You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
Reviewers are singing the praises of the life affirming and updated best selling book, The NEW Heart at Work. Rich with illuminating stories from every sector and lifestyle, this priceless treasure trove of anecdotes gives us all hope in creating workplaces where people thrive when they are appreciated. The formula for a productive workforce is simple but long forgotten - encouragement, empowerment and self-esteem, and one which increases the bottom line better than any other method of management. From CEOs, executives and managers to secretaries, taxi cab drivers and bus boys - self-esteem translates in every language and organization. It is time to transform our everyday lives and become more caring and observant of our fellow human beings. The NEW Heart at Work demonstrates that one person can cause miracles to occur generating a ripple effect. You will be fascinated reading insights from well-known personalities like Nelson Mandela, Mother Teresa, Oprah, Cal Ripken, Jr. and Carol Realini and inspired by those less known but equally as powerful.
Covers receipts and expenditures of appropriations and other funds.
Few political families have captured the public's fascination quite like the members of the House of Windsor, the British royal family. This collection of articles compiles The New York Times's coverage of three of the best-known couples in modern history: Harry and Meghan, William and Kate, and Charles and Diana. Through these pieces, readers can witness firsthand the most publicized moments of each couple's story, including engagements, weddings, childbirth, and, in the case of Charles and Diana, a quite public divorce. Furthermore, articles on Diana's untimely, tragic death and Meghan Markle's activism and career as an actor make this an essential guide to the royal family's affairs.
As a child growing up in a small Louisiana town, Frances Boudreaux couldnt understand her mothers obsession with stuff. She stashed clothes, trash, and even worthless trinkets. It was only years later that Frances discovered the truth about her mother: she was an obsessive-compulsive hoarder. Brutally honest and emotionally-wrenching, Where the Sun Dont Shine and the Shadows Dont Play shares a daughters struggle to comprehend her mothers fall from happy teenager to house-bound adult living in the midst of filth and chaos. Spanning her childhood during the 1950s through her adulthood years, Frances traces the rise of her mothers obsessive compulsive disorder and speaks candidly about the abus...
None
None
None