Thank Goodness We Both Have Our Soft Sides


Book Description

People can be prickly at times. Sophie Corrigan, in her follow-up to her top selling title I Love You Like No Otter, offers another charming gift book with thirty delightful illustrated animal puns conveying the importance of acceptance and forgiveness in relationships.




The Soft Side


Book Description




The Rough Side The Soft Side


Book Description

The Rough Side/The Soft Side explores one woman's battle with depression, failure & self-hatred. Step by step, The Rough Side/The Soft Side details how she overcame the demons that drove her insane. There is no knight in shinning armor at the end, but no doubt there is a happy ending.




The Soft Side


Book Description

George Dane had waked up to a bright new day, the face of nature well washed by last night's downpour and shining as with high spirits, good resolutions, lively intentions—the great glare of recommencement, in short, fixed in his patch of sky. He had sat up late to finish work—arrears overwhelming; then at last had gone to bed with the pile but little reduced. He was now to return to it after the pause of the night; but he could only look at it, for the time, over the bristling hedge of letters planted by the early postman an hour before and already, on the customary table by the chimney-piece, formally rounded and squared by his systematic servant. It was something too merciless, the domestic perfection of Brown. There were newspapers on another table, ranged with the same rigour of custom, newspapers too many—what could any creature want of so much news?—and each with its hand on the neck of the other, so that the row of their bodiless heads was like a series of decapitations. Other journals, other periodicals of every sort, folded and in wrappers, made a huddled mound that had been growing for several days and of which he had been wearily, helplessly aware. There were new books, also in wrappers as well as disenveloped and dropped again—books from publishers, books from authors, boeks from friends, books from enemies, books from his own bookseller, who took, it sometimes struck him, inconceivable things for granted. He touched nothing, approached nothing, only turned a heavy eye over the work, as it were, of the night—the fact, in his high, wide-windowed room, where the hard light of duty could penetrate every corner, of the unashamed admonition of the day. It was the old rising tide, and it rose and rose even under a minute's watching. It had been up to his shoulders last night—it was up to his chin now. Nothing had passed while he slept—everything had stayed; nothing, that he could yet feel, had died—many things had been born. To let them alone, these things, the new things, let them utterly alone and see if that, by chance, wouldn't somehow prove the best way to deal with them: this fancy brushed his face for a moment as a possible solution, just giving it, as many a time before, a cool wave of air. Then he knew again as well as ever that leaving was difficult, leaving impossible—that the only remedy, the true, soft, effacing sponge, would be to be left, to be forgotten. There was no footing on which a man who had ever liked life—liked it, at any rate, as he had—could now escape from it. He must reap as he had sown. It was a thing of meshes; he had simply gone to sleep under the net and had simply waked up there. The net was too fine; the cords crossed each other at spots so near together, making at each a little tight, hard knot that tired fingers, this morning, were too limp and too tender to touch. Our poor friend's touched nothing—only stole significantly into his pockets as he wandered over to the window and faintly gasped at the energy of nature. What was most overwhelming was that she herself was so ready. She had soothed him rather, the night before, in the small hours by the lamp. From behind the drawn curtain of his study the rain had been audible and in a manner merciful; washing the window in a steady flood, it had seemed the right thing, the retarding, interrupting thing, the thing that, if it would only last, might clear the ground by floating out to a boundless sea the innumerable objects among which his feet stumbled and strayed. He had positively laid down his pen as on a sense of friendly pressure from it. The kind, full swash had been on the glass when he turned out his lamp, he had left his phrase unfinished and his papers lying quite as if for the flood to bear them away on its bosom. But there still, on the table, were the bare bones of the sentence—and not all of those; the single thing borne away and that he could never recover was the missing half that might have paired with it and begotten a figure.




