Sunita's Baby Sister


Book Description

The Dealing With Feelings stories explore very simple, familiar childhood experiences. They help children to process and understand a variety of emotions, while helpful tips at the back suggest ways for parents and practitioners to build on this understanding with practical activities and ideas to discuss.




Sunita's Baby Sister: Dealing with Feelings


Book Description

Sunita's baby sister stays at home when Sunita goes to playgroup. The baby is noisy when Sunita has to be quiet. The baby stays up late when Sunita has to go to bed. Sometimes Sunita doesn't like having a baby sister but when the baby smiles, Sunita loves her sister very much indeed! Each of the simple stories in the Dealing with Feelings series, beautifully illustrated by Melissa Four, explores a familiar childhood experience. These stories help children to process and understand a variety of emotions, while helpful tips at the back of the book suggest ways for parents and practitioners to build on the understanding in many creative and fun ways.




An Ultimate Hero of the Dark


Book Description

"An Ultimate Hero of the Dark" is a highly poignant tale about a socially marginalised slum boy Chandu, his spiny struggles, heart touching family love and sacrifices, beautiful but sketchy love story, exemplary friendship, heart-melting talks while dying and mind squeezing great immolation. This tale is full of emotions, sacred romance, thrills, suspense, betrayals, avenge, sacrifices and all the materials able to strongly hold the fiction lovers. This tale also shows the dark side of socially neglected people and the rough mentalities of a few affluent people about them. In order to curiously know how much was the mournful life of Chandu during birth; how his life becomes changed when came in the friendship of Shiwa; how he fell in the deep love of his fast friend Shiwa's sister, Shaumya; how he saves the life of his fast friends and others from the hands of scoundrels and gangsters; how the friendship of Chandu, Krishna, Sapna and Shiwa comes at their peaks following several critical and dangerous turns and twists of life; how he saves two families from the crocodile's mouth of Singhush, his scoundrel son, a cheater family friend; how chapters of innocent loves of Shaumya and Sapna for both friends cruelly remain unaccomplished and many more joyful and mournful twists; the reader must go till the end of the story. Readers will find all spices at one place in the form of highly interesting and thrilling story.




Leela's Book: A Novel


Book Description

"Steeped in the tradition of the Indian epic, yet modern and vastly entertaining." —The Times (London) In her fiction debut, Alice Albinia weaves a multithreaded epic tale that encompasses divine saga and familial discord and introduces an unforgettable heroine. Leela—alluring, taciturn, haunted—is moving from New York back to Delhi. Worldly and accomplished, she has been in self-imposed exile from India and her family for decades; twenty-two years earlier, her sister was seduced by the egotistical Vyasa, and the fallout from their relationship drove Leela away. Now an eminent Sanskrit scholar, Vyasa is preparing for his son’s marriage. But when Leela arrives for the wedding, she disrupts the careful choreography of the weekend, with its myriad attendees and their conflicting desires. Gleefully presiding over the drama is Ganesh—divine, elephant-headed scribe of the Mahabharata, India’s great epic. The family may think they have arranged the wedding for their own selfish ends, but according to Ganesh it is he who is directing events—in a bid to save Leela, his beloved heroine, from Vyasa. As the weekend progresses, secret online personas, maternal identities, and poetic authorships are all revealed; boundaries both religious and continental are crossed; and families are ripped apart and brought back together in this vibrant and brilliant celebration of family, love, and storytelling.




Songs of Innocents


Book Description

A woman's body is found in a lake. Is it a sad case of suicide or something more sinister? Hannah Weybridge, still reeling from her friend's horrific murder and the attempts on her own life, doesn't want to get involved, but reluctantly agrees to look into the matter for the family. The past, however, still stalks her steps, and a hidden danger accompanies her every move. The third in the bestselling Hannah Weybridge thriller series, Songs of Innocents provides Hannah with her toughest, and deadliest, assignment yet...




