Posts Tagged ‘from’

101 Internet Businesses You Can Start from Home: How to Choose and Build Your Own Successful e-Business (101 Internet Businesses You Can Start from Home: How to Choose &) (Paperback)

Saturday, December 12th, 2009

101 Internet Businesses You Can Start from Home: How to Choose and Build Your Own Successful e-Business (101 Internet Businesses You Can Start from Home: How to Choose &)

Review

“[A] great resource on starting a home-based Internet business. It is filled with lots of great tips on selecting the business that is right for you, building your site, e-Business model selection, and getting lots of visitors to your website.”  —Tony Sasso, Novanemedia.com



“An excellent resource for anyone wanting to start an Internet-based business. . . . It not only includes many business ideas but also includes great information on building a top-notch website and generating lots of traffic to it. Read it! I give it a 10!”  —Dr. Harvey Silverstein, Concentrics Communications



“I love this book! It will get you started on your successful home-based business in no time.”  —Maurice Muise, Gemma Group



“Great resource on starting a home-based Internet business .  .  . .filled with lots of great tips on selecting the business that is right for you.”  —Novanemedia.com

–This text refers to the

Paperback
edition.



Product Description

Written for those who want to break away from rigid schedules, unappreciative bosses, and soul-sapping commutes, this book will put prospective Internet entrepreneurs on the road to success. The basics of Internet mechanics and commerce are analyzed and followed by examinations of successful Internet businesses. Providing more than just technical information, this manual is also a guide to prioritizing what the entrepreneur wants to get out of the business and determining what level of risk is comfortable. This method ensures that the business chosen will match the goals and aspirations of the entrepreneur. Each of the 101 business profiles includes promotion techniques to help these start-ups get on the road to success.



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Questions From A to Z You Always Wanted To Ask A Black American (Paperback)

Friday, December 11th, 2009

Questions From A to Z You Always Wanted To Ask A Black American

Product Description

The book takes a light look at Black American thought on many of today’s issues. Answers to questions asked by every day people about Black Americans. The reader gets a behind closed door chance to discover many concepts that Black Americans discuss among themselves. Information in the book will create great conversation topics with any Black American person. It’s fun and informative. A must have book.



About the Author

Mr. Anthony Head is a native Southern Californian, USA. He is a graduate of UCLA and spent a number of years in Aerospace Administration. His work in Washington DC involved direct contact with many top Government offices. He entered the Education field to help children reach their educational goals. Meeting interesting people of all races just came natural to him. Many times the question of what or why Black Americans do something would keep coming up. After much listening and talking to Black Americans, he decided to write a book. A book that finally had answers to those questions about Black Americans. He wants readers to have fun reading the book as well as learning from it.


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Taken From Home: A Father, a Dark Secret, and a Brutal Murder (St. Martin’s True Crime Library) (Mass Market Paperback)

Friday, December 11th, 2009

Taken From Home: A Father, a Dark Secret, and a Brutal Murder (St. Martin's True Crime Library)

Product Description

Grand Junction, Colorado, 2001: When Michael Blagg’s adoring wife, Jennifer, and his six year-old-daughter, Abby, disappeared from their home, Michael led the charge to find them, even going so far as to make a nationwide appeal on Good Morning America for information. But seven months later, investigators found Jennifer’s remains in a Mesa County landfill, and things took a darker turn…

Jennifer had been shot in the head, investigators discovered, and Abby was nowhere to be found.  While Michael, a respected prayer-group leader, played the part of grieving survivor, authorities became increasingly suspicious There was blood evidence in the back of the family’s van. Was Blagg a cold-blooded killer? A religious fanatic? This is the terrifying true story of what happened when Jennifer and Abby Blagg were…



From the Back Cover

A missing mother and daughter.

Grand Junction, Colorado, 2001: When Michael Blagg’s adoring wife, Jennifer, and his six year-old-daughter, Abby, disappeared from their home, Michael led the charge to find them, even going so far as to make a nationwide appeal on Good Morning America for information. But seven months later, investigators found Jennifer’s remains in a Mesa County landfill, and things took a darker turn…

A husband and father shrouded in suspicion.

