Drawn from her popular "Ask Wendy" segment, the outspoken host of "The Wendy Williams Show" draws on personal experience to offer advice on relationships, parenting, body image, beauty, and other topics.
As I slid in, I saw golden engraved plaques lining the wall—legendary San Francisco Chronicle columnist Herb Caen and Charles Williams (founder of Williams-Sonoma)—and then I spotted his name. My date was among the celebrated luminaries ...
In this unique and thought-provoking book, "Change Your Questions, Change Your Life," Wendy Watson Nelson explores the power of asking--and answering--certain questions and invites the reader to pause and reflect on the different kinds of ...
A New York Public Library Best Book of the Year “A twisty, hair-raising tale.”– Newsweek "A fast-paced psychological drama." – GMA.com “Compulsively readable.” – PopSugar "Reinforces Walker’s place at the top of the genre." ...
Sharing the traditional stories she learned at Keewaydinoquay’s side as well as stories from other American Indian traditions and her own experiences, Geniusz brings the plants to life with narratives that explain their uses, meaning, and ...
This book will teach you a new way to communicate which gets to the heart of things!
Green. Definitely green. It smells more like the color green than anything I've ever known in my life. Green and ... Oh! Oh, no!” At her exclamation, even John looked up from his accounts, suddenly alarmed.
Move over 50 Shades, there’s a new romance in town. Superstar Wendy Williams brings on the heat in her first ever, no-holds-barred, down and dirty, romance novel. Kimberly Kind is trying to get beyond her roots.
She reached for her second while Carmen stayed in the living room, stubbornly trying to finish a math problem without giving in to ask Wendy for help quite yet. Aunt Missy washed dishes at the sink with her back to Wendy.
Had Wendy been born without Down syndrome, I believe her interests would have drawn her to a scientific career. ... purchased too much on my credit cards, I stopped at my mother's house to ask her to lend me money so I could pay a bill.
"Though framed as an account of arguably the most famous of Henry VIII's six wives, Dear Heart, How like You This? is far more than another re-telling of a well-trodden tale.