Traveling in the middle of the night, I picked up a fox. It was like travelling in the middle of a dream, picking up a handsome guy, pulling my name Gu Yi, this kind of evil girl, I thought I would meet some illusions, but when they really rushed towards me, I actually felt that this was an incredibly beautiful scene ... ...
Traveling in the middle of the night, I picked up a fox. It was like travelling in the middle of a dream, picking up a handsome guy, pulling my name Gu Yi, this kind of evil girl, I thought I would meet some illusions, but when they really rushed towards me, I actually felt that this was an incredibly beautiful scene ... ...
Traveling in the middle of the night, I picked up a fox. It was like travelling in the middle of a dream, picking up a handsome guy, pulling my name Gu Yi, this kind of evil girl, I thought I would meet some illusions, but when they really rushed towards me, I actually felt that this was an incredibly beautiful scene ... ...
This is an intimate look at a perfectionist mother who learned to live her best life by giving up the reins. Rather than continuing to practice control and conquer parenting she strives to honor the uniqueness of each of her children, accept her own innate mothering style and by slowing down, appreciate the beauty that surrounds her. This books speaks to the masses of mothers who feel uncertain at times and offers a new approach, a new calm and ultimately a new happy place.
The Smut Peddler series of erotic anthologies has been wildly successful, bringing quality filth to the massive underserved audience of women looking for fun, well-adjusted, and sex-positive dirty comics. This Smut Peddler release brings three new elements to the winning formula: full color, longer stories, and a focus on not-exactly-human men. My Monster Boyfriend offers ten tales of fantastic fornication, written and illustrated by some of the most talented women in comics.
Indianapolis Monthly is the Circle City’s essential chronicle and guide, an indispensable authority on what’s new and what’s news. Through coverage of politics, crime, dining, style, business, sports, and arts and entertainment, each issue offers compelling narrative stories and lively, urbane coverage of Indy’s cultural landscape.
Seventeen-year-old New Mexico high school senior Vanessa Shingle learns that she destined to be a monster-hunter like her Van Helsing ancestor, and that the gorgeous janitor she is dating, Jean-Paul, is there to help although he, himself, is a vampire.
A frank, feminist examination of the hidden crisis of rage facing American mothers—and how we can fix it Mothers aren’t supposed to be angry. Still, Minna Dubin was an angry mom: exhausted by the grueling, thankless work of full-time parenting and feeling her career slip away, she would find herself screaming at her child or exploding at her husband. When Dubin pushed past her shame and talked with other mothers about how she was feeling, she realized that she was far from alone. Mom Rage is Dubin’s groundbreaking work of reportage about an unspoken crisis of anger sweeping the country—and the world. She finds that while a specific instance of rage might be triggered by something as simple as a child who won’t tie her shoes, the roots of the anger go far deeper, from the unequal burden of childcare shouldered by moms to the flattening of women’s identities once they have kids. Drawing on insights from moms across the spectrum of race, sexual orientation, and class, she offers practical tools to help readers disarm their rage in the moment, while never losing sight of the broader social change we need to stop raging for good.