This impression has been borne out in her subsequent work. On the publication of her debut novel in 2013, Carter was heralded by critics as ‘a writer worth keeping an eye on’ with a style reminiscent of classic suspense novelist Daphne du Maurier. A former newspaper journalist, Carter ran an award-winning PR agency for 12 years. USA Today bestselling author Elizabeth Ellen Carter is an award-winning historical romance writer who pens richly detailed historical romantic adventures. He has learned Sebastian’s secret and will use it to further his own ambition-using Sebastian’s own family-which will destroy Sebastian and mark him a traitor, and plunge an unprepared England into war with the Scots… But Sebastian is a man with a secret-one that could destroy him.Īs a series of brutal murders haunt their nights, the man who betrayed Alfreya’s father returns claiming to be her betrothed. As Alfreya gets to know her new husband, she finds he’s not the monster she feared, and their marriage of convenience soon becomes a bond of passion. To save her gravely ill brother's life, Alfreya offers herself hostage to her enemy. But instead of returning victorious as her dead father had promised, she returns defeated by Baron Sebastian de la Croix, the Norman who rules her lands. In the years following William the Conqueror’s harrying of the North, Lady Alfreya of Tyrswick returns to her family home after seven years in exile. A shared secret from their past could destroy their future…
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But he’s under orders to retrieve the scroll. Fate thrusts her into the path of mysterious samurai Kage Tatsumi, who is Yumeko’s best hope for survival. When demons kill half-kitsune Yumeko’s adoptive family, she’s forced to flee her home with one part of the ancient scroll. The time is near.and the missing pieces of the scroll will be sought throughout the land of Iwagoto. In this first book of her Japanese mythology-inspired Shadow of the Fox trilogy, bestselling author Julie Kagawa weaves a stunning, high-stakes tale of alliances and deceptions, characters who aren’t what they seem, and secrets that could change the fate of the world.Įvery millennium, whoever holds the Scroll of a Thousand Prayers has the power to call the great Kami Dragon from the sea and ask for one wish. Bringing her dozen years of community organizing and training to bear, Gordon shares the rhetorical approaches she and other organizers employ to not only counter these pernicious myths, but to dismantle the anti-fat bias that so often underpin them.Īs conversations about fat acceptance and fat justice continue to grow, “You Just Need to Lose Weight” will be essential to ensure that those conversations are informed, effective, and grounded in both research and history. In “You Just Need to Lose Weight,” Aubrey Gordon equips readers with the facts and figures to reframe myths about fatness in order to dismantle the anti-fat bias ingrained in how we think about and treat fat people. Yet, these myths are as readily debunked as they are pervasive. Fat acceptance “glorifies obesity.” The BMI is an objective measure of size and health. We’re in the midst of an obesity epidemic. Losing weight is easy-calories in, calories out. The pushback that shows up in conversations about fat justice takes exceedingly predicable form. The co-host of the Maintenance Phase podcast and creator of Your Fat Friend equips you with the facts to debunk common anti-fat myths and with tools to take action for fat justice I feel fresher and smarter and happier for sitting down with her.”-Jameela Jamil, iWeigh Podcast “One of the great thinkers of our generation. #11 in Bestselling Science & Technology Audiobooks The Freak Observer by Blythe Woolston () Skip to main. "synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title. The Freak Observer by Blythe Woolston () on. Woolston writes with what seems like great ease yet with great originality.” -Christina Meldrum, author of Madapple “ The Freak Observer is at once tender and shocking, smart and edgy, emotionally rich and emotionally raw. This is a startling and believable voice.” -Julie Schumacher, author of Black Box “Blythe Woolston’s Loa Lindgren-like Kaye Gibbons’s Ellen Foster or Sapphire’s Precious Jones-is marvelously tenacious, off-beat, and resilient. “When I read for pleasure, I read for voice, and Loa’s voice is so true, so bone-dry funny, so enormously sad.Brava Blythe Woolston for giving this girl’s voice to the world.” -Kathe Koja, author of Headlong The Freak Observer is a startling debut about death, life, astrophysics, and finding beauty in chaos. She must find her own way to pry her world from the clutches of death. But there are no textbook fixes for Loa’s short-circuiting brain. As Loa spins off on her own, her mind ambushes her with vivid nightmares and sadistic flashbacks-a textbook case of PTSD. Everything spun neatly and regularly as the whole family orbited around Asta.īut now Asta’s dead, and 16-year-old Loa’s clockwork galaxy has collapsed. Asta suffered from a genetic disorder that left her a permanent infant, and caring for her was Loa’s life. For eight years, Loa Lindgren’s world ran like one of those mechanical models of the solar system, with her baby sister, Asta, as the sun. To escape a life of poverty, he uses his beauty, but that only backfires and leads him to a catastrophe that changes his life forever. In 1805, Laurent has no family, no means, and his eyesight is failing. Laurent is so lost in the world around him, and is such a tangled mystery, that Beast can't help but let the man claw his way into the stone that is Beast's heart. Sweet, innocent, and as beautiful as an angel fallen from heaven, Laurent pulls on all of Beast's heartstrings. Until one night, when he finds a young man covered in blood in their clubhouse. The accident not only hurt his body, but damaged his soul and self-esteem, so he's wrapped himself in a tight cocoon of violence and mayhem where no one can reach him. Beast has been disfigured in a fire, but he's covered his skin with tattoos to make sure no one mistakes his scars for weakness. Kings of Hell Motorcycle Club vice president. Desperate to escape a life that is falling apart.