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Just minutes before my husband found me passed out, covered in my own vomit, anyone would have believed I was perfectly healthy...including me. What I didn't know was that, since birth, a tumour had been growing in my brain, waiting for 2015 before it would make its shocking, and nearly deadly, presence known. What followed were months of brain surgeries, radiotherapy, and multiple scares as the doctors raced a tumour that had been left unchecked to grow for thirty-six years. Healing involved more than the medical miracles I experienced. In fact, healing is still a process I must tackle every day. I'm here today, after a harrowing six-year journey, because of my husband, who rescued me not o...
Ask yourself when you last stood at the school gate wondering, with other 'perplexed of parent-ville', at the machinations grinding the wheels of your child's school. List the times you waxed lyrical while participating in a playground spleen-venting-fest. Call to mind how you indulged in spurious rage with friends after an OFSTED inspection resulted in an inexplicable judgement. Remember the frustration at the seemingly endless process of 'letting a teacher go' while your child suffered day after day of inadequate teaching. How many of us know the answers...the real answers, which fundamentally affect us all and, more importantly, profoundly affect the lives of our children? This behind the scenes journey will engage, amuse and enlighten in ways you won't find with fly on the wall documentaries. Maggie George's very personal memoir answers the FAQs posed by parents...but rarely answered!
Foreword by Catharine MacKinnon.
Three stories that will delight through words and pictures. Ruskin Bond's short stories have been read and loved by children for decades and he remains by far one of India's most popular writers for children. Funny, heart-warming and full of mischief, his stories are also visual delights. In this collection, acclaimed illustrator Priya Kuriyan draws three favourite stories as a comic book. In 'Monkey Trouble' find out all about the mischief Tutu the monkey that Grandfather brings home gets up to. In 'Eye of the Eagle' Jai has to singlehandedly save his herd from a wily eagle. And in 'A Special Tree' Rakesh and Grandfather take a small seed and watch as it grows into a tree that refuses to di...
I. Children's literature? -- 1. Sex and violence : the hard core of fairy tales -- 2. Fact and fantasy : the art of reading fairy tales -- 3. Victims and seekers : the family romance of fairy tales -- II. Heroes -- 4. Born yesterday : The spear side -- 5. Spinning tales : the distaff side -- III. Villains -- 6. From nags to witches : stepmothers and other ogres -- 7. Taming the beast : Bluebeard and other monsters -- Epilogue : getting even -- Appendixes -- A. Six fairy tales from the Nursery and household tales, with commentary -- B. Selected tales from the first edition of the Nursery and household tales -- C. Prefaces to the first and second editions of the Nursery and household tales -- D. English titles, tale numbers, and German titles of stories cited -- E. Bibliographical note.
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Meandering between desert sands and skyscrapers, between past, present, and alternate timelines, "She Nailed a Stake Through His Head" is a gallery of horrors inspired by the most nightmarish images of Near Eastern cultures.
Reminiscent of Scheherazade and One Thousand and One Nights, Gianni Rodari's Telephone Tales is many stories within a story. Every night, a traveling father must finish a bedtime story in the time that a single coin will buy. One night, it's a carousel that adults cannot comprehend, but whose operator must be some sort of magician, the next, it's a land filled with butter men who melt in the sunshine Awarded the Hans Christian Anderson Award in 1970, Gianni Rodari is widely considered to be Italy's most important children's author of the 20th century. Newly re-illustrated by Italian artist Valerio Vidali (The Forest), Telephone Tales entertains, while questioning and imagining other worlds.
Human heads have an enduring fascination. Believed to be Celtic, the carved Hexham Heads have cast a spell over all who have come into contact with them. Others have made examples in their image and those held by the author on this book cover are two such. On the left a replica created by the man who claimed to have made them in the 1950s. The other being made just ahead of a boy and his brother unearthing the subjects of this book. Since learning of the Hexham Heads and acquiring these 'archaic' facsimiles, Paul Screeton has spent forty years following what has been a QUEST FOR THE HEXHAM HEADS
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