Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts from April 17, 2016

Funny Jokes For Kids by Hudson Moore

DOWNLOAD A FREE COPY BETWEEN 4/23 AND 4/27 Let the young comedian in your family dive head first into this jam packed book of crazy tongue twisters, jokes and brain teasers. You can simply relax and watch as their reading skills improve, their confidence soars and their funny factor goes through the roof! Funny Jokes For Kids by Hudson Moore is available at Amazon.com .

Beautiful Country: A Novel by J.R. Thornton

A coming-of-age story set in modern day China centering on the friendship between an American and a Chinese boy who meet while training with Beijing’s Junior National Tennis Team. Chase Robertson arrives in Beijing as a fourteen-year-old boy still troubled by the recent death of his older brother. He discovers a country in transition; a society in which the dual systems of Communist Era state control and an emerging entrepreneurial culture exist in paradox. A top ranked junior tennis player in the U.S., Chase joins the practices of the Beijing National Junior Tennis Team and is immersed in the brutal, cut-throat world of Chinese sport. It is a world in which gifted children are selected at the ages of six or seven for specialized sport schools where they devote their entire youth to the pursuit of athletic excellence and are paid as professionals by the state. Athletes find themselves compelled to do anything possible to succeed—right or wrong. Those who fail to reach the pinn

New Retirement Rules: Strategies for Succeeding in the Coming Economic Collapse by Dennis Tubbergen

The title of this book, “New Retirement Rules™; Strategies for Succeeding during the Coming Economic Collapse” reflects my views of the inevitable outcome of today’s economic conditions. Parts of this book may shock you. The premise of this book is that where we are headed economically speaking is predictable. Economic cycles and money cycles have existed for 2,500 years. I have concluded from my study of economic history that where we are today economically speaking and where we go from here is as predictable as the sun rising and setting each day. Other parts of this book may anger you. From my experience, most rendering advice to clients in the financial industry are totally unaware of these cycles. Financial professionals are not required to have even a cursory knowledge of economics in order to practice much less what kind of advice to give to clients depending on where we find ourselves in these economic cycles. I hope other parts of this book help you “connect the