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This is the true story of a boy growing up in post WWII London, England, with the dark aftereffects of the war still visible in some of the buildings and the personalities of the people who suffered through it all. The occasional family outings to beaches, parks, and the green rolling hills of Wales to visit relatives triggered a dream to one day explore and live in a wide-open country far away from the gloomy, crowded city life. The Canadian adventures that follow, some fun and some almost fatal, are a fulfillment of that dream.
In the mad dash to succeed fast, many of us compromise so much in the areas of health, relationships, family and personal satisfaction for our work. Over time, we feel bored, burned out, unhappy or unfulfilled and have no idea how we got there or how to fix it. Renessa Boley, America's Premier Life Designer, offers witty insights to revitalize your career, business and overall life so that you experience greater freedom and fulfillment in the climb to success. This book is a wake-up call to raise the bar on happiness in both your life and your work.
"Quantum Leaps in the Wrong Direction" carefully deconstructs five examples of pseudoscience--UFOs, out-of-body experiences, astrology, creationism, and ESP-- and gives easy recipes to test other dubious notions so that the reader can ascertain what lies in the realm of real science and what more properly deserves the tag of pseudoscience.
Is our public education system headed in the wrong direction? Richard Hancock asks us not only to scrutinize education, but to consider crucial pragmatic revisions. He looks hard at some of the negative trends which have become entrenched, including grade inflation and social promotion, and a variety of biases which undermine the integrity of the system. He suggests workable solutions. The book addresses a wide audience: students, parents, educators and administrators in the public system and realms of higher learning, government members, professionals, service and business people, Hancock also refers to others who are striving to bring the plight of the system to the attention of the public and the educational policy-makers. We cannot continue to stifle the brilliant, condescend to special interest groups, and ignore the "average" students, cheating them all of pride in honest achievement. Perhaps it is time to encourage and honour excellence! This is at once a warning and a voice encouraging us to act on behalf of our children and our nation!
At the 1929 Rose Bowl, talented center Roy Riegels picked up a fumble and made an incredible sixty-five-yard run. There was just one problem: Roy Riegels was running the wrong way! Renowned author Dan Gutman recreates this painful (but funny) moment in sports history in a picture book play-by-play of the game's most thrilling moments-all framed by a friendly grandpa remembering the game for his grandson. Told with the excitement of a sports announcer calling the greatest game of his life, and shown through vivid, cartoonlike illustrations by Kerry Talbott, The Day Roy Riegels Ran the Wrong Way is a feast of humor and history for any sports fan.
Imagine if you found a dead angel by the side of the road. What would you do? Perfect for fans of The Alchemist, this charming novel is set against the warmth, challenges, and love of everyday family life. It illustrates how angels can be messengers for peace and love. The story gently unfolds after Raphael begins his quest to bring an angel he finds by the side of the road back to life. Readers will become immersed in the characters' lives as they move along an incredible journey of love, loss, and hope. This transformational novel works like a self-help text, affecting readers long after they've finished it.
Angie and Ian were childhood sweethearts,Angie adored kids and, as one of eight children himself, Ian was only too happy to have as many as they could. After their marriagethey had three sons in quick succession. But then, aged just thirty one, Angie was diagnosed with breast cancer and the couple had to accept they might not be able to have any more. Five years on,though, with Angie well again they went on to have five more. But in 2007, Angie had a shadow on her lung and it was the return of the original breast cancer she thought she had beaten. It seemed the disease had returned to tear their world apart again. Though Ian searched tirelessly for cures, Angie practised acceptance. She wouldn't live to see her children grow up. Raising eight children would be a big job for any couple; to raise them alone, without their mother, an almost Herculean feat. But this was exactly what Angie wanted Ian to be able to do. So in the last months of her life, Angie compiled a list of 'rules' to guide Ian in the future, and put him on an intensive training course,so he could learn all the skills he would need. She taught him howto makeher special chicken curry, how to soothe away their hurts, pack their lunchboxes with all their favouritesand do all the little things she'd done for them so unthinkingly.And Ian knew he wasn't just doing this for the children. He was doing it so his beloved wife could be comforted by knowing that he had the tools to bring their children up her way. Finally, inevitably, came the hardest task of all. Angie, the job done, hadto find the courage to let them go, and Ian and the children the courage to carry on without her.
In this book, Jarod paints a vivid picture to help us see how we act and think like Jonah. I’ll give you a fair warning: it’s more often than we might want to admit. Jarod has the heart of a pastor, and he desires to help us see beyond the obvious to the not-so-known parts of the story. When we do that, we’ll see that Jonah’s story is one we can relate to at every level.
If you were to die today, have you really lived?
After the Enlightenment, German theologians in an over-zealous attempt to apply the then new Scientific Method to the study of the Bible, threw the “Bible Baby” out with the dirty bathwater. Science and evolution were the Zeitgeist, and theologians around the world overly bought into the naturalistic thinking of the time. Looking back, we now can see that almost all the science of the 18th and 19th centuries was very incomplete compared to what we know today. While science corrects itself with time, German theology has a unique and very unscientific way of progressing by building only upon previously accepted ideas even if those previous ideas were wrong. Thus, the unintended consequence of Biblical criticism over the past 200 years has been the trashing of the Bible as the Word of God. This book traces the history of the problem and proposes a Reformation of the way we view the Bible through Science and History thereby resurrecting the Bible once again to its proper position as the Word of God. If we get the Bible right, we will get Jesus right; if we get Jesus right, it will be all right.