My favorite color brown can be used educationally to help children become familiar with the color. This book describes my family's observation of the many brown things we see around us.
This book of love poems takes you on the journey of ups and downs that accompanies a relationship - the heartbreak of missing someone you love and the happiness that is strongest when you are together. But no matter the distance, that feeling of sunshine yellow is always there.
Create a warm and loving feel with something quilted in every room of your home. Quilted Autumn projects you an make in your spare time for your home or for gifts. Choose from mug rugs to wall hangings either for fall or Halloween. There's something for everyone. Mix and Match to personalize a special look
I began writing these stories of events in my life thirty years ago. I discovered then that I was able to remember vividly the first years of life as a child and all the adventures throughout my childhood. I was amazed, recalling my reactions to feelings and emotions were so clear. Somehow, I knew that sharing all these crazy stories that I loved was my gift to you. I found the man living inside my soul when I began to write.
A child, born into a male body, finds the strength and courage to claim her full and authentic gender identity.This book is an affirmation for all people who are longing to claim their birthright to be themselves. It goes to the heart of teaching compassion. My goal is to open a conversation that helps navigate through this transition with empathy, understanding and acceptance.
A lyrical story of parental love that celebrates and takes pride in the many shades of brown skin. Perfect for fans of I Am Enough, Hey Black Child, Hair Love, and Our Skin. When you ask me why your skin is brown, I will tell you that you are my favorite color. I will say that your skin was decided long, long ago. Time was just waiting for you. So begins a mother’s celebration of her children's brown skin, told through warm and vivid poetry. With sweeping descriptions of what brown skin means—it is the brawny bear whose paws know the ground of its home, the sequoia tree that reaches up and touches the sun, the glossy shell of roasted chestnuts—this is a book that empowers as it embraces, and that reminds young readers that they have shades of color that only they can discover and express. With beautiful, lyrical text by powerhouse poet Gillian Sze and vibrant, engaging art by illustrator Nina Mata, the #1 New York Times bestselling illustrator of LeBron James's I Promise, this is more than a story of love—it is a song that rings out for brown kids everywhere. Praise for You Are My Favorite Color: "This is a sweet, languorous celebration of brown skin in all its infinite shades and of multiracial, multifaceted families. Lovely." --Kirkus Reviews
This is my journey from growing up in a house with dirt floors with 13 people to playing Pro soccer at the highest level in the world. This book will change the way you view your life. It will help you to start living on purpose. You will be empowered to follow your dreams and encourage others. You'll discover that God created you for a very special purpose.
Have you ever been at a crossroad where you chose to continue your life with one person instead of another? Where you didn’t select the person that excited you, but allowed your fear to keep you with the person you thought was safe? What if years later you realized that you had made the wrong choice? Do people get second chances? Sometimes there is an incident that can be so traumatic that your brain will bury the memory of it. It will lock this memory in a dark box and drop it to the bottom of the deepest ocean of your subconscious...never to be found again. What if you went digging for this memory? Could you forgive yourself after you exposed the truth about what you had done? David looks in the mirror and sees the aftermath of an event he can’t remember. He can feel the guilt in his body, but he can’t remember what caused all of the scars. Jennifer tells David that she also has moments from her past that she can’t remember. She can feel the fear in her body, but she chooses to keep her story hidden. Will the truth set them free, or just imprison them even further?