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Flagrant exaggerations and distorted facts begin to unfold as members of Tim's, Phyllis's, and Bob's families are exposed for a greeting card venture gone mad! MikWright . . . Family Style seeks to follow in the footsteps of the overwhelming success achieved by its four predecessors by being bigger and better. In a style that remains unmatched, the MikWright group attaches irreverent prose with an in-your-face attitude to traditional family photos (which are quite entertaining themselves). This time around, MikWright . . . Family Style highlights some of the people in the photographs through stories and quips penned with the biting wit that has given this series of books its own distinctive brand of humor.
A compilation of Tim and Phyllis's greeting card line, which evolved from family photos and contributions from their friends and business associates.
it's just what I wanted! (i hope they saved the receipt!)" --momma loves her some eggnog: happy holidaze * For those Yuletides requiring equal parts bourbon and eggnog, MikWright's here to say, "happy holidaze!" Pairing vintage family photographs with irreverently saucy captions, Tim Mikkelsen and Phyllis Wright-Herman, better known as MikWright, make the most of holiday traditions and seasonal annoyances. Nutty relatives, tipsy partygoers, and disappointing gifts become tolerable when paired with MikWrightisms like: * "holidays with the family are always a trip . . . a trip to the liquor store." * "i'll be home for christmas. (and in therapy by new year's.)" * "although a miracle, mary regretted not having an epidural."
In Drinks Well with Others and Mixed Nuts MikWright pokes fun at two favorite topics: cocktails and dysfunction. Readers will laugh as they page through these funny little gift books and may even feel compelled to lift a highball to themselves, family, and nutty friends.All in good fun, Drinks Well with Others conjures up such images as Grandma getting tipsy at the sight of communion wine, Aunt Violet lollygagging around the eggnog bowl at Christmas, and Mom using four-letter words after two glasses of vino. The spicy one-liners mix delightfully with black-and-white photography that looks like it fell right out of every baby boomer's hand-me-down family album. There's Great-grandmother with that trademark iron grip on her cocktail glass and Uncle Bill showing fine form as an ice fisherman-cum-beer drinker.
"the results of your color analysis are in. you look good in nothing." --don't blame me, sister: i told you not to use it in the bathtub * Celebrate sisterhood the MikWright way with this ode to bad-hair days, catty communications, dating commiserations, and more. Tim Mikkelsen and Phyllis Wright-Herman, the creative duo behind MikWright, combine '60s-era photographs with bitingly witty comments to offer candid insights on sisterhood. don't blame me, sister: i told you not to use it in the bathtub is the perfect present for birthdays, bachelorette parties, or just those times when you want to conjure up some girl power. Thoughts include: * "if you can't say something nice about someone, I want to hear it." * "are you out of your mind sleeping with someone you don't know? save that for when you're married." * "i'm not here to make things better, only to observe and pass judgment."
In this guide, Harnish and his co-authors share practical tools and techniques to help entrepreneurs grow an industry -- dominating business without it killing them -- and actually have fun. Many growth company leaders reach a point where they actually dread adding another customer, employee, or location. It feels like they are just adding more weight to an ever-heavier anchor they are dragging through the sand. To make matters worse, the increased revenues have not turned into more profitability, so at some point they wonder if the journey is worth the effort. This book focuses on the four major decisions every company must get right: People, Strategy, Execution and Cash. The book includes a series of One-Page tools including the One-Page Strategic Plan and the Rockefeller Habits Execution Checklist, which more than 40,000 firms around the globe have used to scale their companies successfully.
Offices are a breeding ground for odd expressions and hackneyed platitudes. Why are we peeling onions and putting irons in the fire? Why is our plate always full? And most importantly, how is it even possible to give 110%? Per My Last Email provides you with fresh new words to sprinkle throughout your workday and lift you out of your office-speak rut while making you laugh at the same time. With unexpected and entertaining phrases to boost the productivity of your meetings, revitalize your email game, and even the occasional office-appropriate swear, this book is a fun and informative send-up of stale corporate lingo that will help you freshen up your own workplace communication.
When Zambia became Independent in 1964, the white colonial population did not suddenly evaporate. Some had supported Independence, others had virulently opposed it, but all had to reappraise their nationality, residence and careers. A few became Zambian citizens and many more chose to stay while without committing themselves. But most of the colonial population eventually trickled out of the country to start again elsewhere. Pamela Charmer-Smith has traced survivors of this population to discover how new lives where constructed and new perspectives generated. Her account draws on the power of postcolonial memory to understand the many ways that copper miners, district officers, school-children and housewives became the empires relics. Her work is not that of a dispassionate outsider but of one who grew up in Northern Rhodesia, knew its colonial population and has considerable affection for Zambia.