Your Search Results

      • Trusted Partner
        Personal & social issues: death & bereavement (Children's/YA)
        August 2018

        Navegante

        by Andrés López Martínez

        What happens when a mother dies? Death affects us in many ways, because of the absence and the emptiness it provokes. Sometimes the sadness is such that it makes us wonder through life aimlessly. Then we settle in nostalgia.

      • Children's & YA
        November 2013

        Helping Children With Feelings

        A set of 10 stories about feelings with 10 accompanying guide books

        by Margot Sunderland and Nicky Armstrong

        These 10 beautifully-illustrated storybooks along with 10 practical guidebooks, (20 books in total), enable teachers, parents and professionals to help children aged 4-12 connect with unresolved feelings affecting their behaviour. Each guide focuses on a particular feeling, with exercises and ideas to help children think about, express and focus on that feeling to the point of resolution. The illustrated stories are designed to be told alongside the guide, but can be used independently to promote discussion and help to show children they are not alone. Titles included in the set are: Helping Children of Troubled Parents and Monica Plum's Horrid Problem. Helping Children Locked in Rage and Hate and How Hattie Hated Kindness. Helping Children Pursue Their Hopes and Dreams and A Pea Called Mildred. Helping Children Who Are Anxious or Obsessional and Willy and the Wobbly. Helping Children Who Bottle Up Their Feelings and A Nifflenoo Called Nevermind. Helping Children Who Have Hardened Their Hearts or Become Bullies and A Wibble Called Bipley. Helping Childen Who Yearn for Someone They Love and The Frog Who Longed for The Moon to Smile. Helping Children With Fear and Teenie Weenie in a Too Big World. Helping Children With Loss and The Day The Sea Went Out and Never Came Back. Helping Children With Low Self-Esteem and Ruby and the Rubbish Bin.

      • Children's & YA

        Zero O'Clock

        by C.J. Farley

        In early March 2020 in New Rochelle, New York, teenager Geth Montego is fumbling with the present and uncertain about her future. She only has three friends: her best friend Tovah, who’s been acting weird ever since they started applying to college; Diego, who she wants to ask to prom; and the K-pop band BTS, because the group always seems to be there for her when she needs them (at least in her head). She could use some help now. Geth’s small city becomes one of the first COVID-19 containment zones in the US. As her community is upended by the virus and stirred up by the growing Black Lives Matter protests, Geth faces a choice and a question: Is she willing to risk everything to fight for her beliefs? And if so, what exactly does she believe in? C.J. Farley captures a moment in spring 2020 no teenager will ever forget. It sucks watching the world fall apart. But sometimes you have to start from zero.

      • Trusted Partner
        Children's & YA
        September 2020

        21 Hacks to Rock Your Life - TEEN Edition

        Stop Stuffing Around, Get Focused and Create a Life that Rocks!

        by Cat Coluccio

        What kind of life do you really want for yourself? Really - you've never thought about it? Why not? What if I told you that you have the possibility of bringing your dreams and goals to life. That owning your own home or car, or that creating your dream life is absolutely possible - if that's what you really want! It may take you a while to figure out your goals, but now ... (yes, right now!) is the best time to get started, as you don't need to wait until your 30s, 40s or more to achieve your goals! And Cat's book is here to help you. Do you move enough, eat right, laugh out loud, get enough sleep and hear what your teachers are saying - not just in school, but the ones who help you learn anything, anywhere, anytime? There are some amazing insights in the Teen Edition of 21 Hacks to ROCK your Life! along with easy to understand and implement Hacks that will wake you, shake you, and make you want more. Get started on creating the life you want today, by following the blueprint laid out in the book. It's time to look up, listen up, and review what might await you when you're ready to say 'Yes, I'm Ready to say Stop Stuffing Around, Get Focused and Create a Life that ROCKS!' And here's your personal handbook to help guide you there.

      • Personal & social issues: death & bereavement (Children's/YA)
        2012

        The Dead Ride a Bicycle

        by Christel Guczka

        Tocino (Bacon) has no luck when school homework is about his family. For the last one, he got a 3-day suspension. His teacher thinks he is always making up things of bad taste. But his family is really very special. He will confirm so in this vacation when someone is determined to go with them and will make it unforgettable.

      • Personal & social issues: self-awareness & self-esteem (Children's/YA)

        LIFE AFTER

        My Journey from Starvation to Salvation

        by Ariana Aboulafia

        Ariana Aboulafia was twenty-one years old when she was told by the physician that she had six weeks left to live, if she could not survive from the disturbing and mysterious symptoms, especially the devastating nausea and drastic weight. But three months earlier, Ariana just graduated from college, fond of hiking and gym, enjoying the energetic youth like the others and moved from Los Angeles to Miami to start law school. How did this happen?   In this compelling and reflecting memoir, Ariana chronicles her stories and struggle to find the right diagnosis and her fight against a rare disease that almost caused her to starve to death. Told in an accessible and engaging manner, it is not just a journey to get through what Ariana was suffering and experiences, to fully reveal a patient’s physical, psychological and emotional statuses that are hard to be recognized by around, but a compelling and inspiring story about the healing power derived from family, love, friendship and faith, as well as her reflection and meditation about the society, philosophy, religion, marriage, life and the national healthcare systems. This page-tuner manuscript is completed with approximately 93,000 words, and has a similar tone with the New York Times bestseller Paul Kalanithi’s “When Breath Becomes Air”.

