Most people would think Annie Baker had it all: an idyllic life in the country and a fabulous job as a film producer. And so would she, if it weren't for the men in her life. Her six-year-old son Charlie gets traumatised if she buys the wrong kind of sausages. Her tempestuous boss Barney is a Great Director, but keeps getting stuck with dog food commercials, and as for Lawrence, well, he just wants to get her fired. And then she meets Mack... Hilarious and poignant, The Only Boy for Me will make you laugh and cry.
Fictional humorous memoir of a brilliant dog as told to his master. Action is in greater Boston between 1930 and 1945. Good for stimulating conversations between (grand) parents and children.
Quotes from "Country Boy" Chapter 1 "There are no insignificant events in our lives; it's just that we can't often perceive the significance. It's difficult to detect the pattern when you are just one thread in the tapestry." Chapter 2 "I think children today have too much social pressure on them, and too many organized activities. If every kid could occasionally lie on pine needles and watch the clouds go by, there might be less need for psychiatrists and drugs." Chapter 3 "I will never forget the first time I entered a GI mess hall. It was breakfast time and the cooks were preparing scrambled eggs from powdered eggs or something of that nature. The griddle was about a half-acre in area, in plain view, and was covered with large green bubbles. I have often wondered if Dr. Seuss book, Green Eggs and Ham was inspired by a GI mess hall." Chapter 4 "One of my roommates gave me a ride as far as Stephenville. I spent the night with him and his family, which was something of a revelation. His mother actually believed that the world was flat, and that the sun revolved around the Earth " Chapter 5 "A few minutes earlier John F.Kennedy had been a liberal, tax-and-spend Democrat, but we were Americans and he was our president and we were mad as hell, and I think a little bit scared, about what had happened." Chapter 6 "In Families Anonymous we learned about tough love and letting go.We learned that we were not in control of our children's lives, shouldn't try to be, and shouldn't feel bad because we weren't." "It would be interesting to observe the results of a president who had Carter's moral values and Nixon's political acumen, but perhaps the two attributes are mutually exclusive." "In the midst of all this madness one day I remembered something I had heard years earlier while watching Saturday morning cartoons with my son. Yogi Bear said, 'Boo Boo, as you grow older you will learn that the deeper in the woods you get, the more nuts you will find.' In the 70's the energy industry was pretty deep in the woods." Chapter 7 "Everything considered, I believe that I am in the top 1 percent of all the people who have ever lived. I state this not as a matter of pride, but as a matter of gratitude. My meager contribution is described in this book. It is obvious that most of my good fortune is the result of something greater than me." Eugene E. "Duke" Ellington is a 75 year-old retired natural gas engineer who resides in Kerrville, Texas. Duke was born in Iowa in 1933, and raised in Moultrie, Georgia, where he graduated high school in 1950. He spent almost four years in the Air Force during the Korean War, and was honorably discharged in 1954. He attended Texas College of Arts and Industries in Kingsville, Texas, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Science Degree in Petroleum and Natural Gas Engineering in 1958. After graduation, he worked as an engineer for Conoco for 15 years, then as a consultant at Purvin & Gertz, Inc. in Dallas for almost 24 years. In this book, the author describes the incredible changes that have taken place during his life. The book is a rich fabric of the interwoven threads of his personal life, social and economic changes, race relations, political events and technological advances. Young people will be amazed, older people will reminisce, and all will laugh and cry, and think.
Real love. Real lives. The real thing . . . Girl Heart Boy: You and Me Always is the final book in this irresistibly romantic series that combines the romance of The OC, the realism of Skins and the sexiness of E L James' Fifty Shades of Grey. Perfect for fans of Tammara Webber's Easy, Coleen Hoover's Slammed and Abbie Glines' The Vincent Boys. Four girls, three boys, turning 18. Get set to follow their eventful final year at school . . . About the author: Ali Cronin is a British author with wide experience writing for young adults in print and online. She cut her teeth on Bliss, Sugar and J17 magazines, then became producer of the BBC's website for teens, before leaving to write full-time. Girl Heart Boy is her first book series. Immerse yourself in the stories and engage with the characters through our books, ebooks and online webisodes. Fall in love with Girl Heart Boy at facebook/GirlHeartBoy Don't miss: Girl Heart Boy: No Such Thing As Forever Girl Heart Boy: Rumour Has It Girl Heart Boy: Three's a Crowd Girl Heart Boy: Lesson's in Love Girl Heart Boy: She's The One Girl Heart Boy: You and Me Always
This classic tale of a trip down the Intracoastal Waterway in 1912 contains the following chapters: I. The Cruise of the Mascot II. Provisioning the Mascot III. Cabin Accommodations IV. Battleship Near Newport, Rhode Island V. Tied Up in Erie Basin, Brooklyn, New York VI. Execution Rock VII. Entrance to Delaware and Raritan Canal, New Brunswick, New Jersey VIII. Snugged Up to the Left Bank of the Canal XIV. Gunny Sacks Filled with Dry Leaves for Fenders, Raritan and Delaware Canal X. Lock on the Delaware and Chesapeake Canal XI. Canal Basin, Delaware City XII. Bugeye Oyster Dragger, Chesapeake Bay XIII. Two Young Men on Assignment for “Motor World” Magazine XIV. Chesapeake and Albermarle Canal XV. Visitor on Board at Stumpy Point, North Carolina XVI. Waterfront, Beaufort, North Carolina XVII. Wrecked at Cape Fear, North Carolina XVIII. Completing launch repairs, Southport, North Carolina XIX. Offshore between Southport, North Carolina, and Georgetown, South Carolina XX. Plantation at Frederica, Georgia, where John Wesley Established Methodism in this Country XXI. Paddlewheel Steamer on St. John’s River, Florida XXII. Lighthouse at St. Augustine, Florida XXIII. Alligator Farm at St. Augustine XXIV. Spanish Ruin at Matanzas Inlet XXV. “Flying Machines” at Daytona Beach, Florida XXVI. Relaxing at Cocoa, Florida XXVII. View from Anchorage at Palm Beach, Florida XXVIII. Mouth of Biscayne Bay XXIX. Do-It-Yourself Drawbridge Near Halifax, Florida XXX. Mascot Overhauled and Painted in Miami, Florida XXXI. The Bark “Rakel” at Fernandina, Florida XXXII. H. in the Boatswain’s Chair Scraping and Varnishing the Mast XXXIII. Manteo, North Carolina XXXIV. Sand Dunes at Nag’s Head, North Carolina XXXV. Inner Basin At Mowbray Arch Ghent, Norfolk, Virginia XXXVI. Plank Platform at Railway Station, Clay, West Virginia XXXVII. Lighthouse on Chesapeake Bay XXXVIII. Coney Island, New York XXXIX. Houseboat in Port Washington, New York
A Boy Like Me is the first anthology from openly gender fluid and LGBT+-identified artist Reki* who is also a recording artist based in Los Angeles, California. The collection of poetry and prose is primarily a firsthand narrative of what it means to be feminine within the community when concerning dating and romance, society at large, and sometimes within family and platonic ties and circles. Other themes include heartbreak, day-to-day testimonies that reveal to the reader how alike many of us are, and his mothers untimely death. A Boy Like Me is a piece of literature geared toward liberation of the femmes within the LGBT+ community that are ceaselessly tempted to silence by outside forces and, many times, by our own.
'Walk into any shipping office anywhere, show 'em your book and you're away. Africa, the States, Canada, up the Amazon - the world's your oyster, mate.' And Frank the Pantry-man was right. Joining the Merchant Navy was a great way for any youth to escape