Baby Bank


Book Description

Mila Torres is a successful divorce lawyer by day, stand-up comedian by night and by all accounts—except her mother’s—living a bisexual elder millennial’s dream life in Washington, DC. That is, until she realizes she’s only a year away from hitting the ripe old age of thirty-five and her doctor suggests at her annual pap smear that maybe she should consider freezing her eggs if she wants kids in the future. Except, she doesn’t want a child in the far future…she wants a child right now. This poses a bit of a problem since she’s ten swipes past single and living Golden Girls style with two of her best friends who work on Capitol Hill and one ornery old cat. That is, until she hears a story from a friend about a free sperm bank online app called Baby Bank. A few margaritas later and Mila has swiped on over fifty sperm donors until she finds the perfect match—handsome, successful, brilliant, everything you’d want your sperm to be. Now she’s meeting him at a hotel—along with two of her friends for backup—to complete the process. All should have gone smoothly, except when she learns that her sperm donor is the brother of the reporter that Mila has been dodging for months, and that while she originally only wanted this man’s baby, she actually wants his sister, too. In a comedic story of LGBTQIA+ romance and millennial-specific drama, Mila finds that motherhood and dating are not compatible when you keep it all in the family and that the modern millennial woman might not actually be able to have it all. The first in a series of standalone lesbian and queer themed romance novels coming to ebook, audiobook, and paperback.




Baby's First Bank Heist


Book Description

Meet Baby Frank, the world's most unlikely criminal, as he masterminds his very own bank heist. Perfect for fans of Boss Baby. Move over, Bonnie and Clyde, because there's a new criminal mastermind in town . . . Baby Frank! He's the world's most unlikely criminal, but he's about to pull off the most daring baby bank heist ever. Why? To get money for a fluffy new pet, of course. This baby is dangerously cute and desperate for a pet. You have been warned . . .




Banking


Book Description

Over the past 30 years, banks have increasingly lost their relevance to the customer. Thinking that primarily focused on their internal needs, and not their customers’, led to them to neglect emerging customer trends and created a space for new competitors to challenge their position. Consumers learnt many valuable lessons during the financial crisis at the end of the first decade of the 21st century, which coincided with the phenomenal rise of social media and consumer-orientated technology, such as smartphone and tablet apps. Uncertainty educated them about the need to gain control over their money and social media taught them the value of their personal data. Banks can no longer assume that they can use consumers’ personal data without their approval. If regulators don’t force banks to become more transparent, consumers certainly will. Banks continue to torture customers with push marketing techniques based on models with declining response rates, whilst ignoring the customers trying to buy across disconnected channels. Meanwhile, new lean non-bank competitors stalk banks, offering consumers compelling experiences by leveraging the new technology, a superior understanding of consumers’ needs (as they are not hindered by legacy product or channel-based thinking) and better use of data.However, all is not lost for traditional banks that have lost relevance to their customers. Banking: In search of relevance outlines a new model to help regain relevance in the customer’s eyes and discuss how banks might survive the impact of the consumer and technology shockwave. The book will appeal to any executive running a multi-channel financial services business, either B2C or B2B.




Her Baby's Father


Book Description

Reese Howard’s directive was to deliver one very fertile Sabrina MacFadden to the local sperm bank and gather titillating tidbits for his article. Under no circumstance was he to kiss the delectable Sabrina senseless, father her unborn child, then force her to be his bride. Okay, so he’d gotten a little off course…but why was he starting to believe in the promise of this woman’s touch, his family, in love…?




The Judge


Book Description




Shopaholic & Baby


Book Description

#1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • From the author of The Party Crasher and Love Your Life . . . “Sophie Kinsella keeps her finger on the cultural pulse, while leaving me giddy with laughter.”—Jojo Moyes, author of The Giver of Stars and The Last Letter from Your Lover Becky Brandon’s life is blooming. She’s working at London’s newest big store, The Look, house-hunting with husband Luke (her secret wish is a Shoe Room) . . . and she’s pregnant. She couldn’t be more overjoyed—especially after discovering that shopping cures morning sickness. Everything has to be perfect for her baby: from the designer nursery and the latest stroller to top-of-the-line medical care. But when the must-have celebrity obstetrician Becky’s been so desperate to see turns out to be Luke’s glamorous, intellectual ex-girlfriend, Becky’s perfect world starts to crumble. She’s shopping for two . . . but are there three in her marriage? BONUS: This edition contains an excerpt from Sophie Kinsella’s Shopaholic to the Stars. Praise for Sophie Kinsella and Shopaholic & Baby “Faster than a swiping Visa, more powerful than a two-for-one coupon, able to buy complete wardrobes in a single sprint through the mall—it’s Shopaholic!”—The Washington Post “Kinsella’s heroine is blessed with the resilience of ten women, and her damage-limitation brain waves are always good for a giggle.”—Glamour (U.K.) “As fun as a shopping spree.”—Entertainment Weekly




The Baby Gift


Book Description

The very pregnant woman standing before J.T. Ryker couldn’t remember who she was—or the name of her unborn baby’s father. But Gina Banning was the one woman J.T. would always remember. The last time he’d seen her she’d told him she hated him—and then married his partner a week later. So why had she driven through a snowstorm to J.T.’s doorstep? Gina sensed the honor-bound police chief who offered her shelter and protection was hiding something. His touch felt familiar. Was his kindness a precious gift...or would she and her child have to pay a price once all truths were finally revealed?







Babies Made Us Modern


Book Description

Placing babies' lives at the center of her narrative, historian Janet Golden analyzes the dramatic transformations in the lives of American babies during the twentieth century. She examines how babies shaped American society and culture and led their families into the modern world to become more accepting of scientific medicine, active consumers, open to new theories of human psychological development, and welcoming of government advice and programs. Importantly Golden also connects the reduction in infant mortality to the increasing privatization of American lives. She also examines the influence of cultural traditions and religious practices upon the diversity of infant lives, exploring the ways class, race, region, gender, and community shaped life in the nursery and household.




Bankers Monthly


Book Description