Ģ017. His first gig was illustrating a moody detective one-shot entitled Homicide, written by John Arcudi. A consistent interest in the medium, coupled with some art skill, landed Doug a job drawing comics for Dark Horse at the age of 24 (the date is known precisely, as it occurred just two weeks before he wed his lovely bride). His most recent work includes Batwing and Catwoman.īorn in 1963 in the Year of the Rabbit, Doug Mahnke embarked on a love affair with comics at the age of five, having received a pile of Spider-Man issues from a rugby-playing college student named Mike who lived in his basement. Winick came to national attention when appearing on MTV's The Real World: San Francisco, his experienced inspired his memoir, the award-winning Pedro and Me: Friendship, Loss, and What I Learned. Writer/artist Judd Winick has handled most every major character in the DC Universe including notable runs on Green Lantern, Green Arrow, The Outsiders, Justice League: Generation Lost and wrote the critically acclaimed animated feature Batman: Under the Hood, based on his run on Batman. With activist and founder of LGBT History Month and Schools OUT UK, Susan Sanders, as consultant, you can be confident that the information in this essential resource is reliable as well as being engaging and highly readable. The year’s outstanding debut authors for children: shortlist for the 2023 Branford Boase Award announcedĪn inspirational history of the LGBTQ+ movement.Celebrate Grandparents Day with 50 great kids books about grandparents.Anxiety & Wellbeing - 80 Books to Help Children Nurture Good Mental Health.Jacqueline Wilson - our Guest Editor of the Month.Branford Boase 2023 – what the judges had to say about the shortlist.
Some are from everyday experience: Why do immigrants struggle with a new language, only to have their fluent children ridicule their grammatical errors? Why can't computers converse with us? Why is the hockey team in Toronto called the Maple Leafs, not the Maple Leaves? Some are from popular science: Have scientists really reconstructed the first language spoken on earth? Are there genes for grammar? Can chimpanzees learn sign language? And some are from our deepest ponderings about the human condition: Does our language control our thoughts? How could language have evolved? Is language deteriorating? Today laypeople can chitchat about black holes and dinosaur extinctions, but their curiosity about their own speech has been left unsatisfied-until now. "A brilliant, witty, and altogether satisfying book."Įveryone has questions about language. He approached me with another strange device. Given the heaping pile of logs stacked beside the fireplace, neither of those obstacles had been a problem for Reece. Burning them required a permit and cost a fortune. Trees were a precious resource in the Outlying Lands. My family couldn’t afford wood as a fuel source. The heat felt good against the room’s deep chill, and the dancing flames intrigued me. How much will she sacrifice in order to win? To ensure peace, she must leave the past behind, marry a man she’s never met, and submit to the authority of a relentless officer with a hidden agenda of his own. Greed, corruption, and genetic tampering threaten every aspect of her existence as she’s thrust, unwilling, into the sophisticated culture of the elite Core city. With remarkable skills and a shocking genetic code the Core and its enemies will do anything to obtain, Willow suddenly finds the freedom she craves slipping through her fingers. But when a genetically-advanced military officer shows up in her village and questions her identity, long-buried secrets begin to emerge. Sixteen-year-old Willow Kent believed she was normal. Those with extraordinary skills rise to power and fame. In Earth’s battle-ridden future, humans have evolved. Genres: Dystopian, Romance, Science Fiction, Young Adult The foreword to the collection, written by Mahnaz Parakand, a member of the centre of human rights defenders and one of the four lawyers of the Yaran, sets these poems in context. This is a bit longer than my usual blog but I hope you will be able to read it all and more importantly want to read Sabet’s poetry. It is challenging in the parameters of what should be a short a blog/article to convey the full power and complexity of the spiritual and emotional journey Sabet’s poems will take the reader on, whilst at the same time considering their artistry, spiritual basis, and technique, but my main goal is to give the potential reader motivation to uncage the voice of Mahvash Sabet. Nakhjavani prefers to call them adaptations rather than translations due to the immense difficulty of translating poetry from other languages with absolute accuracy especially with the extra elements of metre and rhyme to combine with meaning and the cultural and spiritual dimensions of language. Mahvash Sabet’s Prison Poems (George Ronald Press, 2013) have been brought to the English speaking world in delicate and skilful adaptations by Bahiyyih Nakhjavani she was assisted in this work by both her father and her mother. ‘We shout as loudly as we can but our voices too are caged/and day after day death is denied as well as aid./No one listens, no one hears this wingless bird.’ (Mahvash Sabet – ‘The Friends’) |