Tinder, Tuk-Tuks, and Tequila


Book Description

Perfect for fans of Don't Come Back! and Round Ireland with a Fridge, Derrick Miller's debut Tinder, Tuk-Tuks, and Tequila, is the memoir a young traveler coming to understand the world and its people through a series of misadventures spanning the globe. Having been around the block and then some, Derrick details his failures of dating-on-the-go in foreign countries, difficulties of travelling not only by planes, trains, and automobiles but also via rickashaws, boats, and his own two feet, and the foggy mornings after long nights with a shotglass and friends. As Derrick himself learned, common sense isn't always so common. With the comical mistakes of The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared, the freshness of youth and naivety of Running with Scissors, and the universal life lessons of Whatever You Do, Don't Run!, Tinder, Tuk-Tuks, and Tequila will have you laughing amidst the morals of his life experiences. Laugh and raise a glass... Add Tinder, Tuk-Tuks, and Tequila to your cart today!




Words to Rhyme with


Book Description

An easy-to-use dictionary of over 80,000 rhyming words.




The Broken Road Home


Book Description

This is Evie's sad tale of surviving sexual abuse, as well as domestic abuse as a young child. Evie much later on also became a survivor of Domestic Violence, as a young wife and mother.Melvin, a family friend, and sexual predator carved a path for himself using Evie's young innocence, by showing her kindness in a place of loneliness. Evie had no one to turn to, her mother an alcoholic, and her step-father a cruel, and vicious man. Evie through the years was placed in several different foster homes; Evie ran away from them all, even living on the cold streets of London at eleven years old. A homeless traveller took Evie under their wing, kept her safe, and eventually helped to guide her home. All she had to cling to in the end was her biological father, also an alcoholic, her Nan, and her great love of horses.Evie would later marry Andrew, yet another man in her life who deceived her in every heartbreaking way imaginable. Andrew viciously beat Evie many times over during a six-year period, and he had numerous affairs with prostitutes, as well as affairs with other women whom she knew. Evie had nowhere to run to, that Andrew would not find her, and bring her back. She felt broken in mind, body, and spirit, with no one to protect her. Evie sometimes felt like giving up her very existence, though it was her deep bond, and love for her children that she found the strength to keep on going.Evie's great fondness for books eventually led her to find spirituality, which gave her calm and peaceful moments, and through spirituality she met two amazing women, and with their help she found the strength to take back her life, and then she met Steve. Steve gave Evie a love story, which she would never, ever forget.Evie wanted to keep her readers in mind, and so her re- account of her childhood memories of being sexually abused is written in such a way, as to not to be too upsetting, and so she decided to write about it very softly, and only touching on this subject very briefly. Her story may appear very harrowing, though it has it does have it's up's and down's, as well it's funny and sad moments. Evie does however eventually experience a beautiful love, and she does have her happy ever after, by walking a broken road...home.




The Sex-Starved Marriage


Book Description

'Not tonight, darling, I've got a headache...' An estimated one in three couples suffer from problems associated with one partner having a higher libido than the other. Marriage therapist Michele Weiner Davis has written THE SEX-STARVED MARRIAGE to help couples come to terms with this problem. Weiner Davis shows you how to address pyschological factors like depression, poor body image and communication problems that affect sexual desire. With separate chapters for the spouse that's ready for action and the spouse that's ready for sleep, THE SEX-STARVED MARRIAGE will help you re-spark your passion and stop you fighting about sex. Weiner Davis is renowned for her straight-talking style and here she puts it to great use to let you know you're not alone in having marital sex problems. Bitterness or complacency about ho-hum sex can ruin a marriage, breaking the emotional tie of good sex.




The Poet's Manual and Rhyming Dictionary


Book Description

A useful aid for all committed and aspiring poets. A good rhyming dictionary is an essential tool for all writers of verse. This volume is compactly arranged to allow writers to find the rhymes they need quickly and easily.




12,000 Words


Book Description

English language 12,000 words.




Have a Word on Me


Book Description




Say it My Way


Book Description







The Garden of Eloquence


Book Description

M. Jourdain, a character in a Moliere play, was amazed when told he had been speaking prose all his life. Willard Espy, who has been compared to Lewis Carroll for his light-hearted and fanciful treatment of words, points out that every day we use rhetoric just as unknowingly. In this latest book, Mr. Espy has created a preposterous wonderland, a garden such as never was; and in the words of Henry Peacham (who published the first Garden of Eloquence in 1577), he has "set therein such figurative Flowers, both of Grammar and Rhetoric, as do yield the sweet savor of Eloquence." Besides its flowers, Espy's Garden is inhabited by creatures large and small, lovable and quarrelsome, beautiful and ugly, each incarnating some figure of speech (or trope)-that magical device that extends the range of language to infinity. We are all familiar with such common tropes as metaphor, hyperbole, and alliteration, but did you know that when the minister says "let us gather together" he is employing pleonasmus? Or that "it was no small task" is an example of litotes? Was Eliza Doolittle aware, when she said she wanted to sit "absobloominlutely still," that she was teaching Henry Higgins about tmesis? Metaphor, hyperbole, alliteration, pleonasmus, litotes, tmesis-these are but a sprinkling of the unforgettable Garden folk. Espy explains more than 200 rhetorical devices, dozens of them in verses sung by the tropes themselves. Each verse is followed by a definition, a comment, and examples of the usage in history, literature, and everyday speech. Thirty of the figures come visually alive in Teresa Allen's charming and witty illustrations, and word games abound throughout the book.