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No Limits: The Will to Succeed

by Michael Phelps

In No Limits, Michael Phelps - perhaps the greatest Olympic competitor the world has ever seen - will show us the secrets to his remarkable success, from training to execution. Behind his tally of Olympic gold medals - more than any athlete throughout history - lies a consistent approach to competition, a determination to win, mental preparation, and a straightforward passion for his sport. One of his mottos is 'Performance is Reality', and it typifies his attitude about swimming. No Limits goes behind the scenes to explore the hard work, sacrifice, and dedication that catapulted Phelps into the international spotlight. Phelps will share remarkable anecdotes about family, his coach, his passion for the sport, and the wisdom that he has gained from unexpected challenges and obstacles. Highlighting memorable races and valuable lessons from throughout his career, Phelps offers candid insight into the mind and experiences of a world champion. No Limits will inspire anyone to follow their passion straight to the finish line.

No Limits

by Michael Phelps

Fresh from his triumphant and extraordinary achievement at the Olympic Games in Beijing, Michael Phelps—up from working-class, born-in-the-USAroots—shows us the secrets to his remarkable success—from training to execution. For years the world has followed Michael Phelps’s progress from teen sensation in Sydney to bona fide phenom in Athens. Now he’s a living Olympic legend in Beijing with a peerless record of gold medals. In No Limits, Michael Phelps—the greatest competitor since Michael Jordan or Tiger Woods—will share the secrets to his remarkable success. Behind his tally of Olympic gold medals lies a consistent approach to competition, a determination to win, mental preparation, and a straightforward passion for his sport. One of his mottos is "Performance is Reality," and it typifies his attitude about swimming. No Limits goes behind the scenes to explore the hard work, sacrifice, and dedication that catapulted Phelps into the international spotlight. Phelps shares remarkable anecdotes about family, his coach, his passion for the sport, and the wisdom that he has gained from unexpected challenges and obstacles. Highlighting memorable races and valuable lessons from throughout his career, Phelps offers candid insight into the mind and experiences of a world champion. Phelps’s success is imbued with the perspective of overcoming obstacles and doing whatever it takes to realize a dream. As his coach, Bob Bowman, says, Phelps has made a habit out of things other people aren’t willing to do. No Limits will show readers just how he does that, and will inspire anyone to follow their passion straight to the finish line.

No Limits: The Will to Succeed

by Michael Phelps Alan Abrahamson

Michael Phelps, winner of 8 gold medals in the 2008 olympics for swimming lives his life with three rules for success. Set goals, take responsibility, and practice discipline. This is the in depth story of how he came to win those eight gold medals.

No Limits: My Autobiography

by Ian Poulter

An autobiography from golf's freshest, most individual voiceIan Poulter is one of golf's most charismatic figures, with an appeal extending way beyond his sport. Here he tells his inspirational story, from his early rejection as a Spurs youth player, right through to his match-winning contributions to successive European Ryder Cup Triumphs. Poulter went from an Assistant Professional staffing the club shop to a global superstar, turning pro when he still had a handicap of 4 but the drive and self-belief to make it to the top. His infectious optimism, will power and flair have ensured he remains one of the biggest names on the tour. As well as insights into the crucial moments in his career, and the life of a professional golfer, he talks about his passions outside the game, including his own riotous brand of clothing. Just as Poulter's appearance on the scene came as a refreshing antidote to a sport that was staid and stuffy, so his own book is as forthright and passionate as Poults himself.

No Limits: My Autobiography

by Ian Poulter

Ian Poulter is one of golf's most charismatic figures, with an appeal extending way beyond his sport. Here he tells his inspirational story, from his early rejection as an Spurs youth player, right through to his match-winning contributions to successive European Ryder Cup Triumphs. Poulter went from an Assistant Professional staffing the club shop to a global superstar, turning pro when he still had a handicap of 4 but the drive and self-belief to make it to the top. His infectious optimism, will power and flair have ensured he remains one of the biggest names on the tour. As well as insights into the crucial moments in his career, and the life of a professional golfer, he talks about his passions outside the game, including his own riotous brand of clothing. Just as Poulter's appearance on the scene came as a refreshing antidote to a sport that was staid and stuffy, so his own book is as forthright and passionate as Poults himself.

No Longer Denying Sexual Abuse: Making the Choices That Can Change Your Life

by Kim O'Hara

We spend a majority of our lives as survivors with no clue what we are actually surviving. To protect us, our brains have frozen in time the incidents fueling our ability to be in denial. Unfortunately, the truth of our sexual abuse seeps out into all areas of our lives, causing us to behave like maligned versions of our true selves. We yell, when we are not yellers. We cheat, when we want love. We drink and abuse drugs when we want to see God. Only through facing the denial do we find our true selves hidden in the cobwebs.

