My Best Year Yet, Happiness Journal" is a daily journal with a happiness-inducing exercises that enable you stay present and focused so you can effectively achieve your greatest goals in life. One book holds two months of daily journaling, or eight weeks.
Whatever you think you can't overcome, know that with all the certainty in my heart, I believe you can. Sometimes we just lack the right tools to get us there because we haven't grown up in a life that presents them. That's what this book is: a compilation of practical tools that you can apply in various situations when you get stuck or overwhelmed. Everything from family drama to finding "the one." They are best used with the "My Best Self" happiness journal or any daily journal you complete with gratitudes. They have writing exercises and reflection exercises, and are practical and easy-to-use. You are capable of absolutely anything you decide you want to do. And you have already taken the first step toward that thing, just by reading this description. All you have to do now is keep going. Whatever you want in your life and whoever you want to become, you will absolutely achieve it. You just have to decide to take the next step. Smile, and keep going. You only get one life. Make it the best one ever.
Sherman's March, cutting a path through Georgia and the Carolinas, is among the most symbolically potent events of the Civil War. In Through the Heart of Dixie, Anne Sarah Rubin uncovers and unpacks stories and myths about the March from a wide variety of sources, including African Americans, women, Union soldiers, Confederates, and even Sherman himself. Drawing her evidence from an array of media, including travel accounts, memoirs, literature, films, and newspapers, Rubin uses the competing and contradictory stories as a lens into the ways that American thinking about the Civil War has changed over time. Compiling and analyzing the discordant stories around the March, and considering significant cultural artifacts such as George Barnard's 1866 Photographic Views of Sherman's Campaign, Margaret Mitchell's Gone with the Wind, and E. L. Doctorow's The March, Rubin creates a cohesive narrative that unites seemingly incompatible myths and asserts the metaphorical importance of Sherman's March to Americans' memory of the Civil War. The book is enhanced by a digital history project, which can be found at shermansmarch.org.
Tort Law: Cases and Materials offers a fresh approach to the study of tort law. It is the essential companion to Green and Gardner's Tort Law textbook. Comprehensively covering the tort law curriculum, the inclusion of extracts from key cases, statutes, newspaper reports and articles demonstrates the law in action. The clear and insightful commentary accompanying each extract explains the significance of each and provides students with an enhanced understanding of the material, ensuring they can respond with depth and analysis in their essay questions. In addition to the standard and oft-cited materials, the expert authors have selected alternative voices, including feminist approaches, socio-legal perspectives and comparative material from multiple international jurisdictions. This provides students with a thorough and wide-ranging examination of tort law. Accompanying online resources for this title can be found at bloomsbury.pub/tort-law-2e. These resources are designed to support teaching and learning when using this book and are available at no extra cost.
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