My Fertility Awareness Programs are designed to help you to master Fertility Awareness and take a deep dive into your cycles. In today’s show, we will be talking about dysmenorrhea (period pain), heavy bleeding, endometriosis, and addressing the question of what you can do when you experience period pain. If you haven’t had an opportunity to listen to the other episodes we recorded together you’ll want to listen to Episode 7 where we spoke about the impact of the pill on your hormones, and Episode 86 where we covered hypothalamic amenorrhea. Briden’s third appearance on the podcast. Lara Briden is a naturopathic doctor with 20 years experience in women’s health, and she is the author of Period Repair Manual: Natural Treatment for Better Hormones and Better Periods. Podcast: Play in new window | Download | Embedĭr.
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She contributed an article, “I’m Listening,” in the Chicken Soup for the Soul: I’m Speaking Now (2021). Here for You was also listed in the “7 Great Reads That Help to Keep the Faith” by Sisters From AARP. Her holiday indie release, Christmas Dinner, and traditionally published, Here for You were featured in Woman’s World, a national magazine. Here for You and Stand by Me are also part of the Family is Forever series. Pat’s first inspirational women’s fiction, Lean On Me, with Sourcebooks, was the February/March Together We Read Digital Book Club pick for the national library system. She is a five-time recipient of the RSJ Emma Rodgers Award for Best Inspirational Romance: Still Guilty, Crowning Glory, The Confession, Christmas Dinner, and Queen’s Surrender (To A Higher Calling). She is a self-proclaimed genealogy sleuth who is passionate about researching her ancestors, then casting them in starring roles in her novels. Pat Simmons is a multi-published Christian romance author of forty-plus titles. Some African-Americans struggled with it: It's a powerful book that details racism, extreme poverty and brutal violence. Myers also discovered Richard Wright, whose memoir, Black Boy, told of a troubled childhood in Natchez, Miss. "He didn't look to me like a writer because he wasn't white," remembers Myers, now 70 years old. Then one day in the 1950s, he met Langston Hughes in Harlem. The only problem was that all the authors Myers read in school were white and British. But he was also bookish, and he knew he wanted to be a writer. He got into his share of fights and run-ins with the law. He was tall, with a speech impediment that elicited teasing. Growing up, Myers lived with his adopted family in Harlem, not far from this Bronx detention center. Myers' books tell stories that many in the audience are all too familiar with - stories about being insecure for lack of a dad, being scared to walk in your neighborhood, being viewed as a criminal monster. Though the audience members walk in wearing prison jumpsuits and sit slumped in their chairs, don't be fooled by the attitude: These kids have read some of Myers' dozens of books and are here because they want to meet the author. Myers amassed a collection of aviation photographs while preparing to write The Brown Condor, the story of a pilot in the Italian-Ethiopian conflict of 1935.Īuthor Walter Dean Myers meets some of his young fans in a classroom at a juvenile detention center in the South Bronx. But there’s a sense of loss when you come to the end of each chapter. Even though these drivers aren’t her killer, a lot of them seem to have hidden horrors of their own. Each driver seems to have a different take on who she is and their relation to her. With this style, you can tell that McBean is indeed, a short story writer and I found the style unique and fresh. Each chapter is written from the point of view of a different hitchhiker as they pick up this woman – always going by a different name – and the reader experiences her changing appearance and mental state as the likelihood of her finding him becomes more grim. The Mother is about a mother hitchhiking along the Hume Highway searching for her daughter’s killer. Firstly, the premise for the book intrigued me and secondly, I hadn’t read any Australian horror and I was interested in seeing how McBean tackled the setting. I bought the book from Infinitas Bookshop in Parramatta – near where I work – the day I got my first pay from my new job. I finished Brett McBean’s novel, The Mother last night coming home on the train and was left with a chilling feeling upon its completion. Of course, the flip side of this is that once you finish one or two, you seem to finish them in droves. I have been doing a lot of reading lately, but my problem has been starting a lot books at once and not finishing them all. Julian, handsome, rich and engaging, is a huge mystery buff. But Marguerite’s son, Julian wants to know Ellery. Bloodworth-Ainsley – nor, it turns out – does Mrs. The event is hosted by the wealthy Marguerite Bloodworth-Ainsley – a descendant of the famed pirate Tom Blood.Įllery doesn’t even know Mrs. Love Is in the Salt Sea Air – And So Is Murder!Įllery Page, aspiring screenwriter, reigning Scrabble champion, and occasionally clueless owner of the village’s only mystery bookstore, the Crow’s Nest, is both flattered and bemused when he’s invited to the annual Marauder’s Masquerade, the best and biggest social event of the season in the quaint seaside village of Pirate’s Cove, Rhode Island. KING: Is it different in some way, better in some way, emotionally healthier in some way to write a book with less heavy themes? Or does that not really play into it? And so the crime genre, the heist novel allowed me to exercise that muscle once again. "The Underground Railroad" and "Nickel Boys" didn't really have room for some of my strange humor sometimes. Colson Whitehead told me this departure from very heavy themes was kind of a relief.