• Image for Star of the show : my life on stage

    Star of the show : my life on stage

    "A stunning celebration of Dolly Parton's iconic career as a performer, featuring entertaining personal stories alongside 350 full-color photographs, including exclusive images and ephemera from her archive, and an 8-page gatefold listing her performances"-- Provided by publisher.

  • Image for Brothers of the gun : Wyatt Earp, Doc Holliday, and a reckoning in Tombstone

    Brothers of the gun : Wyatt Earp, Doc Holliday, and a reckoning in Tombstone

    "Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday: Legendary gunfighters and friends who gained immortality because of a thirty-second shootout near a livery stable called the O.K. Corral. Their friendship actually began three years before that iconic 1881 gunfight, in the rollicking cattle town of Dodge City. Wyatt, an assistant city marshal, was surrounded by armed, belligerent cowboys. Doc saw Wyatt's predicament from a monte table in the Long Branch saloon and burst out the door with two leveled revolvers shouting, "Throw up your hands!" The startled cowboys did, and Wyatt and Doc led them off to jail. Wyatt credited Doc with saving his life, and thus began their lasting -- and curious -- friendship. In this illuminating dual biography, the first about Earp and Holliday, the lives of these two men, one a sometime lawman and the other a sometime dentist, are chronicled in a swirling tableau of saloons, brothels, gambling dens, stage holdups, arrests, manhunts, and revenge killings. And while there's plenty of gunsmoke in this saga, hero-worshipping won't be found. Wyatt and Doc, just like anyone else then and now, had their flaws and failings, and the unsavory parts of their lives are here, too. In Brothers of the Gun, Old West authority Mark Lee Gardner reveals fresh information about Wyatt's and Doc's early lives, their famous friendship, the O.K. Corral gunfight, and Wyatt's controversial "vendetta ride" following the assassination of his brother Morgan. Drawing upon new research into diaries, letters, court records, and contemporary newspaper reports, as well as firsthand observation at several historic sites, this is the definitive book on Wyatt Earp, Doc Holliday, and their enduring bond." --

  • Image for The overthinker's guide to making decisions : how to make decisions without losing your mind

    The overthinker's guide to making decisions : how to make decisions without losing your mind

    "Your brain is wired to overthink decisions--not because something's wrong with you, but because you care deeply about making the right choice. If you've ever found yourself trapped in endless loops of "what if," analyzing every option to exhaustion, or seeking everyone's advice while still feeling lost... this book is your way out. The Overthinker's Guide to Making Decisions breaks new ground where "just trust your gut" advice has failed you. Unlike traditional approaches that leave you stranded between endless analysis and vague intuition, this book provides a counterintuitive system that bypasses the overthinking loop entirely. This isn't about making perfect choices. It's about making aligned ones from a place of clarity instead of chaos." --

  • Image for Words like honey : how to avoid unintentional harm, model kindness, and nurture your child's faith through what you say

    Words like honey : how to avoid unintentional harm, model kindness, and nurture your child's faith through what you say

    "Are some things you say to your child hurting them unintentionally? Experienced homeschooler and mother of nine shows how to speak words of life that grow your child's sense of self, bolster their budding faith, and nurture your relationship with them"-- Provided by publisher.

  • Image for The running ground : a father, a son, and the simplest of sports

    The running ground : a father, a son, and the simplest of sports

    "For Nicholas Thompson, running has always been about something more than putting one foot in front of another. He ran his first mile at age five, using it as a way to connect with his father as his family fell apart. As a young man, it was a sport that transformed, and then shook, his sense of self-worth. In his 30s, it was a way of coping with a profound medical scare. By his early 40s, Thompson had many accomplishments. He was the Editor in Chief of a major magazine; a devoted husband and father; and a passionate runner. But he was haunted by the recent death of his brilliant, complicated father and the crack-up that derailed his father's life. Had the intensity and ambition he'd inherited made a personal crisis inevitable for him as well? Then a chance offer gave him the opportunity to train for the Chicago Marathon with elite coaches. Giving himself over to the sport more fully than ever before, he discovered that aging didn't necessarily put you on an unbroken trajectory of decline. For seven years after his father died, Thompson transforms his body to perform at its highest capacity, and the profound discipline and awareness he builds along the way changes every aspect of his life. Throughout the narrative, he weaves in stories of remarkable men and women who have used the sport to transcend some of the hardest moments in life. The Running Ground is a story about fathers, sons, and the most basic and most beautiful of sports."-- Provided by publisher.

