When Pip the grey squirrel overhears a lady mention Meili one day, word soon spreads that Meili is missing. The search is on! BUT… who and where is Meili? There’s a surprise for all when the woodland creatures discover the mystery of Meili. A heart-warming tale of helpfulness and friendship. A “Save our Planet” story
This memoir from a woman duped by a criminal posing as an heiress is “a tale of love and loyalty gone awry [that] will keep fans of true crime reading” (Library Journal). Aspiring actress Meili Cady left small-town Washington State for the glamorous lure of Los Angeles. Young and alone, she was struggling to make her big break. Then she met Lisette Lee. Calling herself the “Korean Paris Hilton,” Lisette claimed she was a model and a Korean pop star, lived in a $1.2 million dollar apartment in West Hollywood, owned a fleet of luxury cars, and flitted from one red-carpet event to the next. The connection was instant. Meili was enchanted by her friend’s extravagant lifestyle, while Lee claimed Meili was the real thing in a town full of phonies. Soon, the financially strapped Meili became her friend’s personal assistant—and found herself sucked into an audacious criminal enterprise. But when Meili finally realized what she was a part of it was too late—she was in too deep, caught in a terrifying relationship with a manipulative and abrasive con artist smuggling millions of dollars of pot into the Midwest. Trapped in a precarious criminal world of money, drugs, and dangerous secrets, Meili struggled to understand the line between truth and lie. A once naive girl, she could only watch helplessly as it all came crashing down around her. Smoke is her story—an electrifying tale of vice, corruption, hubris, and lost innocence. “Cady sends you careening down a rabbit hole where bad decisions are met with good humor . . . and a duffel bag stuffed with six-figures in cash.” —Allie Kingsley, author of The Liar, the Bitch and the Wardrobe
The world is getting smaller and spinning faster. Bosses, families, and responsibilities constantly demand more. But there's good news: you have a choice in your experience. You can search for-and achieve-fulfillment and peace of mind. The answer is in your mind-set. In Finding Personal Balance, Will Ellis pieces together a brilliant mosaic of leadership lessons, management practices, ancient wisdom, and common sense into "The Choice Cycle." By practicing a few straightforward principles, you'll embrace your freedom to choose your attitude, mind-set, feelings, and thoughts about any situation. By focusing on results, instead of problems, you can change the course of your life. Ellis proffers solutions through stories of others' experiences with life's difficult challenges. He presents a simple process for analyzing yourself and your situations. Whether it's dealing with stress at work, reacting to a hostile driver on your ride home, or coping with an illness or injury, Ellis equips you with tools for change. All of us can be survivors in life and not victims of our circumstances. With lan, Ellis leads you to a new way of thinking. Find your personal balance, and you'll find peace in a world of stress and change.
RESTARTING IN A NEW WORLD—AGAIN?! Subaru Natsuki is an unremarkable high school boy who lives an unremarkable life in Japan. Of course, all that’s about to change now that he’s woken up ain a fantasy world for the first time! There’s something strange about this, though. Everyone seems to already know him, and for some reason, they’re all expecting him to figure out how to overcome the challenges of this weird tower. Who is this fantastical hero they all see when they look at him, and why does he sound nothing like boring old Subaru?
Eye-Spy Max is a Superhero with a mission to show animals living in 7 Continents. Follow his adventures and see the beauty of animals and plants on Earth. An ‘active’ book where children can do actions as they read the story and become superhero children in caring for animals and plant life by keeping the Earth clean.
From one of world literature’s most courageous voices, a novel about the human cost of China’s one-child policy through the lens of one rural family on the run from its reach Far away from the Chinese economic miracle, from the bright lights of Beijing and Shanghai, is a vast rural hinterland, where life goes on much as it has for generations, with one extraordinary difference: “normal” parents are permitted by the state to have only a single child. The Dark Road is the story of one such “normal” family—Meili, a young peasant woman; her husband, Kongzi, a village schoolteacher; and their daughter, Nannan. Kongzi is, according to family myth, a direct lineal descendant of Confucius, and he is haunted by the imperative to carry on the family name by having a son. And so Meili becomes pregnant again without state permission, and when local family planning officials launch a new wave of crackdowns, the family makes the radical decision to leave its village and set out on a small, rickety houseboat down the Yangtze River. Theirs is a dark road, and tragedy awaits them, and horror, but also the fierce beauty born of courageous resistance to injustice and inhumanity. The Dark Road is a haunting and indelible portrait of the tragedies befalling women and families at the hands of China’s one-child policy and of the human spirit’s capacity to endure even the most brutal cruelty. While Ma Jian wrote The Dark Road, he traveled through the rural backwaters of southwestern China to see how the state enforced the one-child policy far from the outside world’s prying eyes. He met local women who had been seized from their homes and forced to undergo abortions or sterilization in the policy’s name; and on the Yangtze River, he lived among fugitive couples who had gone on the run so they could have more children, that most fundamental of human rights. Like all of Ma Jian’s novels, The Dark Road is also a celebration of the life force, of the often comically stubborn resilience of man’s most basic instincts.
This highly original book brings compelling narratives of migration and social diversity vividly to life. At once a play script and an outcome of ethnographic research, it is a rich resource for the interpretation and representation of life in the multilingual city. The book takes an inside view of a hidden space in the city: an advice and advocacy service in a Chinese community centre. Here, advisors translate and translanguage, making sense of the bureaucratic world for clients who need help to access rights and resources related to housing, employment, education, welfare benefits, insurance, taxation, health and much more.