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1000 tulosta hakusanalla Patricia P Truman

Mystic Cloud Walker

Mystic Cloud Walker

Patricia P Truman

Park Point Press
2021
pokkari
Patricia P. Truman has been an active businesswoman for more than 40 years. She obtained her ministerial license and became a staff minister, where she performed spiritual counseling, participated as a prayer practitioner, and was a well-received teacher of numerous classes through Centers for Spiritual Living. She was ordained in 2012 and is still active. Patricia is deeply committed to her large, ever-expanding family. This book is her first public appearance in the literary arts.
The Santa Claus Girl

The Santa Claus Girl

Patricia P. Goodin

Tscg
2020
nidottu
YES, VIRGINIA, THERE IS A SANTA CLAUS.Virginia grew up.When the polio epidemic of '52 reaches New York City, a young WWII veteran races against time, public fear of the disease, and demons from his past, to save the life of a little girl.Goodin debuts with a warmhearted story of a community struggling to navigate a 1952 outbreak of polio. The book centers on the efforts of Virginia O'Hanlon Douglas (a real historical figure), who is a school principal for chronically ill children in Brooklyn's New York General Hospital. Virginia, known as The Santa Claus girl due to the famous letter to a newspaper editor she wrote as a child asking if Santa is real, runs the school with her assistant, Valerie Jackson, a Black woman who's also afflicted by polio. The pair work diligently to mitigate the damaging effects of polio and foster hope in their patients, all against the backdrop of 1952's economic and political upheaval in America. Goodin handles these weighty topics with care and delicacy, evoking the terror surrounding the unknowns of a disease without a viable vaccine but also the community's unwavering spirit as they unite to support the hospital's work. Fifteen-year-old Megan McGuire is one of the newest patients attending the school, but she's not the worst off: Rachel Hall, just five years old, is critically infected and unable to breathe on her own without an iron lung, but the hospital has none to spare. Enter cab driver Ben Wilson, a second World War veteran suffering from flashbacks but with a heart of gold, who pools his resources-along with the help of his boss, Gino Ruganni, co-workers, and even some local waitresses-to purchase a new iron lung to save Rachel's life.Of course, Ben and company run into last-minute trouble on their heroic mission, but the story still builds toward a heartening ending. Along the way Goodin offers poignant coming-of-age moments for a local reporter interviewing Virginia, as well as insight into the era's political undercurrents (some of which eerily mimic contemporary politics). Christmas comes early for the hospital, and Virginia's words of wisdom ring true: "Take care of yourself, and help others along the way." -booklife/Publishers Weekly
The Santa Claus Girl

The Santa Claus Girl

Patricia P. Goodin

Tscg
2021
sidottu
When the polio epidemic of '52 reaches New York City, a young WWII veteran races against time, public fear of the disease, and demons from his past, to save the life of a little girl.YES, VIRGINIA, THRE IS A SANTA CLAUS.Virginia grew up.Yes, that Virginia-who became a teacher-encouraging students through the Great Depression, WWII, and the Polio epidemic. Synopsis - booklife/Publishers Weekly: Goodin debuts with a warmhearted story of a community struggling to navigate a 1952 outbreak of polio. The book centers on the efforts of Virginia O'Hanlon Douglas (a real historical figure), who is a school principal for chronically ill children in Brooklyn's New York General Hospital. Virginia, known as The Santa Claus girl due to the famous letter to a newspaper editor she wrote as a child asking if Santa is real, runs the school with her assistant, Valerie Jackson, a Black woman who's also afflicted by polio. The pair work diligently to mitigate the damaging effects of polio and foster hope in their patients, all against the backdrop of 1952's economic and political upheaval in America. Goodin handles these weighty topics with care and delicacy, evoking the terror surrounding the unknowns of a disease without a viable vaccine but also the community's unwavering spirit as they unite to support the hospital's work. Fifteen-year-old Megan McGuire is one of the newest patients attending the school, but she's not the worst off: Rachel Hall, just five years old, is critically infected and unable to breathe on her own without an iron lung, but the hospital has none to spare. Enter cab driver Ben Wilson, a second World War veteran suffering from flashbacks but with a heart of gold, who pools his resources-along with the help of his boss, Gino Ruganni, co-workers, and even some local waitresses-to purchase a new iron lung to save Rachel's life.Of course, Ben and company run into last-minute trouble on their heroic mission, but the story still builds toward a heartening ending. Along the way Goodin offers poignant coming-of-age moments for a local reporter interviewing Virginia, as well as insight into the era's political undercurrents (some of which eerily mimic contemporary politics). Christmas comes early for the hospital, and Virginia's words of wisdom ring true: "Take care of yourself, and help others along the way."
Readings from Classical Rhetoric

