Kumar & Clark's Cases in Clinical Medicine: A Problem-Based Approach
Parveen Kumar and Michael L. Clark
Book
2014 BMA Medical Book Awards 1st Prize Award Winner in Medicine category! This is new edition of the...
An Dreamwork in Holistic Psychotherapy of Depression: An Underground Stream That Guides and Heals
Book
This book describes how dreamwork can help alleviate depression, in both long-term and time-limited...
Feng Shui For Dummies
David Daniel Kennedy and Lin Yun
Book
Benefit from the ancient Chinese art of Feng Shui Take a look around you. What do you see? Whether...
True Bugs (Heteroptera) of the Neotropics: 2015
Antonio R. Panizzi and Jocelia Grazia
Book
True bugs (Heteroptera) are a diverse and complex group of plant-feeding and predatory insects...
Lily Poole
Book
Everything about John is off-kilter. He's sixteen now, out of school and out of work. It's the early...
The Natural Food Kitchen: Delicious, Globally Inspired Recipes Using on the Best Natural and Seasonal Produce
Book
Showcasing fresh and wholefood ingredients, Jordan's recipes offer vibrant, seasonal dishes that are...
The Vegetarian's Complete Quinoa Cookbook: 120 Superfood Recipes
Book
The Vegetarian's Complete Quinoa Cookbook is the only book you need to incorporate quinoa into a...
Healthy Sleep Habits, Happy Child: A Step-by-step Programme for a Good Night's Sleep
Book
In this completely revised and expanded edition, Dr Marc Weissbluth - a leading paediatrician -...
Positively Primal: Finding Health and Happiness in a Hectic World
Book
What if life could be simpler and slower, purer and more primal? What if we had more time to gaze...
We follow Debbie as she embarks on her first taste of adulthood. She’s eighteen and starting university. She lives in a little village on a dairy farm that her family owns and has no idea how it works being in the city most of the time. From the start of this book she is quite naive and you can tell that she’s not really had to step foot out of the comfort of the village she grew up in.
When she finally makes it into Dublin and to her new university she bumps into a girl named Xanthe who she makes friends with and spends most of her time with when she’s not at home or in class.
The book explores the mental health of many of the characters and does it very delicately, without judgement.
I couldn’t put it down and read it in a couple of hours. It was such a pleasant book. And I loved how the chapters were so short and the characters were just so loveable!
Thank you to Louise Nealon and Readers First for allowing me to read this wonderful book for free!

