence is difficult. With child and elder abuse, the vulnerability of the victim makes the work emotionally as well as legally taxing. With domestic violence, the tendency of some victims to
Black behind the Ears is an innovative historical and ethnographic examination of Dominican identity formation in the Dominican Republic and the United States. For much of the Dominican Republic’s history, the national body has been defined as “not black,” even as black ancestry has been grudgingly acknowledged. Rejecting simplistic explanations, Ginetta E. B. Candelario suggests that it is not a desire for whiteness that guides Dominican identity discourses and displays. Instead, it is an ideal norm of what it means to be both indigenous to the Republic (indios) and “Hispanic.” Both indigeneity and Hispanicity have operated as vehicles for asserting Dominican sovereignty in the context of the historically triangulated dynamics of Spanish colonialism, Haitian unification efforts, and U.S. imperialism. Candelario shows how the legacy of that history is manifest in contemporary Dominican identity discourses and displays, whether in the national historiography, the national museum’s exhibits, or ideas about women’s beauty. Dominican beauty culture is crucial to efforts to identify as “indios” because, as an easily altered bodily feature, hair texture trumps skin color, facial features, and ancestry in defining Dominicans as indios. Candelario draws on her participant observation in a Dominican beauty shop in Washington Heights, a New York City neighborhood with the oldest and largest Dominican community outside the Republic, and on interviews with Dominicans in New York City, Washington, D.C., and Santo Domingo. She also analyzes museum archives and displays in the Museo del Hombre Dominicano and the Smithsonian Institution as well as nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century European and American travel narratives.
William Shawn once called The Talk of the Town the soul of the magazine. The section began in the first issue, in 1925. But it wasn't until a couple of years later, when E. B. White and James Thurber arrived, that the Talk of the Town story became what it is today: a precise piece of journalism that always gets the story and has a little fun along the way. The Fun of It is the first anthology of Talk pieces that spans the magazine's life. Edited by Lillian Ross, the longtime Talk reporter and New Yorker staff writer, the book brings together pieces by the section's most original writers. Only in a collection of Talk stories will you find E. B. White visiting a potter's field; James Thurber following Gertrude Stein at Brentano's; Geoffrey Hellman with Cole Porter at the Waldorf Towers; A. J. Liebling on a book tour with Albert Camus; Maeve Brennan ventriloquizing the long-winded lady; John Updike navigating the passageways of midtown; Calvin Trillin marching on Washington in 1963; Jacqueline Onassis chatting with Cornell Capa; Ian Frazier at the Monster Truck and Mud Bog Fall Nationals; John McPhee in virgin forest; Mark Singer with sixth-graders adopting Hudson River striped bass; Adam Gopnik in Flatbush visiting the ìgrandest theatre devoted exclusively to the movies; Hendrik Hertzberg pinning down a Sulzberger on how the Times got colorized; George Plimpton on the tennis court with Boris Yeltsin; and Lillian Ross reporting good little stories for more than forty-five years. They and dozens of other Talk contributors provide an entertaining tour of the most famous section of the most famous magazine in the world.
This practical volume, the first book in the Manuals in Archaeological Method, Theory and Technique series, examines in detail the factors that affect archaeological detectability in surveys whose methods range from visual to remote sensing in land, underwater, and intertidal zones - furnishing a comprehensive treatment of prospection, parameter estimation, model building, and detection of spatial structure.
The magnitudes, nature, causes, and consequences of population movements between rural and urban sectors of developing countries are examined. The prior literature is reviewed, proving limited in key dimensions. Evidence is presented from a new database encompassing nationally representative data on seventy-five developing countries. Several measures of migration propensities are derived for the separate countries. The situation in each country is documented, both in historical context and following the time of enumeration. Rural-urban migrants enjoy major gains; those who do not move forego substantial, potential gains. Barriers to migrating are very real for disadvantaged groups. Migration among ethnolinguistic communities is a pervasive theme; the context in which each group lives is detailed. Upward mobility in incomes in towns is affirmed, and the departure of adults from rural homes raises living standards of the family left behind but consequent separation of married couples is endemic to particular societies. Reclassification of rural areas as urban is shown to be more important than net rural-urban moves in incremental urbanization and rural-urban moves are less permanent than normally portrayed. A contention of symmetry between rural-urban and urban-rural migration propensities is rejected and indications that these twin movements result in sorting of labor by skills is not supported. Moreover, step and onward migration are not as common as popularly claimed. Previously neglected topics studied include autonomous migration by women, child migration, and networks at origin. Policies to limit rural-urban migration are questioned, rather planning for managed urban growth is vital as climate change continues. Key words: Rural, urban, migration, development, literature, database, reclassification, sorting, policies"--
Burnt Orange is a tiny principality in North Carolina. It consists of a house and lot on Highway 70 in North Carolina between and Efland and Mebane. The Goddesses Nondice, the Goddess of Dependable People, and Opal, the Goddess of Sex and Hilarity, engage Di Bona Fide, Tinsmith of the Gods, to fabricate a helm designed to make King Charles of Burnt Orange allow his daughter, Princess Francine, to get a life. The events depicted could have occurred anytime in history. They could occur anytime in the future. Who knows?
This is all about growing up in the south during the 1930s and 1940s and going into the Army in 1953. Childhood adventures, my first real job at the telephone company and hunting stories. This was the south before ¿progress¿ came into our lives.
Child abuse and neglect are intractable problems exacting a terrible toll on children and rending the very fabric of our society. What can be done to reduce the suffering? If there were simple solutions to abuse and neglect they would have been discovered long ago. There are no easy answers, but in this vivid history of child protection in America, John E.B. Myers introduces realistic policies that will reduce maltreatment and strengthen the system that protects our children. Before it is possible to design viable improvements in today's system, it is necessary to understand how it evolved. The sweeping, beautifully written account of child protection in America traces its growth from colonial days to the present--from the rise and gradual disappearance of orphanages, the growth of foster care, the birth of organized child protection in 1874, and the rise of private societies to prevent cruelty, to the twentieth-century transition to government-operated child protection. Myers goes on to describe the principal causes of child maltreatment, including intergenerational transmission of violence, poverty, substance abuse, cultural violence, excessive corporal punishment, sexual deviance, evolution, mental illness, and domestic violence. Once the causes of maltreatment are clear, it is possible to create solutions. Some of the proposals outlined have been in play for more than a century, while others are new. Policies to combat poverty, expand nurse home visiting programs, increase access to day care, strengthen a sense of community, outlaw corporal punishment, rethink our attitude toward alcohol, and lower the toxicity in popular culture are rooted in a deep understanding of the cycle of violence and challenge traditional ways of thinking. Since it will never be possible to prevent all maltreatment, it is critical to strengthen the existing child protection system. Attainable reforms such as dealing with the lingering effects of racism in the child welfare, reworking funding mechanisms, refocusing leadership, creating a less adversarial system, strengthening foster care, and reinventing the juvenile court point to flaws in our system but demonstrate that progress is possible. This provocative book will challenge all those concerned with children's welfare to move toward real solutions that will make life better for America's most vulnerable children.
Letters of E. B. White touches on a wide variety of subjects, including the New Yorker editor who became the author's wife; their dachshund, Fred, with his "look of fake respectability"; and White's contemporaries, from Harold Ross and James Thurber to Groucho Marx and John Updike and, later, Senator Edmund S. Muskie and Garrison Keillor. Updated with newly released letters from 1976 to 1985, additional photographs, and a new foreword by John Updike, this unparalleled collection of letters from one of America's favorite essayists, poets, and storytellers now spans nearly a century, from 1908 to 1985.
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.