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From the author of The Aosawa Murders, one of the NYT Notable Books of 2020. The WSJ commented: "Part psychological thriller, part murder mystery--it is audacious in conception and brilliant in execution." The Globe and Mail said the book was "emerging as one of the most praised novels of the year." This gripping psychological thriller takes place in a desolate apartment in a Japanese city. The protagonists, Aki and Hiro, fell in love at university before becoming convinced that they were brother and sister, separated when young after Aki was adopted. After living together platonically for some years they went on a trek in the mountains, where their guide--their estranged natural father--die...
Why are you here? What is your soul’s purpose? How do you intend on making this life count? In Remember Who You Are, author Shweta Gandhi explores these existential questions and offers guidance on living a meaningful life that’s aligned with your calling. Each chapter explores a different theme, including self-discovery tools like astrology and numerology to decode your personality as well as 15 journaling exercises and relaxing meditations to connect with your Higher Self. You’ll learn how to access your Akashic Records to uncover karmic patterns, activate your chakras to restore balance, practice mindfulness to overcome anxiety, strengthen your spiritual hygiene to increase well-being, and so much more. It is now time to remember your real identity. You are not this body. You are a soul. From this enlightened state of mind, Remember Who You Are invites you to begin a personal journey to meet your most authentic and honest self. Prepare to transform your life with sacred wisdom that acts as therapy for your soul.
Focuses on a crucial two-day battle in Vietnam that was also marked by an ill-fated protest by University of Wisconsin students at the Dow Chemical Company, in an hour-by-hour narrative.
"Simple text and full-color photographs describe sunlight and how it causes temperature changes, the seasons, wind, and clouds"--
This book brings back to life in rich detail the Afro-Guyanese village community of the author's childhood, where there were old people who had been slaves as children and Africa was not forgotten. It was a time when children did not have open access to the world of adults and childhood had not yet disappeared, and perhaps for this reason, the men and women who pass through these stories have a mystery and singularity that are as unforgettable for the reader as they were for the child.
All Americans should welcome the opportunity to move forward into a better future for America and for all Americans while mending ancient wounds from the nations original sin and at the same time seek to remediate the lingering ills and inflicted hardships still present to this day that divides the nation's people such that some Americans still feel relegated to second class citizenship. Courageous people of all faiths, of goodwill, and of conscience can impart heartfelt support for a new emancipation that moves toward freeing both black and white Americans from the racial disharmony and acrimony that surrounds the issue of racial discrimination in America. It is now possible to seek a new d...
In 2002, our Nation was unsure of its future, panicked by its recent past, and struggling to come to terms with a mounting war and the ever-changing colors of terror. Through it all two poets in a newfound friendship felt it necessary to stop the chaos and share their thoughts, views, struggles, fears, frustrations, and daily triumphs with each other. Sometimes scathing and brash, sometimes vulnerable, sometimes self-assured, the conversational threads have been woven into a constant, furious tapestry covering the landscape of the American South, the desert Southwest and all the way to the cold mountains of Switzerland. These letters represent a refusal to submit and a wild shout to the heavens that art can still matter.
Leaves use sunlight to make energy, and when the sun fades, leaves burst into color.
Reprint of the original, first published in 1881.
This engaging title explores the modern body at leisure, a very unexpected aspect of New Zealand social history. The leisure and pleasure lives of modern Australasians were intimately connected with global developments throughout the twentieth century, whether this meant watching an international strongman perform in his leopard-skin knickers or looking to the Hitler Youth Movement for inspiration.