Readings from Classical Rhetoric

Patricia P. Matsen; Philip B. Rollinson; Marion Sousa

Southern Illinois University Press
1990
nidottu
Here, for the first time in one volume, are all the extant writings focusing on rhetoric that were composed before the fall of Rome.This unique anthology of primary texts in classical rhetoric contains the work of 24 ancient writers from Homer through St. Augustine, including Herodotus, Thucydides, Plato, Aristotle, Cicero, Quintilian, Tacitus, and Longinus.Along with many widely recognized translations, special features include the first English translations of works by Theon and Nicolaus, as well as new translations of two works by important sophists, Gorgias’ encomium on Helen and Alcidamas’ essay on composition.The writers are grouped chronologically into historical periods, allowing the reader to understand the scope and significance of rhetoric in antiquity. Introductions are included to each period, as well as to each writer, with writers’ biographies, major works, and salient features of excerpts.
Index to Artistic Biography

Index to Artistic Biography

Patricia P. Havlice

Scarecrow Press
1990
sidottu
Index to Artistic Biography, published in 1973, is a massive quick reference guide for the location of artists' biographies in 64 reference works published between 1902 and 1970. The First Supplement covers 70 additional titles containing approximately 47,000 names. Publication dates of the indexed volumes range from the reprint of a 1926 title to the 1980 edition of Who's Who in American Art. The format of the new volume is identical to the original work: a listing by surname with birth and death dates, nationality, media in which the artist worked, and a code referring to the bibliography of the titles indexed.
Assimilating Asians

Assimilating Asians

Patricia P. Chu

Duke University Press
2000
sidottu
One of the central tasks of Asian American literature, argues Patricia P. Chu, has been to construct Asian American identities in the face of existing, and often contradictory, ideas about what it means to be an American. Chu examines the model of the Anglo-American bildungsroman and shows how Asian American writers have adapted it to express their troubled and unstable position in the United States. By aligning themselves with U.S. democratic ideals while also questioning the historical realities of exclusion, internment, and discrimination, Asian American authors, contends Chu, do two kinds of ideological work: they claim Americanness for Asian Americans, and they create accounts of Asian ethnicity that deploy their specific cultures and histories to challenge established notions of Americanness.Chu further demonstrates that Asian American male and female writers engage different strategies in the struggle to adapt, reflecting their particular, gender-based relationships to immigration, work, and cultural representation. While offering fresh perspectives on the well-known writings-both fiction and memoir-of Maxine Hong Kingston, Amy Tan, Bharati Mukherjee, Frank Chin, and David Mura, Assimilating Asians also provides new insight into the work of less recognized but nevertheless important writers like Carlos Bulosan, Edith Eaton, Younghill Kang, Milton Murayama, and John Okada. As she explores this expansive range of texts-published over the course of the last century by authors of Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Filipino, and Indian origin or descent-Chu is able to illuminate her argument by linking it to key historical and cultural events. Assimilating Asians makes an important contribution to the fields of Asian American, American, and women’s studies. Scholars of Asian American literature and culture, as well as of ethnicity and assimilation, will find particular interest and value in this book.
Assimilating Asians