New Beginnings


Book Description

An all-new, original book featuring two new Vet Volunteers! Meet Jules and Josh, the new twins in town! While Josh adapts quickly to Ambler, Jules accidentally makes an enemy of Maggie. Hoping a pet will help her feel better, Jules adopts the class rabbit, Chewie, but things go downhill when there are complications with Chewie's spay surgery. With Dr. Mac out on a call, it's up to Jules to work with Maggie to help the rabbit - and maybe even prove that she and Josh are worthy of becoming Vet Volunteers. This brand-new book in the beloved Vet Volunteers series brings all the kids together for another exciting animal adventure!




2024-25 SSC General Intelligence & Reasoning Solved Papers


Book Description

2024-25 SSC General Intelligence & Reasoning Solved Papers 1104 1495 E. This book contains 776 previous year’s solved papers.




The Epsteins


Book Description

Chatskel Barntovsky (1859-1941) emigrated in 1870 from Augustów, Poland, to New York and became Max Epstein in New York (An elder brother had immigrated earlier, and assumed his wife's surname of Epstein). Max married Mary Solomon in the 1870s. Among their children was Sir Jacob Epstein (1880-1959), who studied art in France, became a British subject in 1911. Another of their children was Sylvia Epstein Press (1895-1980), a famous dress designer in New York City. Includes a major interpretive article about Sir Jacob Epstein and his sculpture by Jane F. Babson.




Bindi


Book Description

A richly imagined debut set against the backdrop of India, London, and Hollywood that tells the story of a young boy, suddenly orphaned, and the adults around him, each of whom is also looking for a home in the world. Kerala, 1993: Eight-year-old Birendra suddenly loses his mother, but he refuses to believe he's an orphan. He's certain that his mother's twin sister, the troubled but winning Nayana, will come for him all the way from West London. But when the letter informing Nayana of her sister's death goes missing, numerous lives are forever altered, and Birendra is set adrift. Madeline, a Los Angeles native and interior designer to the stars, is floundering in her personal life. In the aftermath of a failed attempt to get pregnant, she flies to India where she finds herself face-to-face with Birendra. In a moment of sudden certainty, she decides she must adopt the boy in order to save them both. As Nayana falls deeper into crisis at work and in her marriage in London, Birendra learns to make himself at home in Los Angeles, forging an especially close bond with Madeline's younger brother, Edward, who begins to worry that his sister may have met her match in motherhood. When he learns of his adopted nephew's family in London, Edward is faced with an impossible choice. If he can find Nayana and reunite her with her nephew, should he? Even if in doing so he would risk unwittingly setting the two women who love the boy most against each other? Written in stirring prose, and infused with keen emotional insight, Bindi is about our search for family and for home, and an exploration of the ways that loss and longing can be converted into hope, connection, and love.




Socio-Cultural Insights of Childbirth in South Asia


Book Description

This book analyses the significant socio-cultural factors impacting childbirth experiences of women living in remote and complex social settings. This book challenges the notion that childbirth is a universal biological event which women experience in their reproductive lives and provides an in-depth social perspective of understanding childbirth. Drawing on evocative stories of women living in the Himalayas, the author discusses how childbirth should be supported to enable women to take control and ownership of their experiences. Based on extensive research undertaken in remote mountain regions of Nepal, the book provides evidence for and discussion of childbirth in the context of other countries, cultures and communities. Utilising a feminist perspective, this book critiques medical control of childbirth and argues in favour of giving power to women so that they can make decisions which are right for them. In doing so, the author unpacks complexities associated with women’s lives in remote communities and highlights the significance of addressing broader determinants impacting birth outcomes and valuing childbirth traditions to ensure cultural safety for women, families and societies. Through exploring the wide range of factors influencing women and their childbirth experiences, this book offers a new model for childbirth that policy makers, practitioners, communities, educators, researchers and other professionals can use to make childbirth an empowering experience for women. It will be of interest to academics and professionals in the fields of public health, midwifery, health promotion, sociology and South Asian Studies.