My book, Bathroom Talk, is my heart. Being a bathroom attendant for many years, Ive seen and heard things that caught my attention to be of prejudice. The job someone holds shouldnt matter and define who that person isits the character that they display. Numerous times, I was told that I was nothing or nobody just because I worked in the restroom. Who gave them the right to try to make someone feel less just because of their job title? If given a chance, you might have met one of the nicest people in this world. Youll never know why people cross your path, so stop being so judgmental about the next person. Bathroom Talk is to let people see themselves and how they treat others.
We had the marriage license, ceremony and my name changed but no marriage. Follow one woman's journey from a crazy marriage to atonement as she is married for 4.5 years or so she thought. Find out what happens when she filed for a divorce and yet lost to him filing for an annulment because before, during and after her HE WAS MARRIED TO SOMEONE ELS
This book is the unforgettable story of a Comanche woman who has become one of the most influential, inspired, and determined Native Americans in politics. LaDonna Harris was born on a Comanche allotment in southern Oklahoma in the 1930s. From her earliest years, she was immersed in a world of resistance, reform, and political action. As the wife of Senator Fred R. Harris, LaDonna was actively involved in political advising, campaigning, and networking. Not content to remain in the background, LaDonna became a well-known political figure in her own right, serving on the National Indian Opportunities Council as President Lyndon B. Johnson?s appointee and working beside such notable political figures as Hubert Humphrey, Robert Kennedy, and Sargent Shriver. In 1980 she became the vice-presidential nominee for the environmentalist Citizen?s Party. Her story provides a witty and valuable American Indian insider?s view of modern national political scenes.
Our Divide: Two Sides of Locked in Syndrome is the story of the other side—the side of the young, pregnant wife of a man who, at age twenty-seven, is struck down by an obstruction in the brain stem, leaving him with a rare neurological disorder called locked-in syndrome. Like Jean-Dominique Bauby of The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, Cleve is rendered mute and paralyzed by the syndrome—but unlike Bauby, he is unable to move at all, unable to sit up in a wheelchair or communicate by blinking an eye. Our Divide is a beautifully written, honest account of the experience of watching a loved one suffer. Harrison delivers both a peek into the world of a unique other and an intimate view of one young woman’s grieving process. A heartbreaking story that’s at once a grief, a coming-of-age, and a survival narrative, this genuine, honest portrayal of one woman’s mistakes and courage while learning how to take responsibility and create a life for herself will sweep readers away.
Featuring more than 200 vintage postcards, Peoria: A Postcard History captures the changing scenes of the river and downtown Peoria from 1900 to 1950. One of the largest cities in Illinios, Peoria is the seat of Peoria County and lies on the Illinois River where it forms Lake Peoria. Located in the state's central-farm country, Peoria is a manufacturing center known as the "Earth-Moving Equipment Capital of the World." Distilling has also been important in Peoria, which was home to the world's largest distillery, Hiram Walker and Sons, in 1933. Peoria: A Postcard History will allow you to visit "the world's most beautiful drive," as proclaimed by President Theodore Roosevelt during his visit to Grand View Drive in an automobile manufactured in Peoria Heights.
My book, Bathroom Talk, is my heart. Being a bathroom attendant for many years, Ive seen and heard things that caught my attention to be of prejudice. The job someone holds shouldnt matter and define who that person isits the character that they display. Numerous times, I was told that I was nothing or nobody just because I worked in the restroom. Who gave them the right to try to make someone feel less just because of their job title? If given a chance, you might have met one of the nicest people in this world. Youll never know why people cross your path, so stop being so judgmental about the next person. Bathroom Talk is to let people see themselves and how they treat others.
Hickman County was known to early French explorers as the "Iron Banks," to Chickasaw Indians as "the Dark and Bloody Land" or "the Happy Hunting Ground," to early settlers as "the Promised Land," and finally to one and all who live here as "God's Country" or "home." Organized in 1822, Hickman County was named for Capt. Paschal Hickman, a hero of the War of 1812. From gently rolling knolls, abrupt hills, and deep ravines, to the rich bottomlands next to the river, all can be found in this 225-square-mile county. Visitors and residents enjoy camping and touring the Civil War museum at the Columbus-Belmont State Park, the beautiful scenery from the bluffs overlooking the Mississippi River, hiking at Murphy's Pond, or walking back in history at the Hickman County Museum.
Michelle has taken her niece, Nicole, and a friend to an amusement park to celebrate her birthday. An FBI agent, Peter, has also taken his son to the same amusement park. In a few seconds of blinding light, the children from all over the world disappear. Who and why would anyone take all the children. Chaos breaks out! The carousel is full of confused and panicked adults. Michelle and Peter work together to hunt for the missing children, but every lead they follow is a dead end. Where could the children be? Who and why would they take them? After the flash of blinding light, Nicole, wakes up in a fairy tale land, with sparkling beaches, horses that have golden manes, and where time seems to stand still. Everything seems perfect until she realizes some of the children are kept asleep in underground cylinders. What is going to happen to them? Where is she? How did she get here? Is any of this real?
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