 |


Earn
money from your website as an affiliate of our on-line bookshop at
Pickabook.co.uk and Pickabook.com

 |
 |
Item Details
| Title:
|
101 WAYS TO BUILD SELF-ESTEEM AND TEACH VALUES
|
| By: |
Diane Loomans, Julia Loomans |
| Format: |
Paperback |

| List price:
|
£14.50 |
|
This item is not a usual stock item, and we currently cannot source it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
| ISBN 10: |
1932073019 |
| ISBN 13: |
9781932073010 |
| Publisher: |
NEW WORLD LIBRARY |
| Pub. date: |
22 January, 2003 |
| Pages: |
360 |
| Synopsis: |
This is a practical guide to building self-esteem for people of all ages. It offers an encyclopaedia of hands-on exercies, charts, heartwarming stories, poetry and quotes to help parents and children learn basic tools for cultivating mutual respect, recognition and independence. The mother and daughter authors write with promise that "self-esteem is like good nutrition: the more our children have it, the healthier and stronger they become". |
| Illustrations: |
illustrations |
| Publication: |
US |
| Imprint: |
New World Library |
| Returns: |
Non-returnable |
|
|
|
 |

Bloodline
When a dead body is found in a North London flat, a bloodstained sliver of X-ray is found clutched in the dead woman's fist. DI Thorne discovers that the victim's mother had herself been murdered fifteen years before by infamous serial killer Raymond Garvey. When more bodies and more fragments of X-ray are discovered, Thorne realises that a killer is targeting the children of Garvey's victims. Thorne has to move quickly to protect other people from one of the most twisted killers he has ever hunted.


|
Unreliable Sources
Examines how Great Britain's free press changed the world and changed itself over the course of the last hundred years, from the creation of the "Daily Mail" and the first stokings of anti-German sentiment in the years leading up to the First World War, to the "Sun"'s propping up of the Thatcher government, and beyond.


|
The Crucible of Christianity
Christianity is the largest religion in the world, its influence felt in every corner of the globe. But where did this religion come from? How did it take shape and formulate its beliefs? This book takes us back to the beginnings, setting us in the world of the Roman Empire and assessing the dominant philosophies of the time.


|
|
 |