Building Our Dream in Remote Colorado


Book Description

In 1971, after buying their acreage in a very remote area of the Colorado Mountains, the Wood family began to develop their dream ranch. The history and wild life of the area provides a fascinating backdrop for their story of adventure and discovery in the wilderness. From the first Americans to the mining era and the building of the railroads, Colorado is steeped in the glorious history of the Wild West. The property was located in the middle of a cow pasture with only marginal access and the closest electrical lines were over twelve miles away. With no means of communication and the closest town twenty-two miles away, the family had their work cut out for them. After surviving a devastating blizzard with thirty people in their home, they understood the importance of understanding survival techniques. Their crazy but true experiences are recounted with frankness and humor. By sharing his experiences and newly-gained knowledge, Wood has saved many of his friends hundreds of dollars, offering his advice on energy systems and the challenges of building in a remote area. Through perseverance and good old-fashioned hard work, he and his family built their dream ranch in the beautiful mountains of Colorado.




The Tie Is A Lie


Book Description

A woman teletransports to another dimension where her innate supernatural powers are ignited. She joins a secret society, with other supernatural beings, that are fighting off dominating forces from the world she came from. Have you ever wondered who those people are in your dreams that you do not know?THE TIE IS A LIE begins with the present day then flashes back and forth between the 1970s and the present. It takes place in Dreamtime and New Order Time, (N.O.T.), which are multi-dimensional worlds that exist simultaneously and are used interchangeably by those who can travel between the two; that co-exist in various places around the globe. An order was given in N.O.T. to destroy the environment and wild life motivated by a need for power to globalize and dictate the natural world including humans and immortals with special abilities. They are challenged by Awen, a secret society in Dreamtime, designed to eliminate powerful forces in N.O.T. and prevent them from colonizing Dreamtime. Vampires and shape-shifters, with extra special skills live with other humans and immortals in both worlds. Kino is an ancient Italian Vampire with advanced telekinetic powers and is a descendant from bloodlines of medicine men and Druid magic. He is honored yet feels cursed by his legacy to protect Dreamtime from the powerful forces that had taken parts of Dreamtime in the past and killed his mother and father. Executed with his cunning, methodical and merciless tactics he reclaimed what was taken from Dreamtime before. Meghan is his heart's desire but he must let go of a promise he made in order to love her completely. Meghan has been traveling to Dreamtime in her dreams where her latent powers ignited and have since been refined; she can literally write or draw her self to anywhere and eventually adds shape-shifting to her repertoire and becomes a spy and huntress of wildlife poachers. A deluge into Kino's world threatens its existence and the very thing that keeps his power strong which is Meghan. He was forewarned that if love broke his heart, it would weaken his powers; although faith and free will could set him free and release a promise he can no longer keep. Will the powerful individuals within Awen along with Kino and Meghan's power and love together be enough to sustain their future?




Humor in the Advertising Business


Book Description

Beard's Humor in the Advertising Business offers a concise yet thorough exploration of how advertising humor works. As one of advertising's most frequently used tactics, humor is an admittedly complicated topic. Supported with dozens of the world's funniest ads, insights from creative strategists and artists, and decades of research, Humor in the Advertising Business surveys the whimsical side of modern advertising. Great as a supplemental text in Advertising Principles, Copywriting, and Advertising Strategy courses.




Conrad Kain


Book Description

Conrad Kain’s letters provide insights into the life and thoughts of this exemplary Austrian-Canadian mountaineer.




An American Liaison


Book Description

In 1855 the Hawthornes came to Leamington Spa for the first time. This book presents an almost day-by-day account of the family's life during three periods of residence in Leamington. It also relates how they amused and instructed themselves in the thriving Spa town and its attractive surrounding countryside, making trips to such well-known "tourist traps" as Coventry, Warwick, Rugby, Kenilworth, and Stratford-upon-Avon. Unfortunately, for several reasons, to a large extent the subsequent and much-anticipated return to their home in Concord, Massachusetts, in 1860 did not result in any real benefit.




The Morning Side of the Hill


Book Description

This is an account of life in wartime Townsville. "Vivid recollections capture and convey the very atmosphere of the times of school of games Sunday School picnics the very houses we lived in. I felt myself drawn back to my own childhood. The seemingly effortless writing and detailed descriptions of places and events are evocative of a remarkable period in Australian history." - Nancy Armati Townsville.