13SICK, National Home Doctor
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The new App by 13SICK, National Home Doctor Service is the smart way to book an after hours, doctor...
An Economic History of Europe: Knowledge, Institutions and Growth, 600 to the Present
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This revised and extended edition of the leading textbook on European economic history has been...
Managing Expectations and Policy Responses to Racism in Sport: Codes Combined
Keir Reeves and Megan Ponsford
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This volume presents research on policy responses to racism in sporting codes, predominantly...
Merry and McCall Smith's Errors, Medicine and the Law
Alan Merry and Warren Brookbanks
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There is an understandable tendency or desire to attribute blame when patients are harmed by their...
The Museum Educator's Manual: Educators Share Successful Techniques
Anna Johnson, Kimberly A. Huber, Nancy Cutler and Melissa Bingmann
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The Museum Educator's Manual addresses the role museum educators play in today's museums from an...
Head First Ruby
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What will you learn from this book?What's all the buzz about this Ruby language? Is it right for...
Language, Normativity and Europeanisation: Discursive Evidence from the Eurovision Song Contest: 2016
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This book focuses on linguistic practices of identity construction in a popular culture media...
Kristy H (1252 KP) rated Our Own Private Universe in Books
Feb 18, 2021
Aki Simon is ready to start living her life. At fifteen, she believes she's bisexual, but she's only dated boys, and only her best friend, Lori, knows about her feelings. So when Aki and Lori go on a church trip to Mexico, Aki vows to stop sitting around and start living. This becomes possible when she meets Christa, another student on the trip. Christa, older and more worldly, clearly seems to like Aki as much as Aki likes her. But how does Aki--whose father is a pastor and along on this trip--experiment with Christa on this trip? How does she figure out if she likes, or even loves, Christa? And if she does, how does she tell her religious parents?
I've read several books by Robin Talley and really loved them all. This one was a little young for me, but I think it would be an excellent read for the teen age group. It covers a range of vital and big themes for teens: bisexuality, coming out, safe sex, parental expectations, religion and being gay, etc. There's a moment when Aki is trying to track down dental dams, and she's researching how to use them. I'm honestly not sure I've ever seen that in a book, and it's so important and honestly, really cool. I would have loved to find a book like this when I was a teen trying to figure out a lot of various things.
Unfortunately, a lot of the plot of UNIVERSE is based on the premise of one character lying to another, which I really do not care for. It gets off to a slow start. And there is a lot of teen drama, with Lori and other kids on the trip at the center. Maybe it wouldn't seem so melodramatic for teens, who live in that world, but it's a bit much and gets repetitive.
Still, I love how important this book is, covering coming out and featuring such a diverse cast of characters. It's serious yet romantic. I would certainly recommend it for teens grappling with their sexuality, those coming out, or those wanting to support their queer friends or kids. 3.5 stars. (Also, if you are older and queer (or even if you're not), read Robin Talley's PULP. It's amazing.)
Knowledge Management: Value Creation Through Organizational Learning
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This textbook on knowledge management is an outcome of more than twenty years of research, teaching...
Introducing GitHub: A Non-Technical Guide
Peter Bell and Brent Beer
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If you're new to GitHub, this concise book shows you just what you need to get started and no more....