Jennifer had been shot in the head, investigators discovered, and Abby was nowhere to be found.  While Michael, a respected prayer-group leader, played the part of grieving survivor, authorities became increasingly suspicious There was blood evidence in the back of the family’s van. Was Blagg a cold-blooded killer? A religious fanatic? This is the terrifying true story of what happened when Jennifer and Abby Blagg were…

TAKEN FROM HOME

* With 8 pages of shocking photographs *



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Women’s Voices From the Vintage Years (Paperback)

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

Women's Voices From the Vintage Years

Product Description

Until recently, research on late adulthood has focused on men. This book views the aging process in women age fifty and beyond in their vintage years (so named because people of this age are aging to perfection like vintage wine). Twenty-five women between the ages of 50 and 90 describe their own experiences dealing with the nine developmental tasks typical of late adulthood, revealing the “inner process” of aging not before recognized by researchers in the psychology of late adulthood. The words of these women belie the common belief that aging means catastrophe and endless decline physically and emotionally. The “voices” of these women reveal aging as the full flowering of a process of growth that started at conception.


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From Hardtack to Home Fries: An Uncommon History of American Cooks and Meals (Hardcover)

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

From Hardtack to Home Fries: An Uncommon History of American Cooks and Meals

Amazon.com Review

Barbara Haber’s fascinating From Hardtack to Home Fries bills itself as “An Uncommon History of American Cooks and Meals.” More exactly, it locates the recurrent intersection of American women’s history and culinary practice and shows how one shaped the other. In lively chapters like “Pretty Much of a Muchness: Civil War Nurses and Diet Kitchens” and “The Harvey Girls: Good Women and Good Food Civilize the American West,” Haber focuses on the untold female contribution to 19th- and 20th-century food culture, an engrossing story. Readers not only encounter great anecdotes–Civil War nurses guarding barrels of whiskey from thieves, for example, or pioneer chain-restaurateur Fred Harvey’s female service corps in action–but discover a hidden American history.

The vividness of the narratives results, largely, from Haber’s excerpts of contemporary diaries and memoirs, like that of World War II POW Sarah Vaughan, who was held by the Japanese in Manila. (”There is a great rush for spinach juice,” Vaughan reported, “on the days this is served.”) In addition, Haber supplies pertinent recipes, like Ella Kellog’s Savory Nut Loaf, a chilling example of 19th-century food-reformist fare, and Baked Fudge, the formula of Cleora Butler, whose unsung cookbooks first explored African American food in the Southwest. These documents tell truths as no others can. Haber’s final and most personal chapter, “Growing Up with Cookbooks,” explores the importance of cookbooks more explicitly, revealing their “intimate power to make connections between people”–to make culture itself. The authors of most of these recipes are women, a fact not lost on Haber, as the delightful Hardtack shows. –Arthur Boehm



From Publishers Weekly

The tasty graham cracker, a beloved bedtime snack of many children, began its life as the linchpin of its originator Sylvester Graham’s fanatical early-19th-century health campaign to curtail sexual excess, especially masturbation and more then once-monthly marital coitus. Facts such as these, interwoven with informed, witty discussions of social, political and economic history, make Haber’s tour through the history of American food so entertaining. Since food has so often been consigned to the domestic realm of woman, Haber’s study is in essence a history of American women: the “Harvey Girls,” who worked in the chain of reasonably priced railroad depot restaurants that revolutionized public eating in the 1880s and ’90s; how Eleanor Roosevelt and her general housekeeper Henrietta Nesbitt had to balance White House menus, which had to seem both fancy and economical during WWII; the role of a small tea shop, started by faculty wives in Cambridge, Mass., as a boon to women refugees in the 1940s. While Haber doesn’t explore issues in depth (her discussion of why Irish immigrants were antagonistic to African-Americans would have been helped with references to Noel Ignatiev’s 1996 study How the Irish Became White), she does cover a wealth of material with a breezy style and a fine eye for historical detail.



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“Child You Ought to Listen!” Quotes, Short Stories & Poetry of Love and Guidance From our Mothers (Paperback)

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

Product Description

“Child You Ought to Listen” is a collection of quotations, short stories and poetry that will warm the hearts of its readers, but also will remind them of the teachings and guidance instilled i nthem from their mothers. For some of us our mother figure may have been an aunt, grandmother, sister, or friend. But through their instructions and diligence we were taught about the values of love and family, courage, loyalty, and spirituality.

