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Finalist for the 2009 National Book Award and finalist for two 2010 Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards: the prize-winning children's author depicts a childhood from hell in this searing yet redemptive graphic memoir.
By reading this book you'll discover how to inspire your mind, build a small business, and fight off feelings of depression and anxiety. One in seven people in the USA suffer from depression or anxiety. Look at your Facebook wall, out of the last seven people to post on your wall, odds are one of them suffers from depression. Or maybe it's you. Join bestselling author and coach David Small on a journey to discover happiness and control his depression. David has worked in the NHL, for Team Canada, and won championships across Canada and Europe. Join David as he shares about depression, leadership and building a Hope Project.
Here is the third edition of J.M. Watson's Inc.; released in 2011. Seven years later, this collection is just the same poems which were released with his first edition of Inc. that was published with Publish America in 2011.
Alan Powers is getting on in years, and he's coming to terms with some of the difficult people he's loved in his life, helped by his wife, Marilyn, who is much younger and some ways much wiser. He gets calls from his ex-wife who says she's getting phone calls from their dead son. He deals with his emotionally damaged brother, his surviving son's struggles, and his crazy mother. He must placate the ghosts of past loves and cope with the loss of dear friends. Just as Paris beckons, he is struck down by a serious illness. Yet Marilyn will see that more remains of his life than a quiet summing up, and that in the end all their hard-won dreams will come to pass. MORE OF EVERYTHING is a love story told in a very special voice with moments that will make you laugh and cry, just like real life.
Earl Bogwell marries into what he thinks is a mafia family. Strange things happen: people disappear, bombings and mysterious suicides occur. Is it all coincidences, or is everything being orchestrated by his unlikely father-in-law?
Following the internationally acclaimed publication of Stitches, David Small emerged as a storied figure in graphic literature, eliciting comparisons to Stan Lee and Alfred Hitchcock. Werewolf at Dusk, appearing fifteen years later, is his homage to ageing-gracefully or otherwise. The three stories in this collection are linked, Small writes, "by the dread of things internal". In the title story, an adaptation of Lincoln Michel's much-loved short, the dread is that of a man who has reached old age with something repellant-even bestial-in his nature. The spectre of old age also haunts the semi-autobiographical story "A Walk in the Old City", with its looming spiders and cascading brain-matter-a dreamscape that gives way to the ominous environs of 1930s Berlin in the final story, a reinterpretation of Jean Ferry's "The Tiger in Vogue". As fluid as manga and rife with unsettling imagery, Werewolf at Dusk affirms Small's place as a modern master of graphic fiction.
A savage portrayal of male adolescence gone awry, like no other work of recent fiction or film.
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