Assimilating Asians

Patricia P. Chu

Duke University Press
2000
pokkari
One of the central tasks of Asian American literature, argues Patricia P. Chu, has been to construct Asian American identities in the face of existing, and often contradictory, ideas about what it means to be an American. Chu examines the model of the Anglo-American bildungsroman and shows how Asian American writers have adapted it to express their troubled and unstable position in the United States. By aligning themselves with U.S. democratic ideals while also questioning the historical realities of exclusion, internment, and discrimination, Asian American authors, contends Chu, do two kinds of ideological work: they claim Americanness for Asian Americans, and they create accounts of Asian ethnicity that deploy their specific cultures and histories to challenge established notions of Americanness.Chu further demonstrates that Asian American male and female writers engage different strategies in the struggle to adapt, reflecting their particular, gender-based relationships to immigration, work, and cultural representation. While offering fresh perspectives on the well-known writings-both fiction and memoir-of Maxine Hong Kingston, Amy Tan, Bharati Mukherjee, Frank Chin, and David Mura, Assimilating Asians also provides new insight into the work of less recognized but nevertheless important writers like Carlos Bulosan, Edith Eaton, Younghill Kang, Milton Murayama, and John Okada. As she explores this expansive range of texts-published over the course of the last century by authors of Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Filipino, and Indian origin or descent-Chu is able to illuminate her argument by linking it to key historical and cultural events. Assimilating Asians makes an important contribution to the fields of Asian American, American, and women’s studies. Scholars of Asian American literature and culture, as well as of ethnicity and assimilation, will find particular interest and value in this book.
Where I Have Never Been

Where I Have Never Been

Patricia P. Chu

Temple University Press,U.S.
2019
sidottu
In researching accounts of diasporic Chinese offspring who returned to their parents’ ancestral country, author Patricia Chu learned that she was not alone in the experience of growing up in America with an abstract affinity to an ancestral homeland and community. The bittersweet emotions she had are shared in Asian American literature that depicts migration-related melancholia, contests official histories, and portrays Asian American families as flexible and transpacific. Where I Have Never Been explores the tropes of return, tracing both literal return visits by Asian emigrants and symbolic “returns”: first visits by diasporic offspring. Chu argues that these Asian American narratives seek to remedy widely held anxieties about cultural loss and the erasure of personal and family histories from public memory. In fiction, memoirs, and personal essays, the writers of return narratives—including novelists Lisa See, May-lee Chai, Lydia Minatoya, and Ruth Ozeki, and best-selling author Denise Chong, diplomat Yung Wing, scholar Winberg Chai, essayist Josephine Khu, and many others—register and respond to personal and family losses through acts of remembrance and countermemory.
Where I Have Never Been

Where I Have Never Been

Patricia P. Chu

Temple University Press,U.S.
2019
nidottu
In researching accounts of diasporic Chinese offspring who returned to their parents’ ancestral country, author Patricia Chu learned that she was not alone in the experience of growing up in America with an abstract affinity to an ancestral homeland and community. The bittersweet emotions she had are shared in Asian American literature that depicts migration-related melancholia, contests official histories, and portrays Asian American families as flexible and transpacific. Where I Have Never Been explores the tropes of return, tracing both literal return visits by Asian emigrants and symbolic “returns”: first visits by diasporic offspring. Chu argues that these Asian American narratives seek to remedy widely held anxieties about cultural loss and the erasure of personal and family histories from public memory. In fiction, memoirs, and personal essays, the writers of return narratives—including novelists Lisa See, May-lee Chai, Lydia Minatoya, and Ruth Ozeki, and best-selling author Denise Chong, diplomat Yung Wing, scholar Winberg Chai, essayist Josephine Khu, and many others—register and respond to personal and family losses through acts of remembrance and countermemory.
Hooked

Hooked

Patricia P. Harrington

Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2012
nidottu
Love, loss, and old memories. A widow of eight years, Raina Nichols isn't looking for romance. She's content on her little slice of heaven on the Potomac River, doing what she loves most - painting and fishing. She likes the solitude and the quiet. But when Connor disturbs her peace and quiet, she's none too happy about it. Connor, computer guy by night and "wanna-be pro" Bass fisherman by day, has his eye on Raina. Cruising by her place everyday while searching for the perfect spot, he sees her from afar and is interested in more than fishing. When he meets up with her at a local art exhibit and fishes for a date, Raina is hesitant. Dating in the past never worked out for her. Before she can give him her answer, she discovers that he is the obnoxious boater who's been cruising past her land, scaring off the wildlife that she uses in her paintings. She is adamant that she would never date him, no matter how handsome he is or how much her hormones over-react.
Case Studies in Educational Psychology