No Man is an Island

by Adele Dumont

This is the book about immigration detention that all Australians need to read.During the time of the Gillard government, 24-year-old Sydneysider Adele Dumont accepted a volunteer position to teach English to men in immigration detention on Christmas Island. She did not expect to find the work so rewarding or the people she met so interesting. When she was offered a job working at Curtin detention centre near Derby in Western Australia, she took it.Working at Curtin required her to live a fly-in fly-out lifestyle, feeling never quite settled in one place or the other. She lived in a donga when she was in WA, her life full of bus trips to the detention centre and the work she did there; back home in Sydney, she was overwhelmed by the choices people had and the things they didn't do with those choices. What kept her returning to Curtin were her students: men from many lands who had sacrificed all they knew for a chance to live in Australia; men who were unfailingly polite to her in a situation that was barbarous. Slowly, falteringly, these men learned her language and taught her things about their culture.No Man is an Island is the story that will make the issue of immigration detention accessible to far more interested Australians than any number of stern newspaper articles. It is a vividly told story that is full of characters and humanity. It is the story about immigration detention that all Australians need to read.

No Man Is An Island

by Tigeorges Laguerre Jeremy Rosenberg

Jean-Marie Monfort Hébert Georges Fils "TiGeorges” Laguerre died at birth. But anyone who knows the gregarious, polylingual chef and restaurant owner realizes that it takes more than something like dying to keep this charismatic man down. Laguerre was revived, and in the decades since, has lived life to the fullest. His new memoir is a recipe for real talk and a hearty blend of food, family, and country. Laguerre spills secrets of his one-of-a-kind cuisine, talks about the life in Haiti, and shares his everyman’s immigrant’s journey from the Caribbean to New York, and then across the country to L. A.

No Man Knows My History: The Life of Joseph Smith, the Mormon Prophet (2nd Edition, Revised and Enlarged)

by Fawn M. Brodie

Through extensive research of several manuscripts concerning the life of Joseph Smith, this revised and enlarged second edition unfolds the authentic life history of Joseph Smith, the Mormon prophet. The book contains three appendix furnishing Documents on the Early Life of Joseph Smith, The Spaulding-Rigdon Theory and The Plural Wives of Joseph Smith. Bibliography and Index are additional features.

No Man's Land: Preparing for War and Peace in Post-9/11 America

by Elizabeth D. Samet

As the post-9/11 wars wind down, a literature professor at West Point explores what it means for soldiers, and our country, to be caught between war and peace. In her critically acclaimed, award-winning book Soldier's Heart, Elizabeth D. Samet grappled with the experience of teaching literature at the United States Military Academy at West Point. Now, with No Man's Land, Samet contends that we are entering a new moment: a no man's land between war and peace. Major military deployments are winding down, but soldiers are wrestling with the aftermath of war and the trials of returning home while also facing the prospect of low-intensity conflicts for years to come. Drawing on a range of experiences-from a visit to a ward of wounded combat veterans to correspondence with former cadets, from a conference on Edith Wharton and wartime experience to teaching literature and film to future officers-Samet illuminates an ambiguous passage through no man's land that has left deep but difficult-to-read traces on our national psyche, our culture, our politics, and, most especially, an entire generation of military professionals. In No Man's Land, Elizabeth D. Samet offers a moving, urgent examination of what it means to negotiate the tensions between war and peace, between "over there" and "over here"-between life on the front and life at home. She takes the reader on a vivid tour of this new landscape, marked as much by the scars of war as by the ordinary upheavals of homecoming, to capture the essence of our current historical moment.

No Man's Land: The Life and Art of Mary Riter Hamilton, 1868-1954

by Kathryn A. Young Sarah M. McKinnon

What force of will and circumstance drove a woman from a comfortable life painting china tea services to one of hardship and loneliness in the battle zones of France and Belgium following the Great War? For western Canadian artist Mary Riter Hamilton (1868-1954), art was her life’s passion. Her tale is one of tragedy and adventure, from homestead beginnings, to genteel drawing rooms in Winnipeg, Victoria and Vancouver, to Berlin and Parisian art schools, to Vimy and Ypres, and finally to illness and poverty in old age. "No Man’s Land" is the first biographical study of Hamilton, whose work can be found in galleries and art museums throughout Canada. Young and McKinnon’s meticulous research in unpublished private collections brings to light new correspondence between Hamilton and her friends, revealing the importance of female networks to an artist’s well being. Her letters from abroad, in particular, bring a woman’s perspective into the immediate post-war period and give voice to trying conditions. Hamilton’s career is situated within the context of her peers Florence Carlyle, Emily Carr, and Sophie Pemberton with whom she shared a Canadian and European experience.