“Child You Ought to Listen” demonstrates that learning never ends (no matter what age you are). It shows that learning can come from many different avenues including: ancestral sayings, hand-me-down quotations and stories told from generation to generation.

Since learning is an adventure you will embark upon throughout your lifetime, this soul inspiring book, filled with love, pain and other tidbits, is a great place to start another exciting, fantastic journey. Recommended to all individuals whether you’re eight to eighty years of age. There is something in this book for everyone.

This book is written in a simple, down-to-earth language and offers wisdom and lessons on how to live your dreams and may inspire you to never give up hope for a better tomorrow. This book can be a gift that you give to someone you care about. It will keep on giving and teaching life’s lessons on a personal level. Remember, “You have to ‘go’ through some things to ‘grow’ through some things!”

Last of all, these stories are meant to uplift, inspire, entertain and motivate any “Child or adult that just might listen.”



About the Author

SaRob was born as Sarah Lee Robinson in a small southern town called Eden, Mississippi, in the early fifties. She is the second child in a family of eleven children. SaRob migrated to the city of Detroit, Michigan, in 1954 with her family.

SaRob graduated Magna Cum Laude, from the University of Detroit Mercy in 1992 with a Bachelors of Social Work Degree. She had returned to school at the tender age of thirty-nine. She overcame her fears regarding returning to school and becoming a student again, at her age.

After receiving a ‘merit scholarship’ from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, she graduated with honors and received her masters of Social Work Degree, within eleven months. She has been employed as a Therapist, working with the mentally ill population, since graduating from college in 1993.

SaRob is the mother of four adult children and the grandmother of ten. She is currently parenting four of her grandchildren and they help her stay youthful and busy.

SaRob has been writing poetry and short stories since the early age of seven. She is a voracious reader and is currently working on her second book, ‘Reflections From Mama’


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The 30-Day Plan to Whip Your Career Into Submission: Transform Yourself from Job Slave to Master of Your Destiny in Just One Month (Paperback)

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

The 30-Day Plan to Whip Your Career Into Submission: Transform Yourself from Job Slave to Master of Your Destiny in Just One Month

Review

The 30-Day Plan to Whip Your Career Into Submission is an unusual hybrid of laugh-out-loud humor and instructive information to help people master a variety of career problems, no matter what career you’re in, or what level you’re at.  It’s jam-packed full of inspiring, quotable gems–the kind that get you elbowing whomever is within elbowing reach so you can read them out loud.  I thoroughly recommend this book.”
–Geraldine Laybourne, Chairman and CEO of Oxygen Media

“Karen Salmansohn has written a highly thoughtful exploration of what it means to work and be happy in a confusing world where we want it all.  (Oh, and it is entertaining too.)”
–Scott Webb, Executive Creative Director, Nickelodeon

“If you feel as if you’re trapped in career slavery–then chances are you could use a good laugh, along with some good helpful advice on how to master your career problems.  This book will supply both in hefty portions.”
–Mindy Schultheis, Executive VP of Comedy Development, 20th Century Fox TV — Review



Review

The 30-Day Plan to Whip Your Career Into Submission is an unusual hybrid of laugh-out-loud humor and instructive information to help people master a variety of career problems, no matter what career you’re in, or what level you’re at.  It’s jam-packed full of inspiring, quotable gems–the kind that get you elbowing whomever is within elbowing reach so you can read them out loud.  I thoroughly recommend this book.”
–Geraldine Laybourne, Chairman and CEO of Oxygen Media

“Karen Salmansohn has written a highly thoughtful exploration of what it means to work and be happy in a confusing world where we want it all.  (Oh, and it is entertaining too.)”
–Scott Webb, Executive Creative Director, Nickelodeon

“If you feel as if you’re trapped in career slavery–then chances are you could use a good laugh, along with some good helpful advice on how to master your career problems.  This book will supply both in hefty portions.”
–Mindy Schultheis, Executive VP of Comedy Development, 20th Century Fox TV



