The trials of growing up a homosexual in a straight society. The protagonist is Ben Smith, 14, who falls in love with another boy with whom he publishes a school paper. Trouble starts when someone photographs them kissing. A first novel.
A pink gold dots notebook featuring the inspirational quote "She Believed She Could So She Did" on the cover. Write all your notes and ideas into this notebook (journal). - SIZE: 8.5 x 11 (Large). - PAPER: Lined Paper: 55 Pages (Ruled on the front and back). - COVER: Soft Cover. - PATTERN: Inspirational Quote. - COLOR: Pink (Matte).
Whether for your desk at home, your work or in your bag on the go this professionally designed 6" x 9" notebook provides the perfect platform for you to record your thoughts. The pre-lined pages are ready and waiting to be filled! - 300 Lined Sheets - Crisp White Pages with a Thick Cardstock Cover - Simple, Stylish, Elegant Cover Art - Dimensions: 6" x 9"
A unique engineering graph pad notebook with a technical drawing title block.The Technical Engineering Notebook is designed by Engineers for Engineers. It has an emphasized 5mm x 5mm grid and a classic technical drawing title block so you can put your engineering ideas on paper and put your name on your ideas. You have one of these handy when you need to conceptualize something just before putting it in an official document on your computer. Perhaps you keep a few available in your bag ready to take notes when you've learned something new, had feedback on one of your designs or just got a spark of innovation. Whatever the case may be an engineer typically has the right tools at hand and when it comes to a notebook for engineers, this fits the spec! Engineering IRL notebooks are designed based on what we know engineers will love and would be happy to show their engineering pride.
Sure, sex is great, but have you ever cracked open a new notebook and written something on the first page with a really nice pen? The story behind Notebook starts with a minor crime: the theft of Tom Cox's rucksack from a Bristol pub in 2018. In that rucksack was a journal containing ten months' worth of notes, one of the many Tom has used to record his thoughts and observations over the past twelve years. It wasn't the best he had ever kept – his handwriting was messier than in his previous notebook, his entries more sporadic – but he still grieved for every one of the hundred or so lost pages. This incident made Tom appreciate how much notebook-keeping means to him: the act of putting pen to paper has always led him to write with an unvarnished, spur-of-the-moment honesty that he wouldn’t achieve on-screen. Here, Tom has assembled his favourite stories, fragments, moments and ideas from those notebooks, ranging from memories of his childhood to the revelation that 'There are two types of people in the world. People who fucking love maps, and people who don't.' The result is a book redolent of the real stuff of life, shot through with Cox’s trademark warmth and wit.
From the author of Secrets of the Signs comes an exciting new book designed to help teenagers get in touch with their psychic instincts and unlock the power of intuition.
I began writing this book in 2011 when I was living with my mother and step father in Rosny, Tasmania. My high school art teacher loved my poems, so I continued writing poems in my spare time. My technique varies and is totally freelance. I don't always use a set structure, sometimes I use verse or rhyme. I enjoy the freedom of writing poetry as there are no real rules. This book reflects my life experiences, from the mundane to significant events. I have drawn inspiration from reading, the dictionary is my best friend.
On the Las Vegas Strip, blockbuster casinos burst out of the desert, billboards promise "hot babes," actual hot babes proffer complimentary drinks, and a million happy slot machines ring day and night. It’s loud and excessive, but, as the Project on Vegas demonstrates, the Strip is not a world apart. Combining written critique with more than one hundred photographs by Karen Klugman, Strip Cultures examines the politics of food and water, art and spectacle, entertainment and branding, body and sensory experience. In confronting the ordinary on America’s most famous four-mile stretch of pavement, the authors reveal how the Strip concentrates and magnifies the basic truths and practices of American culture where consumerism is the stuff of life, digital surveillance annuls the right to privacy, and nature—all but destroyed—is refashioned as an element of decor.
A collection of 20 short stories, with illustrations by 20 artists from the fine art, graphic art and comic book worlds - including Charles Burns, Paul Hornschemeier and Caroline Hwang. The hardback edition was a finalist in the Granta's 2009 Story Prize, alongside the works of Jumpa Lahiri and Tobias Wolff. In these stories, oddly modern moments occur in the most familiar of public places.