No-Man's Lands: One Man's Odyssey Through the Odyssey

by Scott Huler

When NPR contributor Scott Huler made one last attempt to get through James Joyce's Ulysses, he had no idea it would launch an obsession with the book's inspiration, the ancient Greek epic: The Odyssey and the lonely homebound voyage of its Everyman hero, Odysseus.

No Man's War: Irreverent Confessions of an Infantry Wife

by Angela Ricketts

Raised as an Army brat, Angie Ricketts thought she knew what she was in for when she eloped with Darrin-then an infantry lieutenant-on the eve of his deployment to Somalia. Since that time, Darrin, now a colonel, has been deployed eight times, serving four tours in Iraq and Afghanistan. And Ricketts, has lived every one of those deployments intimately-distant enough to survive the years spent apart from her husband, but close enough to share a common purpose and a lifestyle they both love.With humor, candor, and a brazen attitude, Ricketts pulls back the curtain on a subculture many readers know, but few ever will experience. Counter to the dramatized snap shot seen on Lifetime's Army Wives, Ricketts digs into the personalities and posturing that officers' wives must survive daily-whether navigating a social event on post, suffering through a husband's prolonged deployment or reacting to a close friend's death in combat. At its core, No Man's War is a story of sisterhood and survival. As Ricketts states: "We tread those treacherous waters together. Do we sometimes shove each other's heads under water for a few seconds? Maybe even on purpose? Of course. Are we sometimes dragged underwater ourselves by the undertow created by all of us struggling together too closely? Without a doubt. But we never let each other drown. Our buoyancy is our survival."

No Map, Great Trip: A Young Writer's Road To Page One

by Paul Fleischman

Newbery Medalist Paul Fleischman reflects on his childhood with his award-winning father, Sid Fleischman, and details his own path to becoming a writer in this memorable book that is part memoir, part travelogue, and part reflection on craft and creativity.No Map, Great Trip is an excellent choice for aspiring authors, language arts classrooms, and fans of Gail Carson Levine’s Writing Magic. Acclaimed author Paul Fleischman considers how growing up with a father who was an award-winning author helped to shape and inspire his own career. Paul and Sid Fleischman are the only father-son Newbery medalists in history, and life in the Fleischman home was extraordinary. Readers will feel like part of the family in this humorous and aspirational chronicle. Paul Fleischman is the author of the Newbery Award-winning Joyful Noise and the classroom classic Seedfolks, as well as many other acclaimed and beloved titles. His books are taught and performed in classrooms across the country.Part memoir, part travelogue (young Paul travels from California to New Hampshire by himself), part writing book, and part reflection on art and creativity, this inspirational book includes black-and-white photographs, as well as writing tips and prompts just right for budding authors. No Map, Great Trip is a great gift for young writers, language arts teachers, and for fans of Jack Prelutsky’s Pizza, Pigs, and Poetry and Ralph Fletcher’s A Writer’s Notebook.

No Map To This Country: One Family's Journey Through Autism

by Jennifer Noonan

A heartbreaking yet also funny and ultimately empowering memoir revealing the a multi-year journey into the latest science and treatments in order to rescue her kids and her family from autism.

No me callo: Mis memorias

by Karmele Marchante

«A mi generación, que fue puntera en todo, nadie nos explicó nada. Y nada es nada. Todo tuvimos que descubrirlo, intuirlo o sufrirlo antes o después de que sucediera». Karmele Marchante es una figura mítica y muy popular del periodismo español y una feminista acérrima. Karmele Marchante es hija, hermana, activista, amiga y compañera. Pero, por encima de todo, Karmele Marchante es una apasionada de su oficio y una luchadora incansable. Estas memorias honestas y valientes recogen la trayectoria profesional de Karmele, pero también sus vivencias más íntimas y desconocidas: su turbulenta infancia en Tortosa, cómo se convirtió en una referencia de la contracultura en los ochenta, sus historias de amor y desamor, su paso por todos los medios de comunicación -incluida la prensa rosa- y los enemigos que hizo por el camino, su lucha política en defensa de los derechos de la mujer y los secretos mejor guardados de una gran mujerque no se calla nada.