      • Picture books, activity books & early learning material

        Watermelon tales

        by Ioanna Babeta, Daniela Stamatiadi

        There are three things our heroine loves more than anything in the summer: the sea, watermelon and grandma’s stories. She enjoys all three every summer once the school is out… Until one summer something changes. The see is still bright, and the watermelon is still sweet, while grandma is looking after her from above. But her fairy tales are still heard, and they are just as sweet. “Once upon a time…”

      • Personal & social issues

        What in my head is going on?

        Stages of grief and loss, for children

        by Agnes de Bezenac

        Children’s responses to loss and change are sometimes messy. This illustrated book can help kids recognize some of their feelings and understand that it’s normal to experience them when going through difficult times. Giving emotions a name and sharing some examples can help kids see what’s going on in their head and get them through to the happy ending. Appropriate for ages 7 to 11. For more info see https://www.icharacter.org/products-page/what-in-my-head-is-going-on/

      • Children's & YA
        June 2020

        SO MUCH RAIN IN THE SKY

        by Volnei Canônica

        Raindrops fall outside the window.Inside, drops pour from a little girl’s eyes, grief real and heavy on her chest.There are only memories now… A dress, a smell, a sound.A story full of beautiful images and emotion that deals with childhood, loss and overcoming grief in a beautiful and poetic way.

      • Children's & YA

        Sentimientos Encontrados

        by Gustavo Puerta Leisse

        How is envy different from jealousy? Why is there pain and a little pleasure when we feel nostalgic? Is guilt more painful than shame? By looking at different situations experienced by seven characters who inhabit a single house, the reader can explore their own feelings, as well as those of the characters. The reader is also invited to reflect on the subtleties that make each of these feelings unique; they may even gain insights into how we often wrongly interpret our feelings. This books lends itself to many different readings. Some readers will perhaps focus and reflect on everything that is happening in a single vignette. Others might follow the deeds of one character throughout a range of illustrations. The book can be read from start to finish or by just focusing on one of the 16 emotional categories represented within it. Nevertheless, the best taste is always provided by the carefully considered combination of the text and the illustrations. At all times we can see what each character is doing in a specific situation in terms of one of these core feelings; or we can do this the other way around - once a feeling is found in the text, we can find an image that best illustrates it.

      • Military history
        June 2014

        Friend Grief and the Military: Band of Friends

        by Victoria Noe

        “They were killing my friends.” That was how Medal of Honor winner Audie Murphy justified his heroic actions in World War II. As long as there have been wars, men and women in the military have watched their friends die. Experts warn that delaying our grief will complicate our lives. But what about those who have no choice but to delay it until the battle is over? In Friend Grief and The Military: Band of Friends you’ll meet military and non-combatants who struggle with the grief and guilt of losing their friends. You’ll learn, too, in the amazing ways they help each other, that “leave no one behind” is a life-long commitment.

      • Personal & social issues: body & health (Children's/YA)

        Akosua and Osman

        by Manu Herbstein

        Akosua Annan is a confident and fiercely intelligent student at a posh school in Cape Coast, Ghana. There she comes under the influence of a charismatic feminist teacher. Osman Said’s background is very different. Upon the death of his parents, a police sergeant and an unschooled market trader, immigrants to Accra from the North, he is adopted by a retired school teacher, Hajia Zainab. After a spell as an apprentice in an auto workshop, he returns to school. There, finding the teaching inadequate, he becomes an avid reader and educates himself. Akosua and Osman are thrown together by chance in the course of a school visit to the slave dungeon at Cape Coast Castle. Their paths cross again as finalists in the national school debating competition where the subject is “The problem of poverty in Ghana is insoluble.” They meet for the third time as students at the University of Ghana and as we leave them, it looks as if their relationship might develop into something permanent. The friendship between Akosua and Osman is one that transcends differences of ethnic origin, class and religion. This story celebrates the diversity of Ghanaian society. “This fascinating novel tells the story of how these two young people from these disparate backgrounds are brought together as if by an unseen hand, in a process that teaches us about our history, our common humanity despite ethnic differences, the need to pursue our ambitions, the strength of human sexuality and the need for self-discipline, and, above all, the power of love.” The Judges, Burt Award for African Literature, 2011. The Burt Award for African Literature recognises excellence in young adult fiction from African countries. It supports the writing and publication of high quality, culturally relevant books and ensures their distribution to schools and libraries to help develop young people’s literacy skills and foster their love of reading. The Burt Award is generously sponsored by the Canadian philanthropist, Bill Burt, and is part of the ongoing literacy programmes of the Ghana Book Trust and of CODE, a Canadian NGO which has been supporting development through education for over 50 years. The Burt Award includes the guaranteed purchase of 3000 copies of the winning books for free distribution to secondary school libraries.