ĬOLSON WHITEHEAD: I like to be able to make my weird jokes, and sometimes the subject matter allows me to do that. But Ray is drawn by family, friends, circumstance and his own ambition into some crooked scenarios, including a heist at the most glamorous hotel in Harlem. His new book, "Harlem Shuffle," is the story of Ray Carney, a furniture salesman trying to walk the straight and narrow in early '60s New York. So it's possible to forget that Colson Whitehead can be very funny. "The Nickel Boys" was about a reform school in Florida where boys were brutalized. "The Underground Railroad" was about slavery and escape. Colson Whitehead's last two books won Pulitzer Prizes. In this novella, high school upperclassman, Sawyer, and his friends devise a huge, hopefully unforgettable, prank to take place at one of the friends, Shanna’s, workplace–the local movie theater. I enjoyed his other work– Mapping the Interior, Mongrels–but that collection of short stories remained my favorite. I didn’t think I’d ever read something even better than that collection from Stephen Graham Jones. So, naturally, I went to the library and checked out the only book of his I could find on the shelves: After the People Lights Have Gone Off. He even wrote about my greatest literary weakness: werewolves. She told me that this man, this fellow person of color, was writing horror that was literary and entertaining. She told me all about this native-Texan, Blackfeet-Indian, writing-professor horror writer. Then she asked, “Have you ever heard of Stephen Graham Jones?” I looked at her, full of skepticism that both literary fiction and horror could co-exist in the same piece. My amazing professor never batted an eye, even encouraging me to keep writing––to make a career out of words. The first time I was introduced to his work, I was studying creative writing at my local community college, writing horror stories for my assignments while my classmates wrote literary pieces. I didn’t think writers like Stephen Graham Jones existed. (d) The Client is responsible for all costs associated with making a claim under this clause, unless Nuovo agrees otherwise in its sole discretion or unless otherwise required by law. (c)Ě Client must afford Nuovo an opportunity to inspect the Products within a reasonable time upon request to confirm the defect or error raised by the Client. Unless otherwise required by law, for Products which Nuovo has agreed in writing are defective or were delivered in error, Nuovo’s liability is limited to either (at the Nuovo's discretion): + Nuovo Group - Return policyIf the Client believes that any Product delivered is defective at the date of delivery or that the Product delivered does not correspond with the Client's order, the Client must notify Nuovo via TradeSquare within seven (7) days of delivery. To do this, we distil the themes of the book into what we call imaginal ideas, encapsulated nuggets of spiritual wisdom designed to be easy to grasp so you can get all of the wisdom in a fraction of the time. Imaginal Box summaries are designed to distil the wisdom of world's most influential spiritual traditions and teachers for those with too many books to listen to and not enough time. Subtitled “A book that changes lives”, Way of the Peaceful Warrior has impacted millions since its first publication, and continues to inspire listeners with its profound spiritual truths. In the book, the protagonist, Dan, encounters a mysterious man one night at a service station, and thereafter begins a journey of self-discovery and initiation into a new vision of life brimming with spiritual possibilities. It is provided for those who have listened to the book and wish to explore its insights, or those wishing to understand the spiritual wisdom and themes presented in the book before listening.ĭan Millman's Way of the Peaceful Warrior is a best-selling fiction work based on the life of Dan Millman. Note: this is a summary of Dan Millman's Way of the Peaceful Warrior, not the original book. Praise for A Magic Steeped in Poison:A USA Today BestsellerA Publishers Weekly BestsellerAn ABA Indie BestsellerAn ABA Indies Introduce SelectionAn ABA Indies Next Pick Beautifully written, from the setting to the magic system, A Magic Steeped in Poison is sure to enchant both fantasy lovers and cdrama aficionados. But between the backstabbing competitors, bloody court politics, and a mysterious (and handsome) boy with a shocking secret, Ning might actually be the one in more danger. The winner will receive a favor from the princess, which may be Ning's only chance to save her sister's life. When Ning hears of a competition to find the kingdom's greatest shennong-shi-masters of the ancient and magical art of tea-making-she travels to the imperial city to compete. She was the one who unknowingly brewed the poison tea that killed her-the poison tea that now threatens to also take her sister, Shu. For Ning, the only thing worse than losing her mother is knowing that it's her own fault. Now all I can think is, These are the hands that buried my mother. Lin's sweeping debut A Magic Steeped in Poison, first in a duology, is sure to enchant fans of Adrienne Young and Leigh Bardugo. "item_description" : "A #1 New York Times BestsellerJudy I. "item_title" : "A Magic Steeped in Poison", |