Walking Taylor Home

Walking Taylor Home

Author: Brian Schrauger

Publisher: Thomas Nelson Inc

Published: 2001-12-06

Total Pages: 229

ISBN-13: 1418556467

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No one ever said that the honest truth was easy. In this raw account of the intense love between a father and his son, no emotion goes untouched as Brian watches his son, Taylor, war against the cancer that rages in his little body. The courage will inspire you. The joy will surprise you. The hope will encourage you. And the faith will challenge you. This true story is not about a boy who gets sick and dies. It's about a boy who gets sick and "lives."


Walking Taylor Home

Walking Taylor Home

Author: Brian Schrauger

Publisher: Monarch Books

Published: 2009-02-10

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9780825462917

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Brian Schrauger chronicles his nine-year-old son's battle with cancer, describing how his son's strength and courage inspired Brian to live a better life and make the most of every moment.


Walking Taylor Home

Walking Taylor Home

Author: Brian Schrauger

Publisher: Monarch Books

Published: 2008-11

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781854248862

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An intensely moving account of the courageous life and death of eleven year old Taylor Schrauger, and his father's search for meaning.


Walking Taylor Home

Walking Taylor Home

Author: Brian Schrauger

Publisher: Thomas Nelson Inc

Published: 2001

Total Pages: 292

ISBN-13: 9780849917035

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A fresh and honest account of how a family deals with the agony of a child's terminal illness, their crisis of faith and ultimately death and eternal hope.


Walking Gentry Home

Walking Gentry Home

Author: Alora Young

Publisher: Hogarth

Published: 2022-08-02

Total Pages: 241

ISBN-13: 0593498011

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An “extraordinary” (Laurie Halse Anderson) young poet traces the lives of her foremothers in West Tennessee, from those enslaved centuries ago to her grandmother, her mother, and finally herself, in this stunning debut celebrating Black girlhood and womanhood throughout American history. “A masterpiece that beautifully captures the heartbreak that accompanies coming of age for Black girls becoming Black women.”—Evette Dionne, author of Lifting as We Climb, longlisted for the National Book Award Walking Gentry Home tells the story of Alora Young’s ancestors, from the unnamed women forgotten by the historical record but brought to life through Young’s imagination; to Amy, the first of Young’s foremothers to arrive in Tennessee, buried in an unmarked grave, unlike the white man who enslaved her and fathered her child; through Young’s great-grandmother Gentry, unhappily married at fourteen; to her own mother, the teenage beauty queen rejected by her white neighbors; down to Young in the present day as she leaves childhood behind and becomes a young woman. The lives of these girls and women come together to form a unique American epic in verse, one that speaks of generational curses, coming of age, homes and small towns, fleeting loves and lasting consequences, and the brutal and ever-present legacy of slavery in our nation’s psyche. Each poem is a story in verse, and together they form a heart-wrenching and inspiring family saga of girls and women connected through blood and history. Informed by archival research, the last will and testament of an enslaver, formal interviews, family lore, and even a DNA test, Walking Gentry Home gives voice to those too often muted in America: Black girls and women.


Learning to Walk in the Dark

Learning to Walk in the Dark

Author: Barbara Brown Taylor

Publisher: Canterbury Press

Published: 2014-06-30

Total Pages: 160

ISBN-13: 1848256175

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In this long awaited follow-up to the best-selling An Altar in the World, Barbara Brown Taylor explores ‘the treasures of darkness’ that the Bible speaks about. What can we learn about the ways of God when we cannot see the way ahead, are lost, alone, frightened, not in control or when the world around us seems to have descended into darkness?


Walking the Talk

Walking the Talk

Author: Carolyn Taylor

Publisher: Random House

Published: 2015-09-24

Total Pages: 301

ISBN-13: 1473535859

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A new, fully revised edition. The culture of an organisation can mean the difference between success and failure. Leaders cast long shadows, and if you want to change the culture you have to walk the talk. This book shows you how. Walking the Talk covers everything from measuring corporate culture to changing people's behaviour (including your own) and describes in detail six archetypes of company culture: Achievement, Customer-Centric, One-Team, Innovative, People-First and Greater-Good. Packed with fascinating examples and case histories, and drawing extensively on Carolyn Taylor's twenty years' experience of building great cultures, it will give you the confidence to build a culture of success in your own organisation.


The Barefoot Sisters Walking Home

The Barefoot Sisters Walking Home

Author: Lucy Letcher

Publisher: Stackpole Books

Published: 2010

Total Pages: 498

ISBN-13: 081173529X

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The saga of the Barefoot Sisters continues with this sequel to The Barefoot Sisters Southbound. Lucy and Susan Letcher begin their journey home, hiking barefoot on the Appalachian Trail from Georgia to Maine. Along the way, they must face the pleasures and perils of a northbound thru-hike, from bluegrass festivals and trail angel feasts to encounters with bears and venomous snakes. --publisher.


WALK

WALK

Author: Jonathon Stalls

Publisher: North Atlantic Books

Published: 2022-08-16

Total Pages: 242

ISBN-13: 1623176964

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A transformative collection of essays on the power of walking to connect with ourselves, each other, and nature itself. In 2010, Jonathon Stalls and his blue-heeler husky mix began their 242-day walk across the United States, depending upon each other and the kindness of strangers along the way. In this collection of essays, Stalls explores walking as waking up: how a cross-country journey through the family farms of West Virginia, the deep freedom of Nevada’s High desert, and everywhere in between unlocked connections to his deepest aches and dreams--and opened new avenues for renewal, connection, and change. While most of us won’t walk or roll across the country, the deep wisdom and insights that Stalls receives from the people, land, and animals he meets on his pilgrimage have profound impacts for each of us. He shares how walking deepened his relationship to himself as a gay man, offering deep and clarifying emotional medicine. He confronts the systemic racism, classism, and ableism that shape and reshape the communities he walks through. And he invites readers to become awakened activists, to begin healing our culture’s profound separation from the natural world. WALK is for those who crave to feel and embody, not just know and study, their way through complex themes that live in each chapter: vulnerability, human dignity, presence, mystery, and resistance. With dedicated practices--like connecting to Earth stewardship, moving into vulnerability, and walking and rolling with intention--Stalls’ WALK is an urgent and glorious call to slow down, look around, and engage with the world in front of us. It awakens us to what we miss when we’re driving by, flying over, and rushing past what surrounds us. It’s an invitation to move, to connect, to participate deeply in the world--and to dissolve the barriers that disconnect us from each other and the living Earth.


Walking Up a Rainbow

Walking Up a Rainbow

Author: Theodore Taylor

Publisher: HarperTeen

Published: 1996-08-01

Total Pages: 288

ISBN-13: 9780380725922

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Inheriting her parent's Iowa sheep farm and an enormous debt when she is orphaned, fourteen-year-old Susan Carlisle heads to California in the hopes of selling the sheep and experiences adventure and romance on the American frontier. Original.