      • Family & health
        July 2012

        My Boy - A memoir

        by Anthony James

        This little book tells of the sad but inspiring story and his addicted son coming together in the valley of the shadow of death.  There is poignancy, sadness but also love and redemption.  It is inspiring and will give hope and help to thousands who struggle with drug addiction in thier families.The book will give comfort to those who are experiencing loosing their loved ones.  You are not alone, the wonderful Hospice movement and the palliative care forces are there to hold you up and give you hope.

      • Children's & YA
        May 2023

        MY LIFE AS A CHAMELEON

        by Diana Anyakwo

        'Freedom comes with the courage to be seen’ Lily is a sixteen-year-old living in Manchester. It is nearly five years since her father’s death, and she is soon to return to her birthplace in Nigeria to reunite with her mother and siblings for the anniversary. As cold rain thunders on the streets of Moss Side she looks back over her young life and wonders . . . how did she get here? As a young girl in Lagos, Lily is the baby of her large family. The daughter of a Nigerian father and Irish mother, she lives in a dual reality: one where moments of bright colour and tenderness exist alongside a sense of danger just beneath the surface of her apparently idyllic life. This is a tension that nobody dares speak out loud and it teaches Lily an early lesson: always blend in, always play the right part. But the truth cannot stay hidden forever. Things in Lagos itself, and within her family, soon reach breaking point. As her city and her family implode into chaos around her, and at school her skin colour marks her out from the crowd, Lily struggles to know how to blend in. And when her mother sends her away to school in England, Lily’s sense of identity is challenged in even more painful ways. My Life as a Chameleon is a powerful story of resilience and belonging, about family secrets and how they can destroy even the deepest bonds. It is a story about finding your place in the world and realising you deserve to be there. The author says: I’m sharing this story because I believe we can all relate to the intensity of our feelings as we are moving from childhood through our teenage years to being an adult and I want young people to feel that whatever they are going through, they are not alone.

      • Personal & social issues: family issues (Children's/YA)
        November 2021

        LOTTE – your star sister

        by Viktoria Alsmann, Anika Schneider

        A children's book on the subject of stillbirth and miscarriage. Lotte - your star sister addresses a very natural but sad process of our human development in a child-friendly way. Stillbirths and miscarriages affect many families. Not infrequently, however, these fates are borne alone, parents are little accompanied in their grief. It is often difficult to deal with grief and at the same time to find explanatory words and pictures for a sibling. At the same time, this children's book is intended to encourage families to remember their star children. Because every star child is also a sibling and part of the sibling sequence. The star child Lotte says goodbye to her sister Frida herself, after she died in Mama's belly. She tells her sister Frida about the beautiful moments she noticed while she was still pregnant and explains why she couldn't stay after all.   Told by two star mamas.

      • Family & home stories (Children's/YA)
        August 2017

        CHAINS: [Don't] let go!

        by Johannes Wiedlich

        A novel for young adults about friendship and enmity, and how closely allied these two can be.   Snow white? What? Bite me! I was expecting idiots, not the blue-haired pestilence. I was expecting conflict, not a battle for my sanity. So what did my past teach me? [Nothing!]   Matthew moves into a shared apartment for an exchange semester that couldn't be more annoying. His roommate Sirin turns out to be an obsessive-compulsive domestic dragon already within the first week. You can get along with Robert quite well, but you can't expect any backing from him, and Karla mainly is conspicuous by her absence. But Luka seems the worst. The guy who doesn't follow any pattern, doesn't play by any rules, and obviously enjoys pushing Matthew to his limits repeatedly.

      • Personal & social issues: death & bereavement (Children's/YA)
        July 2015

        CHECK: get up, stay alive, go to bed.

        by Johannes Wiedlich

        Jimmy. Call me that. The name is okay.... or ... sure, just ignore me. All idiots! Sometimes the whole world is annoying me. You say something, you aren't listened to. You want to be left alone, everybody is bugging you to talk. Apparently, most people live on the same planet as me, but not in the same world. Or maybe I live in a bubble. So here I am - lying in my sleeping coffin - ignoring my sister who's knocking on the door because she's worried again for completely no reason, and I wonder ... Jimmy is a young adult with a whole bunch of problems. He feels abandoned in a world in which he is only slightly interested. Alcohol, drugs, and self-harming behavior are on the daily agenda. Only a few people still get through to him, but he keeps pushing these away too.

      Subscribe to our

      newsletter