**Love At First Sight** Angel-faced Paula Guitierrez was 15 when she met 14-year-old Nestor (Chino) DeJesus on a subway platform in New York City. Almost immediately they began a torrid affair fueled by sex and marijuana. But while Chino charmed Paula's parents, behind closed doors he was a sadisti
You'd Better Not Die or I'll Kill You
โ Scribed by Heller, Jane
- Book ID
- 109048160
- Publisher
- Chronicle Books LLC
- Year
- 2012
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 218 KB
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9781452126029
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Bestselling writer Jane Heller thought she'd found her dream man--until he turned out to be a "frequent flier," the term doctors and nurses use to refer to patients who land in the E.R. more often than the average person goes to Starbucks. Here, Jane shares her experiences of looking after her chronically ill husband with Nora Ephron-like wit, and offers practical guidance for handling it all without drowning. With advice on staying healthy while caring for a loved one and learning to communicate with medical staff, plus wisdom from other caregivers and experts, this is a personal and invaluable tool kit that also manages to prompt laughter and inspire. For the more than 65 million caregivers in the US alone, this book couldn't be more timely or important.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
What do you get when you mix nine parts of speech, one great writer, and generous dashes of insight, humor, and irreverence? One phenomenally entertaining language book\_.\_ In his waggish yet authoritative book, Ben Yagoda has managed to undo the dark work of legions of English teachers and librar
### From Publishers Weekly Yagoda (\_The Sound on the Page\_) isn't trying to reinvent the style guide, just offering his personal tour of some of the English language's idiosyncrasies. Using the parts of speech as signposts, he charts an amiable path between those critics for whom any alterations
What do you get when you mix nine parts of speech, one great writer, and generous dashes of insight, humor, and irreverence? One phenomenally entertaining language book\_.\_ In his waggish yet authoritative book, Ben Yagoda has managed to undo the dark work of legions of English teachers and librar
### From Publishers Weekly Yagoda (\_The Sound on the Page\_) isn't trying to reinvent the style guide, just offering his personal tour of some of the English language's idiosyncrasies. Using the parts of speech as signposts, he charts an amiable path between those critics for whom any alterations