  • Image for Zatanna : bring down the house

    Zatanna : bring down the house

    "After a deadly mistake left her terrified of her own abilities, Zatanna found a home for herself in Las Vegas performing a free show full of sleight-of-hand and cheap card tricks at the crappiest casino on the strip. It's not exactly glamorous - or heroic - but it sure beats the risk of dabbling in real magic! That is, until a mysterious stranger plunges Zatanna's world into chaos, dredging up old wounds and cracking open an inter-dimensional rift in the process! Now, Zatanna will have to face her fears and embrace her powers whether she wants to or not! But will the magic words do the trick, or will it all collapse around her like a house of cards?"--

  • Image for Forever in the path : the Black experience at Michigan State University

    Forever in the path : the Black experience at Michigan State University

    "Founded in 1855 as the State Agricultural College of the State of Michigan, Michigan State University-"America's first agricultural college"-has a fascinating past, a history shaped by vacillating local and national contexts as well as by people from different walks of life. The first Black students arrived on campus during late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and the first full-time Black faculty member was hired in the late 1940s. Before and after the modern Civil Rights Movement, African Americans from various backgrounds were transformed by MSU while also profoundly contributing in vital ways to the institution's growth and evolving identity. Forever in the Path offers a sweeping overview of the Black experience at Michigan State University from the 1890s through the late twentieth century. With explorations of countless personalities, important events, and key turning points, this book is a blend of intellectual history, social history, educational history, institutional history, and the African American biographical tradition. Dagbovie depicts and imagines how his numerous subjects' upbringings and experiences at the college and later university informed their futures, and how they benefitted from and contributed to MSU's vision, mission, and transformative role in the history of higher education"--

  • Image for Something from nothing

    Something from nothing

    "Alison Roman gives you a collection of simple, smart, timeless recipes that rely on a home cook's best kept secret: a well-stocked pantry. Making the most of your shelf-stable bottles, bags, jars and cans, Alison shows you how to cook as she does-loosely, intuitively, and with maximum flavor. With each recipe you'll fall deeper in love with the magic of pantry cooking by using flavorful, hardworking ingredients, leaving you to ask, "How did something so wonderful come from basically nothing?". In this book, you'll find warm, opinionated writing coupled with classic recipes, both with signature Alison flair"-- Provided by publisher.

  • Image for Front Street : resistance and rebirth in the tent cities of techlandia

    Front Street : resistance and rebirth in the tent cities of techlandia

    "In his first book, award-winning investigative journalist Brian Barth takes us on an immersive journey deep into Silicon Valley's homeless encampments, challenging everything we thought we knew about our unhoused neighbors."--Provided by publisher.

  • Image for Dead moose on Isle Royale : off trail with the citizen scientists of the Wolf-Moose Project

    Dead moose on Isle Royale : off trail with the citizen scientists of the Wolf-Moose Project

    "The Wolf-Moose Project is the world's longest running predator-prey study and is located on Isle Royale, Michigan. A portion of the scientific work is to collect as many dead moose as possible and, from the collected bones, reconstruct the moose population through the years. This reconstructed population is then correlated against other data such as data on wolves, weather, ticks, amount of browse available on the island, and so on. The effort to find dead moose is largely supported by volunteers who, for a week at a time, hike off trail on the island looking for dead moose. The book provides an overview of the predator-prey study as well as what it is to volunteer and hike off trail in support of the project"-- Provided by publisher.

  • Image for Visiting Mackinac : 150 years of tourism at Michigan's fabled straits

    Visiting Mackinac : 150 years of tourism at Michigan's fabled straits

    "The Straits of Mackinac have been a tourist destination for more than 150 years. The story of how tourism developed on Mackinac Island and in the adjacent communities of St. Ignace and Mackinaw City is narrated in this book, with stories from the people who helped shape it. This work explores the factors that shaped this region into the tourist destination that it is today. It includes historical context of how conflicting ideas developed a seasonal tourist industry and examines how tourism at the Straits of Mackinac developed within regional and national contexts as the tourist industry boomed in the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries. This volume also shows how the people at the Straits responded to various national trends, such as when the automobile transformed the tourist experience and when independently published travel literature painted a critical picture of the region"-- Provided by publisher.

