An autobiographical account of a nightmarish childhood. A recollection of events that happened behind closed doors. From youth to adulthood; from hurting to healing. Intertwined with a journey into intuition, paranormal occurrences and finding out who you are. A story about mental and physical growth, learning how to be strong on your own and finding the right time to confront those who wronged you. Finding strength from your own weakness is incredibly freeing and powerful. Sometimes you look back and wonder how you made it; how did you survive? All you know is you did, you will, you can.
Welcome to New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Kristen Ashley's Colorado Mountain Series, where friends become family and everyone deserves a second chance.
"It's time to celebrate the joy of creativity through dreams! There are endless possibilities to what children can imagine: from penguins eating ice cream to cute cuddle bugs, what do you dream?"--Back cover.
Sarah Goode never had the chance to go to school, but she was determined to solve problems using only her imagination. She drew, then built her own invention. Could she patent it?
“The award-winning singer has taken one of her songs and created a gorgeous picture book” raved School Library Journal about Jewel’s first picture book, That’s What I’d Do. In Sweet Dreams, a mother’s soothing lullaby opens the ...
We were in Paris for a Helmut Newton shoot, and there was this mad expenditure of money. Steve was actually very eccentric, and he could be quite straight and provincial. We were staying at the George V, just around the corner from the ...
Among the tenets of British aestheticism, few had more impact than Bell's concept of “significant form.”23 A twentieth-century extension of those philosophical claims for the legitimate value of formal means, Bell's approach could be ...
A little rabbit checks for shadows under the bed and monsters in the closet at bedtime
Innocent ten-year-old Heather is the only one to notice that the children of Good Hope, Missouri, are being possessed by an evil force, but before she can convince someone, the...
Light It could only be seen in the dead of night.
In the final essay, the "intrinsic" nature of "qualia" is compared with the naively imagined "intrinsic value" of a dollar in "Consciousness—How Much is That in Real Money?"