Jana's Pocket Posh Journal is a lovely, tote-sized journal that's perfect for keeping all of your thoughts close at hand . . . and it's personalized just for you! Blank pages are perfect for writing, doodling, making lists, or jotting down ideas. This portable package is part of the best-selling Pocket Posh series featuring highly stylized covers and boasting 7 million copies in print.
As a young girl in Bangalore, Gayathri was surrounded by the fragrance of jasmine and flickering oil lamps, her family protected by gods and goddesses. But as she grew older, demons came forth from dark corners of her idyllic kingdom—with the scariest creatures lurking within her tortured mind. Shadows in the Sun traces Gayathri’s courageous battle with debilitating depression that consumed her from adolescence through marriage and a move to the United States. Her inspiring memoir provides a first-of-its-kind cross-cultural view of mental illness—how it is regarded in India and in America, and how she drew on both her rich Hindu heritage and Western medicine to find healing.
"Jena's Pocket Posh Journal" is a lovely, tote-sized journal that's perfect for keeping all of your thoughts close at hand . . . and it's personalized just for you! Blank pages are perfect for writing, doodling, making lists, or jotting down ideas. This portable package is part of the best-selling Pocket Posh series featuring highly stylized covers and boasting 7 million copies in print.
"Gina's Pocket Posh Journal" is a lovely, tote-sized journal that's perfect for keeping all of your thoughts close at hand . . . and it's personalized just for you! Blank pages are perfect for writing, doodling, making lists, or jotting down ideas. This portable package is part of the best-selling Pocket Posh series featuring highly stylized covers and boasting 7 million copies in print.
A sheltered Pakistani girl is sent to America by her parents, with unexpected results: “Entertaining, often hilarious . . . Not just another immigrant’s tale.” —Publishers Weekly Feroza Ginwalla, a pampered, protected sixteen-year-old Pakistani girl, is sent to America by her parents, who are alarmed by the fundamentalism overtaking Pakistan—and influencing their daughter. Hoping that a few months with her uncle, an MIT grad student, will soften the girl’s rigid thinking, they get more than they bargained for: Feroza, enthralled by American culture and her new freedom, insists on staying. A bargain is struck, allowing Feroza to attend college with the understanding that she will return home and marry well. As a student in a small western town, Feroza finds her perceptions of America, her homeland, and herself beginning to alter. When she falls in love with a Jewish American, her family is aghast. Feroza realizes just how far she has come—and wonders how much further she can go—in a delightful, remarkably funny coming-of-age novel that offers an acute portrayal of America as seen through the eyes of a perceptive young immigrant. “Humorous and affecting.” —Library Journal “Exceptional.” —Los Angeles Times “Her characters [are] painted so vividly you can almost hear them bickering.” —The New York Times
"Gianna's Pocket Posh Journal" is a lovely, tote-sized journal that's perfect for keeping all of your thoughts close at hand . . . and it's personalized just for you! Blank pages are perfect for writing, doodling, making lists, or jotting down ideas. This portable package is part of the best-selling Pocket Posh series featuring highly stylized covers and boasting 7 million copies in print.
"Jana's Pocket Posh Journal" is a lovely, tote-sized journal that's perfect for keeping all of your thoughts close at hand . . . and it's personalized just for you! Blank pages are perfect for writing, doodling, making lists, or jotting down ideas. This portable package is part of the best-selling Pocket Posh series featuring highly stylized covers and boasting 7 million copies in print.
Stitched together over five years of journaling, Obiter Dicta is a commonplace book of freewheeling explorations representing the transcription of a dozen notebooks, since painstakingly reimagined for publication. Organized after Theodor Adorno's Minima Moralia, this unschooled exercise in aesthetic thought--gleefully dilettantish, oftentimes dangerously close to the epigrammatic--interrogates an array of subject matter (although inescapably circling back to the curiously resemblant histories of Western visual art and instrumental music) through the lens of drive-by speculation. Erick Verran's approach to philosophical inquiry follows the brute-force literary technique of Jacques Derrida to exhaustively favor the material grammar of a signifier over hand-me-down meaning, juxtaposing outer semblances with their buried systems and our etched-in-stone intuitions about color and illusion, shape and value, with lessons stolen from seemingly unrelatable disciplines. Interlarded with extracts of Ludwig Wittgenstein but also Wallace Stevens, Cormac McCarthy as well as Roland Barthes, this cache of incidental remarks eschews what's granular for the biggest picture available, leaving below the hyper-specialized fields of academia for a bird's-eye view of their crop circles. Obiter Dicta is an unapologetic experiment in intellectual dot-connecting that challenges much long-standing wisdom about everything from illuminated manuscripts to Minecraft and the evolution of European music with lyrical brevity; that is, before jumping to the next topic.