Slap Happy

Slap Happy
Author: Alan Dworsky
Publisher: SCB Distributors
Total Pages: 67
Release: 2012-09-05
Genre: Music
ISBN: 098573986X

Slap Happy is for kids of all ages. It turns drum rhythms into body rhythms you can step, clap, and slap with a buddy. Right from the start, you'll be learning traditional dance rhythms from West Africa and the Caribbean: Kuku from Guinea, Sunguru Bani from Mali, Kpegisu from Ghana, Bomba from Puerto Rico, and Conga from Cuba. You can do Slap Happy in pairs or in groups, indoors or out, at home or at school. If you're a parent, it's a great way to do something fun and educational with your kids that doesn't require any previous musical training. If you're a music teacher, you can use Slap Happy to give your students a hands-on experience of world rhythms without having to buy any instruments. It's physical, it's funky, and it's fun! Please note: audio files of the CD that comes with the print version of this book are not included in this ebook version (but are available separately).

Slaphappy

Slaphappy
Author: Thomas Hackett
Publisher: Harper Collins
Total Pages: 254
Release: 2010-11-30
Genre: Sports & Recreation
ISBN: 0062029029

Slaphappy is reporter Thomas Hackett's penetrating look at the world of professional wrestling, for those who love the spectacle and for the sport's skeptics and the uninitiated. Through interviews with wrestlers, promoters, and fans, Hackett explores the full range of issues that swirl around wrestling culture -- fame, masculinity, violence, aggression, performance, and play. Among the lessons of professional wrestling is that deceit is a fundamental fact of American life. And yet, paradoxically, the one thing wrestling isn't is dishonest. Although wrestlers play pretend, wrestling itself doesn't pretend to be anything other than what it is -- fantastically absurd, a very American kind of madness. Celebrity-obsessed, pathologically narcissistic, murderously competitive, it both epitomizes and parodies the delusional egoism at the heart of the culture. More than that, wrestling provides its fans and performers a medium for thinking about "getting over" in America today. This spectacle of excess may be the apotheosis of American imbecility, but it is also defiant, hopeful, liberating, and unifying -- a throwback to the raucous pleasures of early theater. Fans aren't detached connoisseurs, looking satirically down on life, concealing their anxieties in the cold comforts of irony. They are total participants in a carnival of their own making, shouting epithets, throwing chairs, expatiating their worries in a crowd's triumphant foolishness. It is, Slaphappy concludes, all the stuff of human culture. Where does fantasy end and reality begin? Where does the performance stop and life take over? Writing with affection and discernment, Hackett gets deep into the culture, discovering that the make-believe competition of wrestling is indeed "real" for millions of young men -- real in the sense that something real and important is at stake: their worth as men.

Slap Happy Jack

Slap Happy Jack
Author: Mickijo
Publisher: Dorrance Publishing
Total Pages: 32
Release: 2019-06-17
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1480960373

Slap Happy Jack By: Mickijo Slap Happy Jack tells the tale of young Jack and his best friend, Smack—a rabbit of unusually large proportions—as they travel around the Old West growing famous for their slap jack skills and generosity with their winnings. Slap Happy Jack captures the author’s memories of her grandparents telling stories of “the old days.”

Slap-Happy - Cache of Odes

Slap-Happy - Cache of Odes
Author: Sindhuja Manikandan
Publisher: BecomeShakespeare.com
Total Pages: 123
Release: 2021-01-11
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 9390543479

Every page you turn will have one or the other emotion out of love, fun, scare, anger, confusion, excitement and some more to hold the flavor of father's care to mother's share to romantic pair and so on. Read the odes with passion to really feel the aroma of emotion.

Slap Happy

Slap Happy
Author: Nancy Millikin Tubbs
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
Total Pages: 318
Release: 2016-02-13
Genre:
ISBN: 9781530021581

The first in a series on the lives, loves, mysteries and mishaps of three generations of southern women. Coco Strong, dog sitter and member of the eccentric Layton clan, has just fallen for an Italian waiter who is doing an excellent job of ignoring her. Her widowed mother Katie finds herself, unintentionally, dating the bank president. And her grandmother is mailing mysterious packages while complaining of imaginary burglars. But are they imaginary? And what is the deep family secret that only Grammy knows?

Happy

Happy
Author: Alex Lemon
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 306
Release: 2009-12-29
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 143916049X

His freshman year of college, Alex Lemon was supposed to be the star catcher on the Macalester College baseball team. He was the boy getting every girl, the hard-partying kid everyone called Happy. In the spring of 1997, he had his first stroke. For two years Lemon coped with his deteriorating health by sinking deeper into alcohol and drug abuse. His charming and carefree exterior masked his self-destructive and sometimes cruel behavior as he endured two more brain bleeds and a crippling depression. After undergoing brain surgery, he is nursed back to health by his free-spirited artist mother, who once again teaches him to stand on his own. Alive with unexpected humor and sensuality, Happy is a hypnotic self-portrait of a young man confronting the wreckage of his own body; it is also the deeply moving story of a mother’s redemptive and healing powers. Alex Lemon’s Technicolor sentences pop and sing as he writes about survival—of the body and of the human spirit.

Popular Representations of America in Non-American Media

Popular Representations of America in Non-American Media
Author: Endong, Floribert Patrick C.
Publisher: IGI Global
Total Pages: 361
Release: 2019-06-28
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1522593144

Much of what the world knows about the United States of America is constructed and spread through global media. One can hardly find a country where news events involving the U.S.A. do not attract media attention, controversy, or at least invoke some level of critical thought. Popular Representations of America in Non-American Media provides emerging research exploring how non-American media covers and represents the U.S.A. through a critical review that demonstrates how foreign media representations of the country have varied according to periods in history, political leadership, and current ideological and socio-cultural affinities. The publication also conversely examines Americans’ perceptions of foreign media representations of their country. Featuring coverage on a broad range of topics such as neocolonialism, political science, and popular culture, this book is ideally designed for students, scholars, media specialists, policymakers, international relation experts, politicians, and other professionals seeking current research on different perspectives on non-American media’s representation of the U.S.A. and Americans.

Homesick and Happy

Homesick and Happy
Author: Michael Thompson
Publisher: Ballantine Books
Total Pages: 306
Release: 2012-05-01
Genre: Family & Relationships
ISBN: 0345524934

An insightful and powerful look at the magic of summer camp—and why it is so important for children to be away from home . . . if only for a little while. In an age when it’s the rare child who walks to school on his own, the thought of sending your “little ones” off to sleep-away camp can be overwhelming—for you and for them. But parents’ first instinct—to shelter their offspring above all else—is actually depriving kids of the major developmental milestones that occur through letting them go—and watching them come back transformed. In Homesick and Happy, renowned child psychologist Michael Thompson, PhD, shares a strong argument for, and a vital guide to, this brief loosening of ties. A great champion of summer camp, he explains how camp ushers your children into a thrilling world offering an environment that most of us at home cannot: an electronics-free zone, a multigenerational community, meaningful daily rituals like group meals and cabin clean-up, and a place where time simply slows down. In the buggy woods, icy swims, campfire sing-alongs, and daring adventures, children have emotionally significant and character-building experiences; they often grow in ways that surprise even themselves; they make lifelong memories and cherished friends. Thompson shows how children who are away from their parents can be both homesick and happy, scared and successful, anxious and exuberant. When kids go to camp—for a week, a month, or the whole summer—they can experience some of the greatest maturation of their lives, and return more independent, strong, and healthy.