Summer ends too fast when you’re dreading junior high Twelve-year-old Madison Finn is allergic to change. Her two best friends are away at camp and Madison is not sure she’s going to survive the summer, let alone the beginning of junior high. Good thing she has a new laptop, which she uses to write and store all of her thoughts on friendship, her parents’ divorce, and her fear of being called a loser for not liking sushi! At first, change seems like the worst thing ever, but with the support of her family, friends, and little pug, Phin, Madison realizes she can handle anything that comes her way.
Only the Lonely: The Life and Artistic Legacy of Roy Orbison
Only The Lonely
Then, with handfuls of his shirt, he yanked Robert out of the conclave he'd made in the wall, dragged him from the apartment, down the hall, toward the elevator at the far end. Robert was trying to fight now, but, though to Diane he'd ...
The most complete overview of Gedney’s work to date, this volume reveals the undeniable beauty of a major American photographer.
The four sections of the book: Loneliness, Creativity and Artists; Clinical Dimensions of Loneliness; Loneli-ness/Solitude in the Psychoanalytic Training Process; Loneliness and Life Events testify to the encompassing scope of this ...
“Mr. Pemberton's really keen to meet with you,” he said, handing Hubert a business card. “He's been following your story from the beginning and wants to know what he can do to help.” One telephone call and the swapping of a shift with ...
Does technology draw us closer together or trap us behind screens? Laing travels deep into the work and lives of some of the century's most original artists in a celebration of the state of loneliness.
This fresh, new series for "tweens" introduces Madison Finn, a seventh graderdealing with issues such as friendships, divorce, and school, while using herlaptop and the Internet to help her through changes.
Kate Bernheimer and Chris Sheban have teamed up to create a picture book that promises to be loved every bit as much as the lonely book itself.
Panda is lonely.