Ice Cream Maker Game - Cooking games
Games, Food & Drink and Stickers
App
Welcome to Yogurtland! Be part of ice cream adventure by making ice cream or yogurt in cooking game...
The Wild Oats Project
Book
A testament to how far feminism has taken us all...her search for sexual nirvana is hugely...
Mummy's Little Helper: The Heartrending True Story of a Young Girl Secretly Caring for Her Severely Disabled Mother
Book
The fifth book from bestselling author and specialist foster carer Casey Watson. A recent census...
Felt Time: The Science of How We Experience Time
Book
We have widely varying perceptions of time. Children have trouble waiting for anything. ("Are we...
50 Quick and Easy Pizzas: Fast, Tasty Pizzas for Every Occasion, Shown in 300 Photographs
Book
This title offers fast, tasty pizzas for every occasion, shown in 300 photographs. Features: 50...
Cake Shop - Making & Cooking Cakes Game for Kids
Games
App
SAFE FOR KIDS • No Ads • Parental Controls ABOUT PAZU Pazu is a mobile games company that...
An Abbreviated Life: A Memoir
Book
A beautiful, startling, and candid memoir about growing up without boundaries, in which Ariel Leve...
Leela Kids: For 3-15 Year Olds
Education and Utilities
App
Techcrunch - "Leela Kids opens up the world of podcasts to children." Lifehacker (Australia) -...
ClareR (5996 KP) rated Nasty Little Cuts in Books
Feb 24, 2022
This book is phenomenal. It’s read-it-thorough-your-fingers-with-your-eyes-shut kind of phenomenal.
Reading it on The Pigeonhole, one stave a day for 10 days was a feat of endurance - the wait between staves was tortuous. This is NOT an easy read, and should probably come with some sort of trigger warning. It’s dark, emotional, visceral. It’s violent and frankly traumatic.
Debs and Marc should probably have never got together, never mind got married and had children. They’re both emotionally scarred from terrible childhoods and have never confronted, or been treated for, these psychological and physical injuries. And now they just seem to vent their feelings on one another with physical violence.
There’s loads of backstory that explains why they are in their current predicament, and honestly, I did feel some sympathy for them. But then, and Tina Baker does this so well, she gives with one hand, and snatches away with the other. Every past revelation of abuse or trauma, is bookended by domestic violence.
Honestly, it sounds horrendous, doesn’t it? But I couldn’t stop reading. As I said on The Pigeonhole: What a reading experience this has been. I’ll leave a review, but what can I say that will do this book justice?
Well, I can say this: Read It.