Case Studies in Educational Psychology

Patricia P. Willems; Alyssa R. Gonzalez-DeHass

Rowman Littlefield
2017
sidottu
This case study book serves as a valuable tool for professors and instructors of educational psychology. It contains 18 cases that represent current areas of interest in Educational Psychology embedded within current challenges that teachers face in today’s elementary grade classrooms. The cases are organized into six major parts: Human Development, Individual Differences and Diversity, Learning Theories, Motivation, Classroom Management, Instructional Approaches, and Assessment and Evaluation. Each case describes a detailed teaching scenario written from either the student or the teachers’ perspective. To engage students in critical thinking, perspective-taking, analysis, problem solving and decision-making, the cases have been intentionally written without a conclusion. Because the cases are open-ended, it allows the professor or instructor more flexibility and autonomy in how they use the cases. Each case is followed by thought-provoking questions, highlighting the significant issues in the case, from which to analyze the case and apply various theoretical viewpoints. While the cases do not replace actual classroom experience, they present a way to immerse students in the classroom’s culture by providing them with real-life teaching examples.
Case Studies in Educational Psychology

Case Studies in Educational Psychology

Patricia P. Willems; Alyssa R. Gonzalez-DeHass

Rowman Littlefield
2017
nidottu
This case study book serves as a valuable tool for professors and instructors of educational psychology. It contains 18 cases that represent current areas of interest in Educational Psychology embedded within current challenges that teachers face in today’s elementary grade classrooms. The cases are organized into six major parts: Human Development, Individual Differences and Diversity, Learning Theories, Motivation, Classroom Management, Instructional Approaches, and Assessment and Evaluation. Each case describes a detailed teaching scenario written from either the student or the teachers’ perspective. To engage students in critical thinking, perspective-taking, analysis, problem solving and decision-making, the cases have been intentionally written without a conclusion. Because the cases are open-ended, it allows the professor or instructor more flexibility and autonomy in how they use the cases. Each case is followed by thought-provoking questions, highlighting the significant issues in the case, from which to analyze the case and apply various theoretical viewpoints. While the cases do not replace actual classroom experience, they present a way to immerse students in the classroom’s culture by providing them with real-life teaching examples.
Janie's Got a New Job

Janie's Got a New Job

Patricia P. Harrington

Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2012
nidottu
Janie Montgomery at thirty-two did something she thought made her crazy or a fool. When most women her age were settling into a career, she chose to quit hers and open her own business. Moving to Edenton, North Carolina and into the small home her grandmother left, she took change one step further by starting a business she knew nothing about. But she had a plan. When she discovered handsome Alexander Drake had opened an office next door to hers, she was a little apprehensive. His little ankle-biter, Puddles, had tripped her up, and gotten their acquaintance off to a rocky start. Little did she know that the trip up in the park would lead to things not in her business plan.
Alquimia del corazon: Como dar y recibir mas amor

Alquimia del corazon: Como dar y recibir mas amor

Patricia P. Spadaro; Elizabeth Clare Prophet

Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2013
nidottu
Descubre una expresi n m s elevada del amor Sensibles, profundas e ins litas reflexiones que te ayudar n a adentrarte en la parte m s preciada al tiempo que incomprendida de tu ser: el coraz n. Te revelar n que aun cuando el amor puede ser compasivo y reconstituyente, tambi n puede ser poderoso, din mico y pragm tico, es decir, un catalizador para el crecimiento espiritual. Descubrir s que un coraz n maduro es capaz de vencer los bloqueos ocultos que impiden dar y recibir m s amor. Aprender s a suavizar y fortalecer el coraz n a fin de generar relaciones m s profundas en todos los mbitos de tu vida. Y ver s que incluso las lecciones m s intensas que te depare el amor, siempre y cuando est s dispuesto a aprender de ellas, te abrir n la puerta a una expresi n superior del amor: una forma m s elevada de amar.
Recetas para una vida espiritual: Descubre tu mision y equilibra tu vida

Recetas para una vida espiritual: Descubre tu mision y equilibra tu vida

Patricia P. Spadaro; Elizabeth Clare Prophet

Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2013
nidottu
Intima con el Esp ritu. Este sencillo manual te ofrece un m todo pr ctico que te ayudar a estar en armon a con el Esp ritu aun hall ndote envuelto en el ajetreo del d a a d a, a escuchar la vocecita queda de dentro, a vivir en el aqu y ahora. A la vez, te brinda t cnicas creativas que te permitir n crecer interiormente y contribuir al propio tiempo a elevar al mundo que te rodea. Elizabeth Clare Prophet, destacada autora en el mbito de la espiritualidad moderna, desgrana con sumo pragmatismo varias claves espirituales extra das de la antigua sabidur a de las religiones y escuelas espirituales del mundo, as como de sus propias vivencias personales.