Anne Happy, Vol. 10


Book Description

After months of self-discovery and the craziest tests imaginable, the Happiness Class has, at long last, reached the end of their first year at Tennomifune Academy. Whether they realize it or not, Hibari, Hanako, Botan, Hibiki, Ren, and Tsubaki have learned to chase their dreams and overcome the odds-but do they truly know what it menas to be happy? Keep your fingers crossed for these luckless girls in this final volume of Anne Happy!




Anne Happy, Vol. 5


Book Description

Lots of surprises are in store for Tennomifune Academy's Happiness Class. Not only do they have Tsubaki, a shy new classmate, but for the upcoming school culture festival, they'll be doing...improv?! Will Hibari, Hanako, and Botan (along with Hibiki and Ren) be ready to take the stage, or will their collective misfortune lead to chaos? And just why does Tsubaki's voice sound so familiar...?




Lucky Go Happy


Book Description

It is easy to be happy, but there is a prerequisite. We first must understand how happiness works. Like anything else in life, things become a lot easier once we understand them. Doing math, for example, is only difficult as long as we don't understand it. Happiness works on the same principle. Rather than teaching us how happiness works, society presents us with stepping-stones on the road to happiness, such as: if you study this, you will get that job, and then you will be happy. If you own this, you will impress your friends, and then you will be happy. If you eat healthy and exercise regularly, you will lose those pounds, and then you will be happy. Lucky Go Happy is not a stepping-stone and will ? demonstrate how we lose out on more than 70 percent of potential happy time by living for weekends; ? explain how contentment can yield the same amount of happiness as ecstasy; ? provide concrete proof that money can never make us happy; ? highlight why it is absolutely essential to be unhappy at times; ? illustrate how a midlife crisis happens; ? offer the simple formula to calculate the amount of happiness, or unhappiness, you experience; ? show that happiness is not around the next corner; it is here and now; and ? help you understand how happiness works. Written for teenagers and adults, this easy-to-read book will equip you with the knowledge to make you happier and happy more often. Rather than waiting for it, you can make happiness happen for yourself and for those around you. ?Money makes the world go round; however, happiness greases the axle. Without this lubricant, life will seize.?




The Happy Book


Book Description

From the creator of ARCHIE THE DAREDEVIL PENGUIN comes the unique story of two friends who can't escape all the feels. Camper is happy as a clam and Clam is a happy camper. When you live in The Happy Book, the world is full of daisies and sunshine and friendship cakes . . . until your best friend eats the whole cake and doesn't save you one bite. Moving from happiness to sadness and everything in between, Camper and Clam have a hard time finding their way back to happy. But maybe happy isn't the goal--being a good friend is about supporting each other and feeling all the feels together. At once funny and thoughtful, The Happy Book supports social-emotional learning. It's a book to keep young readers company no matter how they're feeling!




Your Daughter Doesn't Have to Be Miserable


Book Description

Your teenage daughter doesn’t have to be miserable. Have you felt helpless watching your daughter go from a happy-go-lucky child to a moody and miserable teen? Has your once-strong relationship deteriorated as your child entered adolescence? As a parent, it’s tough helping kids navigate their teenage years. It’s even harder if they won’t let us in. The good news is, you don’t have to stand by, feeling helpless or stuck. It is possible to strengthen your relationship with your teen and help her work through her negative emotions so she can get back to her normal self and start enjoying her teenage years. In this book, therapist and adolescent expert, Dr. Courtney Conley, will show you how to gain access to your daughter’s world so you can help her navigate life’s challenges. This book will allow you to: understand what’s really going on in your teenager’s mind, even if she won’t tell you; discover the sources of your teen’s changes and how to counter them at home; discover the most common parenting mistakes and how to avoid them; learn my number-one tool for deescalating almost any situation (psst...it’s so simple!); start communicating with your teen and fueling a deeper connection; learn how to support your daughter as she navigates her emotions. This book is the Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus for mothers and teenage daughters! If you are tired of watching your daughter struggle with unhappiness and are ready to do whatever you can as a parent to help, this book is for you.




The Promise of Happiness


Book Description

The Promise of Happiness is a provocative cultural critique of the imperative to be happy. It asks what follows when we make our desires and even our own happiness conditional on the happiness of others: “I just want you to be happy”; “I’m happy if you’re happy.” Combining philosophy and feminist cultural studies, Sara Ahmed reveals the affective and moral work performed by the “happiness duty,” the expectation that we will be made happy by taking part in that which is deemed good, and that by being happy ourselves, we will make others happy. Ahmed maintains that happiness is a promise that directs us toward certain life choices and away from others. Happiness is promised to those willing to live their lives in the right way. Ahmed draws on the intellectual history of happiness, from classical accounts of ethics as the good life, through seventeenth-century writings on affect and the passions, eighteenth-century debates on virtue and education, and nineteenth-century utilitarianism. She engages with feminist, antiracist, and queer critics who have shown how happiness is used to justify social oppression, and how challenging oppression causes unhappiness. Reading novels and films including Mrs. Dalloway, The Well of Loneliness, Bend It Like Beckham, and Children of Men, Ahmed considers the plight of the figures who challenge and are challenged by the attribution of happiness to particular objects or social ideals: the feminist killjoy, the unhappy queer, the angry black woman, and the melancholic migrant. Through her readings she raises critical questions about the moral order imposed by the injunction to be happy.




Sexy Like Us


Book Description

Sexy Like Us: Disability, Humor, and Sexuality takes a humorous, intimate approach to disability through the stories, jokes, performances, and other creative expressions of people with disabilities. Author Teresa Milbrodt explores why individuals can laugh at their leglessness, find stoma bags sexual, discover intimacy in scars, and flaunt their fragility in ways both hilarious and serious. Their creative and comic acts crash, collide, and collaborate with perceptions of disability in literature and dominant culture, allowing people with disabilities to shape political disability identity and disability pride, call attention to social inequalities, and poke back at ableist cultural norms. This book also discusses how the ambivalent nature of comedy has led to debates within disability communities about when it is acceptable to joke, who has permission to joke, and which jokes should be used inside and outside a community’s inner circle. Joking may be difficult when considering aspects of disability that involve physical or emotional pain and struggles to adapt to new forms of embodiment. At the same time, people with disabilities can use humor to expand the definitions of disability and sexuality. They can help others with disabilities assert themselves as sexy and sexual. And they can question social norms and stigmas around bodies in ways that open up journeys of being, not just for individuals who consider themselves disabled, but for all people.




The Boss


Book Description

For seven years, Jake's been in love with a beautiful woman. Trouble is, she's his boss. She wants nothing to do with him. And he isn't willing to risk his job. When fate lands them together in hot water, OK, maybe just tropically warm water, he seizes the opportunity to turn the tables of authority.




Belgravia


Book Description




The Mediator


Book Description