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From Jobless to Job Bliss: Marketing Strategies for Educators (Paperback)

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

From Jobless to Job Bliss: Marketing Strategies for Educators

Product Description

From Jobless to Job Bliss addresses the marketing strategies needed by professionals that aspire to be a vital part of the educational setting. This book consists of numerous marketing strategies that will assist qualified educators in seeking their first teaching job. In addition, seasoned teachers can use the strategies for communicating more effectively during various activities such as parent conferences, seminars, teacher-to-teacher workshops, and other professional engagements.Administrators can execute marketing skills for annual budgets, referendums, general presentations, and other professional requirements. They can execute the strategies as a springboard to accomplish their goals, win over the public opinion and create a feeling of accomplishment that will enhance our American Educational setting.


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The Family Manager Saves the Day: Rescue Your Family from Everyday Stress for a Peaceful, Positive Home (Paperback)

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

The Family Manager Saves the Day: Rescue Your Family from Everyday Stress for a Peaceful, Positive Home

Review

“Every woman who runs a home should call themselves a Family Manager.”



Product Description

Kathy Peel, founder and president of Family Manager, Inc., has built a career out of showing busy mothers how to effectively balance their lives. In this companion volume to The Family Manager Takes Charge, Kathy turns her business sense to parenting matters. After all, being a mom means more than taking care of the household——it also means being the family mentor, cheerleader, event planner, and child psychologist!

For every mother who’s at the end of her wits, Kathy shares hundreds of easy tips to save her from everyday parenting stress. Through Kathy’s proven organizational systems and encouraging, common-sense approach, readers will discover how to tackle life’s daily “crises” large and small with serenity and confidence.

Includes practical tips on how to:

€ Beat daily burnout (and get a good night’s sleep)
€ Manage an overflowing calender
€ Balance work and family
€ Prepare for a new baby
€ Raise a polite, confident, well-adjusted child
€ Help children succeed——from housework to hard choices
€ Talk to teens and get a positive response
€ Strengthen marriage and friendships
€ Make the most of “family time”



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Stories I Ain’t Told Nobody Yet: Selections from the People Pieces (Paperback)

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

Stories I Ain't Told Nobody Yet: Selections from the People Pieces

From Publishers Weekly

In one of the most powerful poems in this 96-page collection, a mother asks her grown child to come home while she is still alive: “I could fill you up with stories, stories I ain’t told nobody yet. . . . When I am dead, it will not matter / how hard you press your ear to the ground.” Like the voices in the oral histories collected by Studs Terkel, these monologues and dialogues from east Tennessee and the Appalachian region “all come from people,” and while the poems “remain true to the speaker’s thoughts and rhythms of speech,” they are Carson’s “distillations.” Haunting and funny, full of folk wisdom and unflinching honesty, the characters seem spotlighted on a stage. Many poems presume an adult perspective and understanding, but all reflect Carson’s sensitive and unsentimental awareness of her characters’ lives and language. A Richard Jackson Book. Ages 12-up.
Copyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc.
–This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


From School Library Journal

Grade 9 Up– As Carson points out, the 49 poems in this collection are “distillations,” reconstructions of monologues and dialogues from east Tennessee and the Appalachian region. The pieces, written in colloquial English, are short and untitled and appear in broad groupings. The designation “juvenile poetry” seems a misnomer since most of the pieces deal with adults and their concerns: a woman describes being beaten by her husband; a dyer worries about toxins in the factory; a newly married man throws his mother-in-law out of the house. Not only is the subject matter adult; so is the language, which is strong yet appropriate in context. Nonetheless, some young adult readers would respond to their wry humor and authentic “down home” tone. A speaker describes a neighbor as “tryin’ to slip Jesus Christ a couple of dollar bills/ for the free gift of salvation.” A terminated worker notes that some “will not look at me/ because somehow fired and failed/ are too close together.” And the denizen of a small town observes that everyone there “made their decision/ once or twice/ about whether you was right/ or wrong.” A few poems sound preachy. About a third of the selections appeared previously in literary magazines. –Ellen D. Warwick, Robbins Junior Library, Arlington, Mass.
Copyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc.
–This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


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