No More Diapers Click Picture of Cover for Larger View Smith, Esther
$9.95
While being designed specifically for girls on the Autism Spectrum, and girls with other Developmental Delays--No More Diaper can certainly also be used for all girls who are learning to go "potty" on the toilet. It was inspired by the author's oldest two daughters who both have Autism. The author needed help and was unable to find it in available books. She knew her children and many others needed visuals and step by step instructions--so, thus was born No More Diaper. "I know you'll enjoy this book with your daughter, as much as I have with my daughters" says author Esther Smith. The author says--while using this book was no overnight success--it has helped immensely and has been the only thing, so far that has helped.
Nothing Ventured Click Picture of Cover for Larger View Bache - Wiig, Denny
$15.95
An inexperienced family set forth into the South Pacific, carrying on with plans made before husband/father Ted's tragic death. Captain Danny, navigator Denny, and crew Bonnie and Terri barely make it to Hawaii. There the girls, returning home, are replaced by new crew, and the adventure begins. In the course of their eventful voyage they run aground in New Zealand, approach Fiji under tow, are shipwrecked on Guadalcanal, and the author undergoes major surgery in a jungle bush hospital.
In Part Two, daughter Bonnie and the author revisit the islands, this time by jet, and have equally challenging experiences!
Now it Can be Told Click Picture of Cover for Larger View Fields, Wanda
$80.00
Shipwrecks and plane crashes on isolated Alaska islands, bear hunts not for sport, but to protect herds of cattle and sheep, hauling cattle by ship, barge, and skiff, snowshoeing across snow-filled mountain passes to feed cattle and rescue calves, the 1912 Katmai Volcano, fox farming, the 1964 earthquake and tidal wave (tsunami), and the oil spill of 1989. All of this and more is woven by Wanda Fields into the fabric of her tales about pioneer Alaskan ranchers on and around Kodiak Island over the past two hundred years. She has combined extensive interviews with many of these ranchers, stories passed down and lived personally, and the ranching experiences she and her husband De Witt have shared during their 50 years in Kodiak. Only now, that most of the participants in these events have passed on, can some of these stories be told.