  • Image for A place in common : rethinking the history of early Detroit

    A place in common : rethinking the history of early Detroit

    "At the turn of the eighteenth century, Indigenous nations designated Detroit as a "common bowl" and a crucial nexus where they shared resources, made compromises, and coexisted. As the century unfolded, Detroit continued as a polyglot community in the face of expanding Euro-American settlement. The region became a highly charged space where the rituals of political negotiation grew in importance alongside a constant threat of violence. British political and economic systems continued to operate long after the end of the American Revolution, creating a shared cultural border at the end of the eighteenth century that would endure even as the American empire reestablished rule on the north side of the river. Both Anishinaabe and Wyandot people set aside land for future occupation of their people, re-creating another transnational space in the region. A hundred years later, issues of race, economic development, political partisanship and overlapping national claims continued to resonate as the city commemorated and mythologized its origins. This book considers how larger watershed occasions impacted the Detroit region and how, in turn, the unique particularities of local custom impacted regional and national trade and politics and the very nature of how the city continues to view its past"--

  • Image for Roy Reuther and the UAW : fighting for workers and civil rights

    Roy Reuther and the UAW : fighting for workers and civil rights

    "This biography of Roy Reuther examines his life, including his involvement in the labor and civil rights movements. As the brother of famed labor leader Walter Reuther, Roy was a key figure in the historic Flint sit-down strike that gave birth to the United Auto Workers (UAW). He became the political director of the UAW and was deeply involved in struggles to pass civil rights legislation. This book explores his passion for voting rights and his vow to help farmworkers"--

  • Image for Baldwin, Styron, and me

    Baldwin, Styron, and me

    "In 1961, James Baldwin spent several months in William Styron's guest house. The two wrote during the day, then spent evenings confiding in each other and talking about race in America. During one of those conversations, Baldwin is said to have convinced his friend to write, in first person, the story of the 1831 slave rebellion led by Nat Turner. 'The confessions of Nat Turner' was published to critical acclaim, winning the Pulitzer Prize in 1968, and also creating outrage in part of the African American community. Decades later, the controversy around cultural appropriation, identity, and the rights and responsibilities of the writer still resonates. In 'Baldwin, Styron, and me,' Mélikah Abdelmoumen considers the writers' surprising yet vital friendship from her standpoint as a racialized woman torn by the often unidimensional versions of her own identity put forth by today's politics and media. Considering questions of identity, race, equity, and the often contentious public debates about these topics, Abdelmoumen works to create a space where the answers are found by first learning how to listen--even in disagreement"--Inside cover flap.

  • Image for Michigan's con-con 11 : women and state constitution-making in 1961

    Michigan's con-con 11 : women and state constitution-making in 1961

    "Michigan's CON-CON 11 highlights the contributions of the eleven female delegates to the 1961-1962 Michigan Constitutional Convention. As the first female delegates to a state of Michigan constitutional convention, these pioneers demonstrated that women were more than capable of helping to revise Michigan's highest law. Their examples encouraged other women to enter politics during a time when few women held state or federal public office. Following the women's Con-Con journey over seven and a half months, the book offers a general overview of what a state constitutional convention is and what it means to be a delegate. CON-CON 11 both educates the reader on constitution-making and sheds new light on an exciting moment in Michigan political history"--

  • Image for Cat on the road to findout

    Cat on the road to findout

    From 1960s pop stardom to spiritual awakening, Cat Stevens traces the extraordinary journey of one of music's most beloved artists. Rising to fame with hits like "Wild World" and "Father and Son," Stevens' career was transformed by a near-fatal illness that sparked a lifelong search for meaning. His exploration of faith and philosophy ultimately led him to Islam, a new name--Yusuf Islam--and a life devoted to peace, family, and humanitarian work. This inspiring story follows his evolution from chart-topping singer to spiritual seeker and global advocate for compassion.

