Diaries to an Older Me

Diaries to an Older Me
Author: Cerah Whitlow
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Total Pages: 229
Release: 2011-05-04
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1456750941

Be a good person, and work hard so you dont have to be like me when you grow up. That was the mantra drilled into the young, tender, and impressionable mind of Cerah Whitlow (pronounced Sarah). So, that was what she set out to accomplish. Little did she know that the less you know going into it, the more failures you experience. The passion was there, the desire, the drive. However, the know-how was lacking. Faith and religious beliefs played both roles of help and hindrance. The result was a life full of contradictions and the psychological pains that go along with it. This book is not fiction. These are the journal entries, tear-stained entries, that Cerah used to process her experiences. Not only did she write to get the feelings out, but also she did it so that she wouldnt have to re-live those mistakes. She did it because she did not want to re-experience rejection, hurt, loss, rape, shame and self-degradation. She wrote it down, documented it, so that she would not forget it. She put them in this book so you would not have to experience those things. She wants you to learn from her mistakes and triumph where she fell short.

You Make Me Feel Like an Unnatural Woman

You Make Me Feel Like an Unnatural Woman
Author: Judith Newman
Publisher: Miramax Books
Total Pages: 324
Release: 2005-05-11
Genre: Health & Fitness
ISBN: 9781401359638

A brutally honest and hilarious memoir from an over-forty first-time mom. Veteran journalist and Ladies Home Journal columnist, Judith Newman spent seven years and $70,000 on infertility treatments, and finally, at age forty, she became pregnant with twins. You Make Me Feel Like an Unnatural Woman is not only her account of having children later in life: it's about what happens to a marriage -- and to the spirit, when even the most sought-after baby comes. Wry, warm, and brutally honest, this is the book for any woman who has awakened at 3 AM to the insistent shrieks of her darling and thought: Oh man, I'm too old for this.

How to End a Story

How to End a Story
Author: Helen Garner
Publisher: Text Publishing
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2021-11-02
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 1922459526

The third instalment of diaries from the inimitable Helen Garner covers four eventful years in the life of one of Australia’s most treasured writers.

Tales from a Not-so-popular Party Girl

Tales from a Not-so-popular Party Girl
Author: Rachel Renée Russell
Publisher:
Total Pages: 279
Release: 2010
Genre: Diaries
ISBN: 9781536403510

Nikki's diary describes a frightful Halloween, on which she helps with her sister's ballet class party at the same time she is Brandon's date for their middle school Halloween dance, where she has promised to spend the evening with her two best friends.

A Life Discarded

A Life Discarded
Author: Alexander Masters
Publisher: Macmillan
Total Pages: 273
Release: 2016-10-18
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0374178186

"An unorthodox investigative literary biography of a mysterious graphomaniac whose nearly 150 diaries are rescued from a dumpster by the author"--

The Financially Challenged

The Financially Challenged
Author: Wilson J. Humber
Publisher: Moody Publishers
Total Pages: 244
Release: 1995
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780802427373

Packed with eye-opening principles that will help the "financially challenged" move beyond their challanges, this book offers practical steps to steer clear of--or emerge from--financial disaster. Graphs and charts.

Sixty: A Diary: My Year of Aging Semi-Gracefully

Sixty: A Diary: My Year of Aging Semi-Gracefully
Author: Ian Brown
Publisher: The Experiment, LLC
Total Pages: 264
Release: 2017-09-05
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1615193510

“This is the thing, you see: I am on my way to being an old man. But at sixty, I am still the youngest of old men.” As acclaimed journalist and author Ian Brown’s sixtieth birthday loomed, every moment seemed to present a choice: Confront, or deny, the biological fact that the end was now closer than the beginning. Brown chose instead to notice every moment—to try to capture precisely what he was experiencing, without panicking. Sixty is the result: an uncensored, seriocomic report, a slalom of day-to-day dramas (as husband, father, brother, friend, and neighbor), inquisitive reporting, and acute insights from the line between middle-aged and soon-to-be-elderly.