In Navajo families, the first person to make a new baby laugh hosts the child's First Laugh Ceremony. Who will earn the honor in this story? The First Laugh Ceremony is a celebration held to welcome a new member of the community. As everyone--from Baby's nima (mom) to nadi (big sister) to cheii (gra
First Laugh
✍ Scribed by Rahiem Brooks
- Book ID
- 100646543
- Publisher
- Prodigy Publishing Group
- Year
- 2013
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 68 KB
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
FIRST LAUGH is the prequel to Laugh Now. It is the back story of Kareem Bezel to highlight why he became such a prolific thief by high school, and why Andre Bezel decided to follow in their father's foot steps and sell drugs, despite their father's life sentence. First Laugh also gets into why the brothers have such a love/hate relationship. This is a must read for all Laugh Now, Die Later lovers and those anticipating LAST LAUGH, the next novel in this series set to release January 2014.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
After studying to become a therapist and crisis intervention counselor—even doing her master's thesis on the stages of bereavement—Christina Rasmussen thought she understood grief. But it wasn't until losing her husband to cancer in her early 30s that she truly grasped the depths of sorr
Overview: After studying to become a therapist and crisis intervention counselor—even doing her master’s thesis on the stages of bereavement—Christina Rasmussen thought she understood grief. But it wasn’t until losing her husband to cancer in her early 30s that she truly grasped the depths of sorrow
Overview: After studying to become a therapist and crisis intervention counselor—even doing her master’s thesis on the stages of bereavement—Christina Rasmussen thought she understood grief. But it wasn’t until losing her husband to cancer in her early 30s that she truly grasped the depths of sorrow
Overview: After studying to become a therapist and crisis intervention counselor—even doing her master’s thesis on the stages of bereavement—Christina Rasmussen thought she understood grief. But it wasn’t until losing her husband to cancer in her early 30s that she truly grasped the depths of sorrow