  • Image for The redeemed reader : cultivating a child's discernment and imagination through truth and story

    The redeemed reader : cultivating a child's discernment and imagination through truth and story

    "A book, too, can be a star, a living fire to lighten the darkness, leading out into the expanding universe. -Madeleine L'EngleGod loves stories. We understand the world and ourselves in light of His great story. And humans reflect Him in their love to tell and immerse themselves in story. But not all stories are equal-or even good.Good books awaken us to truth, warn us from falsehood, and provide unforgettable examples. They open our hearts to beauty and wonder. They shape us. In The Redeemed Reader, parents and educators find encouragement and guidance to raise readers who can engage both heart and mind with books and the culture surrounding them.This book offers insight into how to build discernment in children and provides practical tips, examples, and booklists for their literary journey. Passionate about shepherding imaginations and young hearts, the authors read ahead so that you can confidently choose books for your children.Readers will discover a deeper understanding of how the gospel shines into children's books and practical guidance for applying these principles. If you want the imaginations of your children to be formed by what is good and true, The Redeemed Reader will equip you-parents, librarians, and educators-to navigate literary culture in a fallen world and to nurture thoughtful readers."-- Provided by publisher.

  • Image for Bread of angels

    Bread of angels

    "God whispers through a crease in the wallpaper, writes Patti Smith in this indelible account of her life as an artist. A post-World War II childhood unfolds in a condemned housing complex described in Dickensian detail: consumptive children, vanishing neighbors, an infested rat house, and a beguiling book of Irish fairy tales. We enter the child's world of the imagination where Smith, the captain of her loyal and beloved sibling army, vanquishes bullies, communes with the king of tortoises, and searches for sacred silver pennies. The most intimate of Smith's memoirs, Bread of Angels takes us through her teenage years when the first glimmers of art and romance take hold. Arthur Rimbaud and Bob Dylan emerge as creative heroes and role models as Smith starts to write poetry, then lyrics, merging both into the iconic recordings and songs such as Horses and Easter, "Dancing Barefoot" and "Because the Night." She leaves it all behind to marry her one true love, Fred "Sonic" Smith, with whom she creates a life of devotion and adventure on a canal in St. Clair Shores, Michigan, with ancient willows and fulsome pear trees. She builds a room of her own, furnished with a pillow of Moroccan silk, a Persian cup, inkwell and fountain pen. The couple spend nights in their landlocked Chris-Craft studying nautical maps and charting new adventures as they start their family. As Smith suffers profound losses, grief and gratitude are braided through years of caring for her children, rebuilding her life, and, finally, writing again-the one constant on a path driven by artistic freedom and the power of the imagination to transform the mundane into the beautiful, the commonplace into the magical, and pain into hope. In the final pages, we meet Patti Smith on the road again, the vagabond who travels to commune with herself, who lives to write and writes to live"--

  • Image for Injustice : how politics and fear vanquished America's Justice Department

    Injustice : how politics and fear vanquished America's Justice Department

    "Throughout his first administration, Donald Trump did more than any other president to politicize the nation's top law enforcement agency, pressuring appointees to shield him, to target his enemies, and even to help him cling to power after his 2020 election defeat. The Department, pressed into a defensive crouch, has never fully recovered. Injustice exposes not only the Trump administration's efforts to undermine the Department at every turn but also how delays in investigating Trump's effort to overturn the will of voters under Attorney General Merrick Garland helped prevent the country from holding Trump accountable and enabled his return to power. Carol Leonnig and Aaron C. Davis take readers inside as prosecutors convulsed over Trump's disdain for the rule of law, and FBI agents, the department's storied investigators, at times retreated in fear. They take you to the rooms where Special Counsel Jack Smith's team set off on an all-but-impossible race to investigate Trump for absconding with classified documents and waging an assault on democracy--and inside his prosecution's heroic and fateful choices that ultimately backfired. With a plethora of sources deeply embedded in the ranks of three presidencies, Leonnig and Davis reveal the daily war secretly waged for the soul of the department, how it has been shredded by propaganda and partisanship, and how--if the United States hopes to live on with its same form of government--Trump's war with the Justice Department will mark a turning point from which it will be hard to recover" -- Dust jacket.

