It's anything but the ho-hum, princess diary that is so yesterday. Coke or Pepsi? GIRL Diary turns "dear diary" on its head. Girls can find fresh, hot-off-the-press Coke or Pepsi? questions, a tree to carve messages on, a place to keep things they just can't part with, and tons of shout-out space. There's prompts like - what's the most embarrassing thing that's happened lately to 5 things you did today from worst to best.
It's the ultimate undiary that boys will want to write in, draw on, and lock up. DUDE Diary comes with a lock and key so all the awesomeness can never be leaked out. Access denied to anyone but the owner. Sweet!
It's anything but the ho-hum, princess diary that is so yesterday. Coke or Pepsi? GIRL Diary turns "dear diary" on its head. Girls can find fresh, hot-off-the-press Coke or Pepsi? questions, a tree to carve messages on, a place to keep things they just can't part with, and tons of shout-out space. There's prompts like - what's the most embarrassing thing that's happened lately to 5 things you did today from worst to best.
The new superstars in sports are women, and pro beach volleyball player Gabrielle Reece is the hottest of them all. At six-foot-three, 170 pounds, Gabby Reece is at once beautiful and brutish, feminine and rowdy, accessible and intimidating--a woman who is exploding female stereotypes and redefining our image of the female athlete. "A young girl doesn't get many chances to exercise the character muscle via sports, whereas for young boys, it's part of their everyday lives. For girls, it's especially good for them to be forced to work as a team with other girls, to work together under every possible condition--winning, losing, tired, grumpy, happy. It forces them to deal with unpleasant, ungracious emotions and get over it. It forces girls to rely on each other. It gives them confidence in other girls, which ultimately gives them confidence in themselves." "Everything a woman does has an emotional component. Paying attention to my emotional side without surrendering to it is one of the toughest parts of playing professional sports." "I don't like this 'Fear of Being Big' thing because it feeds into the general female thing of wanting to be less--less powerful, less assertive, less demanding, less opinionated, less present, less big." From the Trade Paperback edition.
The legendary lost novel in which fourteen-year-old Preston Wildey-King must choose between his all-consuming passion for Pepsi Cola and his love for schoolmate Peggy. "He walked into the turbulent super market. There were people everywhere. His eyes swept over the shelves and stabilised on a large stack of Pepsi-colas. He could almost experience the cool fizzy liquid descending his parched throat." Written by June-Alison Gibbons when she was only 16, The Pepsi Cola Addict is considered one of the great works of twentieth-century outsider literature. More than just a literary curiosity, however, this tale of a teenager whose passion for a well-known cola drink threatens to ruin his life is the uniquely vivid expression of a young woman trying to make sense of the confusing, often brutal world she in which found herself. Published in 1982 by a vanity press who took £800 from its young author and gave her only a single book in return, it's thought that fewer than ten original copies still exist in the world. Shortly after its publication, June-Alison and her sister Jennifer would become infamous as "The Silent Twins" and find themselves cruelly incarcerated for over a decade in Broadmoor Hospital. This author-approved edition makes June-Alison Gibbon's remarkable vision widely available for the first time.