No me cerrarán los labios: Una novela sobre Hermila Galindo, feminista y revolucionaria

by Abia Castillo

Una mujer que luchó intensamente por la emancipación femenina. La Revolución mexicana como telón de fondo. Una historia inspiradora sobre la búsqueda de libertad. «Creo firmemente que la mujer es digna de mejor suerte que aquella que le han deparado». Hermila Galindo Hermila Galindo podría ser recordada por muchos motivos: alzó la voz a favor de la Revolución, accedió a la política y se convirtió en la secretaria de Venustiano Carranza, fundó la revista feminista Mujer Moderna, viajó fuera y dentro de México para promulgar su mensaje revolucionario, fue la primera mujer en presentarse a diputada federal en el país, abogó siempre por la educación, la sexualidad y la independencia económica de las mujeres, y luchó con fuerza por el sufragio femenino. Sin embargo, hoy conocemos de ella poco más que su nombre. Esta es la novela sobre la vida y la voz de Hermila Galindo, ejemplo de desafío a lo establecido e inspiración para quienes aún luchan por sus derechos y libertades, además de una historia sobre la importancia de la amistad femenina como lazo de solidaridad y acto de resistencia.

No me cuentes cuentos: 100 mujeres españolas que cambiaron el mundo y el cuento

by Varias autoras

No me cuentes cuentos recoge las vidas únicas y fascinantes de cien mujeres españolas dignas del mejor de los cuentos. Hay un montón de mujeres extraordinarias, está demostrado. Y algunas están asombrosamente cerca. Este libro recoge, en forma de cuento, las vidas extraordinarias de cien mujeres españolas. Gloria Fuertes, Alaska, Carmen Balcells, Montserrat Caballé, Lola Flores, Margarita Salas, Rosalía de Castro y muchas más mujeres que cambiaron el mundo. Nuestro mundo. No me cuentes cuentos es un proyecto colectivo liderado por Kloshletter y Prodigioso Volcán que busca contar de otra forma la historia inspiradora de cien mujeres españolas con vidas apasionantes que, en muchos casos, han pasado desapercibidas.

No Mean Glasgow: Revelations of a Gorbals Guy

by Colin MacFarlane

In his last book, The Real Gorbals Story, Colin MacFarlane detailed how he witnessed a once great area, home to wonderful characters and grand old buildings, disappear before his eyes. By the time MacFarlane's tenement was knocked down in the early 1970s, he had left school and been rehoused in another part of the city. In an attempt to extricate himself from his Gorbals gang days, he took a job as an apprentice chef at one of Glasgow's top restaurants, where he soon discovered that his colleagues were just as insane as those he had mixed with on the city streets. Meanwhile, MacFarlane struggled to integrate into the more affluent area that his family had been moved to and soon found himself returning to his old haunts and back in trouble again.In No Mean Glasgow, MacFarlane charts his eventful, fun-packed passage from Gorbals street boy to grown man on the brink of a new beginning. He describes his adventures with a mixture of humour, sadness and delight. It is a book for those people living all over the world who remember the old Glasgow - a city teeming with warmth, passion, patter and characters who could brighten up even the darkest of days.

No Meat Required: The Cultural History and Culinary Future of Plant-Based Eating

by Alicia Kennedy

A culinary and cultural history of plant-based eating in the United States that delves into the subcultures and politics that have defined alternative food.The vegan diet used to be associated only with eccentric hippies and tofu-loving activists who shop at co-ops and live on compounds. We&’ve come a long way since then. Now, fine-dining restaurants like Eleven Madison Park cater to chic upscale clientele with a plant-based menu, and Impossible Whoppers are available at Burger King. But can plant-based food keep its historical anti-capitalist energies if it goes mainstream? And does it need to?In No Meat Required, author Alicia Kennedy chronicles the fascinating history of plant-based eating in the United States, from the early experiments in tempeh production undertaken by the Farm commune in the 70s to the vegan punk cafes and anarchist zines of the 90s to the chefs and food writers seeking to decolonize vegetarian food today.Many people become vegans because they are concerned about the role capitalist food systems play in climate change, inequality, white supremacy, and environmental and cultural degradation. But a world where Walmart sells frozen vegan pizzas and non-dairy pints of ice cream are available at gas stations – raises distinct questions about the meanings and goals of plant-based eating.Kennedy—a vegetarian, former vegan, and once-proprietor of a vegan bakery—understands how to present this history with sympathy, knowledge, and humor. No Meat Required brings much-needed depth and context to our understanding of vegan and vegetarian cuisine, and makes a passionate argument for retaining its radical heart.

