Groomed: A Troubled Girl. A Shocking Allegation. Is it Too Late to Uncover the Truth?
Book
It's late on Friday night when Casey's mobile starts to ring. She is expecting it to be her daughter...

Boystown: Sex and Community in Chicago
Book
From neighborhoods as large as Chelsea or the Castro, to locales limited to a single club, like The...

Why Therapy Works: Using Our Minds to Change Our Brains
Book
That psychotherapy works is a basic assumption of anyone who sees a therapist. But why does it work?...

World Literature Today
Entertainment and Magazines & Newspapers
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Your passport to great reading.World Literature Today was founded as Books Abroad in 1927 by Roy...

Debbiereadsbook (1472 KP) rated Once Upon A Goth Dog Solstice in Books
Dec 13, 2024
This is book 8 in the Once Upon A Holiday series, a multi author series joined ony by the Hook's Book Nook Travelling Library, which pops up in all the books. I have not read any of those, and they can all be read as stand alone books.
Luther is suffering after being medically discharged from the Marines, fostering his daughter and trying to make ends meet. Meeting Doug at the local craft market, and the pair embark on a tentative relationship, that sees Doug away from long periods. Can they make it work?
I liked this, a good deal.
It's sweet and cute, its warm and fuzzies and low angst. Not ever so explicit, but I didn't miss that. It's more about the budding relationship between these two, than the smex. I liked that it was low steam, to be honest.
I kinda didn't feel their connection at the beginning though. I felt they met, met again and then jumped into bed together. It just felt a little off, to ME, that's all. The connection DOES build, just that intial bit didn't quite work for me.
LOVED the way Luther introduces Mila and Doug, and how they all get along with Violet, Luther's sister. She has a story to tell, I'm sure! Oh and Oscar! Children and dogs for the win!
A good read, one that passed a very dull shift at work. One that made me smile.
4 stars
*same worded review will appear elsewhere
Acceptance of Mental Illness: Promoting Recovery Among Culturally Diverse Groups
Book
Recently there has been a growing awareness of the process of recovery from serious mental illness...

The Alchemy of Transformation
Book
Redefine Your Reality: Master the Art of Transformation Today Are you tired of feeling stuck, as...

Lee (2222 KP) rated Instant Family (2019) in Movies
Jan 24, 2019 (Updated Jan 24, 2019)
Instant Family is based on the real life experience of the director Sean Anders and the adoption process he went through with his wife. In the movie, the couple are called Pete and Ellie (Mark Wahlberg and Rose Byrne), who earn their living by flipping houses (buy, renovate, sell). After Ellie has an argument with her sister regarding kids, they begin thinking about having children of their own. Worried about their age, they begin looking into fostering, with a view to eventually adopting an older child.
They visit an adoption agency, where they are joined by a number of other couples and single parents all looking to find out more and begin their journey to becoming parents. Octavia Spencer and Tig Notaro are social workers, there to guide them all through the process. A very funny double act, providing a lot of the movies hilariously well timed lines. In fact, all of the other potential adopters are well written and funny, continuing to crop up throughout the movie as we revisit how everyone is getting on with their fostered children. None of this is zany, particularly goofy or over the top though - it's made very clear that many of the children in the foster system have had a pretty awful life so far, and this honest piece of reality is never downplayed.
At a meet-and-greet with potential adoptive children, organised as an outdoor event in a park, Pete and Ellie are drawn to Lizzie (Isabela Moner), a fiery teenage girl who is hanging out with the other older kids - separated from the main gathering, having resigned themselves to the notion that they're never going to get chosen by the prospective parents. When the couple mark her down as a potential for fostering, they learn that she actually comes as part of a package, having a younger brother Juan and even younger sister Lita. Pete and Ellie decide to go for it and foster all three, convinced they can make a difference in these kids lives.
There follows a period of new parents being thrown in at the deep end - the stressful night time routine, the problems with getting kids to eat and dress properly, problems at school etc. But again, it's not over the top - rooted in reality and successfully managing to walk the line between comedy and drama without resorting to exaggerated comedy set pieces. The problems experienced are made all the more challenging as the couple trying to care for and raise children who haven't had a great start in life, and have been used to a very particular way of living. Made even more difficult when the children's birth mother appears on the scene later in the movie.
I wasn't expecting to enjoy this movie as much as I did. There are more laugh out loud moments than any movie I've seen in recent years that bills itself as a comedy, but at the same time it's also a really heartwarming feel-good drama. So many enjoyable characters too, and with a sharp script that brings out the best in them all. Hugely enjoyable.

Rising Above the Gathering Storm: Developing Regional Innovation Environments: Summary of a Workshop
National Academy of Sciences, Committee on Science, Engineering and Public Policy and National Academ
Book
In October 2005, the National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, and Institute of...
The American Theatre Wing, an Oral History: 100 Years, 100 Voices, 100 Million Miracles
Book
In 1943, a wounded soldier aided by a cane limped into the Stage Door Canteen, the American Theatre...