Added by: Kahena | Karma: 11526.37 | Fiction literature | 21 August 2011
9
Calendar Girl
After spending most of her twenties in limbo-working at seasonal jobs and dating a series of commutement-challenged men-twenty-eight-year-old Nan Cloutier is determined to let go of her past and present hurts, find a permanent job, and fall in love with the right guy.
• COVER: The Changing Face Of Breast Cancer - Once a disease of the Western world, breast cancer has become a global concern. How women, doctors and communities are fighting back and bringing hope to those in need • SCIENCE: Eco-Rebels - Few still doubt climate change is real, but now the skeptics are questioning the best way to deal with it • HEALTH & MEDICINE: When Yoga Hurts - • SOCIETY: Fatherhood 2.0 - • ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT: The Oddball - • PEOPLE: 10 Questions for George Clooney -
It's the most bizarre and frightening proposal true-crime writer Marie Lightfoot has ever received: a killer wants Marie to collaborate with him by becoming his next victim — and writing a book about her own murder. But for Marie, it may be the key to solving her most personal mystery and at last uncover the truth about the disappearance of her parents. They were underground Civil Rights activists who vanished during the explosive summer of 1963. Now Marie must follow the instructions of her "co-author" to find the answers she seeks in a small Alabama town — while racing to outwit her would-be killer before she is forced to write her own final page.
• Do you yearn for someone who is not physically or emotionally available to you? • Do you believe that if you love him enough he will have to love you? • When you feel insecure, does it drive you only to want her more? • Do you find yourself phoning repeatedly or waiting long hours for the phone to ring?
First Steps in Parenting the Child Who Hurts: Tiddlers and ToddlersThis text approaches attachment and developmental issues arising when the child is in your care. It offers practical, sensitive guidance through the dark areas of separation, loss and trauma in early childhood. It reassures that no problem faced as a result of the child's early experiences is insignificant or undeserving of a solution. Neither is the reader patronized by assumptions that some matters should already be common knowledge. It sets out purposefully to encourage confidence and thereby to enable enjoyment of the young life in your care.