No Mercy from the Japanese: A Survivors Account of the Burma Railway and the Hellships, 1942–1945

by Cecil Lowry John Wyatt

By the laws of statistics John Lowry should not be here today to tell his story. He firmly believes that someone somewhere was looking after him during those four years. Examine the odds stacked against him and his readers will understand why he hold this view. During the conflict in Malaya and Singapore his regiment lost two thirds of its men. More than three hundred patients and staff in the Alexandra Military hospital were slaughtered by the Japanese he was the only known survivor. Twenty six percent of British soldiers slaving on the Burma Railway died. More than fifty men out of around six hundred died aboard the Aaska Maru and the Hakasan Maru. Many more did not manage to survive the harshest Japanese winter of 1944/45, the coldest in Japan since record began. Johns experiences make for the most compelling and graphic reading. The courage, endurance and resilience of men like him never ceases to amaze.

No, mi general

by Irene Lozano Zaida Cantera

La capitán Zaida había sido preparada para combatir en cualquier guerra. Lo que nunca imaginó es que el enemigo estaría en sus propias filas. «La capitán Zaida era brillante, honesta y leal, pero se permitió un único error: no callarse ante una injusticia. En el Ejército, si te atreves a denunciar a un superior, aunque tengas razón, antes o después acabas perdiendo.» Jordi Évole Después de seis años de persecución inmisericorde, la hoy comandante Zaida Cantera de Castro ha decidido romper su silencio superando el miedo cerval que muchos militares tienen a hablar. Su estremecedor relato, escrito por Irene Lozano, cuenta la experiencia brutal y traumática de ser acosada sexualmente primero, y perseguida laboral, profesional y personalmente después, a modo de escarmiento, por aquellos que tendrían que haberla protegido. Reseñas: «Una mujer muy valiente. Mucho.» Ana Pastor «Lectura muy recomendable.» Nativel Preciado «Enhorabuena a Zaida Cantera por la capacidad de comunicación y convicción. El Ejército se pierde un buen mando, el acosador, sigue.» Julia Otero «Sus acosadores siguen dentro. Ella ha conseguido la baja. Algo no funciona.» Jordi Évole. «Zaida Cantera se ha convertido en el símbolo de la explosión de la burbuja de hermetismo en la que se encontraban las Fuerzas Armadas.» Diario Público #Zaida «Creo que es la primera vez que un militar se atreve a contar su historia aportando nombres y apellidos de "compañeros" en activo para poner caras a los culpables. Lo hago, en primer lugar, porque creo que hay que denunciar a los responsables, porque hay muchos militares honrados dejándose la piel, y hay que diferenciarlos. En segundo lugar, porque no todos somos iguales como se ha demostrado. No lo somos ante la ley, lo que es lamentable, pero tampoco lo somos ante la corrupción, el caciquismo, el servilismo...» Zaida Cantera de Castro

No More Mr. Nice Guy: How I Survived a Corporate Career Derailment

by James E. Alston Jr.

In this professional biography, the author draws extensive conclusions on race relations in corporate America. He writes with a heartfelt conviction from an insider's perspective as a top restaurant executive for over thirty years. The author outlines the instances and impact of evasive, covert discriminatory practices of managers and coworkers on all levels of employment and sets a bold course to tell it like it is on the frontlines of the American food and beverage industry.

No More Tomorrows: The Compelling True Story of a Young Woman Sentenced to Twenty Years in a Hellhole Bali Prison

by Kathryn Bonella Schapelle Corby

It was meant to be a two-week holiday in paradise to celebrate her sister's birthday, but for Schapelle Corby it ended in every traveller's darkest nightmare. She stepped off the plane and into a world of hell after Bali customs officers discovered 4.2 kilos of marijuana in her bag. Her dazzling blue eyes and cries of innocence while facing a possible death sentence turned her into a celebrity overnight. The media couldn't get enough. Months later, in a humid Bali courtroom brimming with media, her family watched in horror as the judge sentenced her to 20 years in the notorious Bali prison dubbed Hotel K.Inside, Schapelle suffered the unimaginable; living in a tiny rat-infested concrete cell, surrounded by daily suicides, murders, brutal bashings and overdoses. Outside her family fought tirelessly to prove her innocence. In this updated edition, Schapelle describes in intimate detail of how she descended into madness and ultimately found strength and her way home. Written with bestselling author Kathryn Bonella, this is an utterly compelling and unsettling tale that you won't be able to put down.

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