  • Image for 100 train journeys of a lifetime : the world's ultimate rides

    100 train journeys of a lifetime : the world's ultimate rides

    "Experience 100 of the most sought-after train rides around the world"-- Provided by publisher.

  • Image for Born lucky : a dedicated father, a grateful son, and my journey with autism

    Born lucky : a dedicated father, a grateful son, and my journey with autism

    "In a world quick to label, judge, and box in people, one father and son stood firm and refused to be defined by an autism diagnosis. If you're channel surfing and happen upon Leland Vittert during his nightly national cable show on NewsNation, he comes off as a poised journalist prying nuggets from guests. If you watched him for years as an anchor at Fox News Channel, you saw him on the battlefields of the Middle East, the anchor desk, and the White House North Lawn. No one, including friends and co-workers, has ever known his full life story and how miraculous it was to get to that point. Leland was a socially awkward boy who didn't speak for years, and when he finally did, teachers and leaders declared him 'weird.' His unique behavior and inability to connect with his peers made him a frequent target for bullying and exclusion. In one particularly harsh moment, a school principal bluntly told his parents, 'The people here think Leland is pretty weird. I guess I do, too.' Those words felt like being shot with an arrow, as his parents sat in stunned silence, grappling with their own fears and uncertainties for their son's future. From a young age, Leland showed signs of being autistic, a term rarely used at the time, struggling with social cues, communication, and behavioral norms that came naturally to other kids. The diagnosis didn't deter his father, Mark. He knew the world wouldn't change for Leland, so he quit his job and began changing Leland for the world. He became a full-time parent-coach, training Leland and teaching him the skills he needed to navigate in society. Simple concepts like eye contact, understanding humor, and instilling motivations had to be taught painstakingly. From hundreds of pushups at age 7 to toughen him against bullies, to coaching him through complex social interactions, Mark's relentless dedication changed the trajectory of Leland's life. 'Born lucky' offers an intimate look into their inspiring journey. Leland lays bare his experiences of the crushing bullying during middle and high school, the sting of rejection continuing into college, and his ultimate transformation into an esteemed journalist. But above all, this book is a love letter from a grateful son, who despite his diagnosis, trusted his father and defied all odds. It offers hope to every parent and every child who is grappling with their own unique challenges, to be inspired to break labels, tear down the walls that society builds, and create a better future"--Amazon.

  • Image for Forging identity : the story of Carlos Nielbock's Detroit

    Forging identity : the story of Carlos Nielbock's Detroit

    "An urban sociologist befriends a visionary Detroit craftsman, artist, and inventor. Over the course of the next several years Paul Draus records how Carlos Nielbock's life experiences act as a lens that refracts the key challenges facing the city of Detroit and presents the city's redevelopment as an evolving high-stakes drama. Combining sociological context and theory, Draus chronicles Nielbock's mixed-race upbringing in postwar Germany, his journey to find his Black father in 1980s Detroit, his struggles with racial and cultural adversity, and his ambitious artistic vision for Detroit's future. Direct observations, interviews, and historical research on Detroit's ascendance, decline, and resurgence underpin Nielbock's story. The book explores race and identity, craftsmanship and capitalism, and criminal justice and incarceration"--

  • Image for Wrecked : the Edmund Fitzgerald and the sinking of the American economy

    Wrecked : the Edmund Fitzgerald and the sinking of the American economy

    "When the Edmund Fitzgerald went down in a Lake Superior storm on November 10, 1975, more than a ship and twenty-nine lives were lost. Wrecked tells the story of America's most infamous shipwreck, as well as an even larger one-the wreck of the American industrial economy during the last third of the twentieth century. The Fitzgerald disaster was both a human tragedy and an indictment of American industrial policies that eventually cost the nation thousands of jobs and hundreds of wrecked communities. Wrecked tells the story both about the reasons for the decline of manufacturing in the industrial heartland of the United States, centered in the upper Midwest, and also about the causes of the sinking of the Edmund Fitzgerald, and the legal machinations that followed for the survivors. The book conveys the sense of loss that still is felt by the survivors, along with the outrage over the disappearance of manufacturing and the jobs that went with it, and the inadequate maintenance and legal maneuvering over liability for the sinking of the ship. Wrecked captures a time that has passed and a critique of what went wrong, and why"-- Provided by publisher.

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