The Dance Old wounds begin to heal between them when a spirited beekeeper named Brooke Hastings contracts Jacky to train her overly-protective dog, Bee.The Dance is a book about love, family and friendship, an
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| Title | : | The Dance |
| Author | : | |
| Rating | : | 4.66 (867 Votes) |
| Asin | : | 0986388149 |
| Format Type | : | Paperback |
| Number of Pages | : | 258 Pages |
| Publish Date | : | 2016-02-06 |
| Genre | : |
The Dance is a book about love, family and friendship, and learning how to dance with life’s constant spin. Dog trainer Jacky Applebaum is focused on one thing – making up for a grave misunderstanding that damaged her relationship with her fifteen-year old stepdaughter Sophie. They are suffocating under the pressure of hurt and guilt. Old wounds begin to heal between them when a spirited beekeeper named Brooke Hastings contracts Jacky to train her overly-protective dog, Bee. A mutual affinity grows instantly between them, an affinity Jacky won’t allow herself to embrace. But, the heart knows what it needs. Meanwhile, Brooke hires Sophie as her assistant in the bee apiary. A trust forms, and soon Sophie begins to feel alive again as she comes face-to-face with the many parallels between her and the honeybees she nurtures. Just as they learn to open up and dance with life again, a hurtful truth reveals itself. Will this truth set them free or unravel all they’ve c
Editorial : About the Author Suzie Carr admires the beauty of life's curves and enjoys writing books about some of the most interesting ones. She donates a portion of her proceeds to the NOH8 Campaign and Hearts United for Animals. She blogs about the positive side of life's twists and turns at curveswelcome
I would not recommend this book to someone approaching the material for the first time, or to teach oneself, it is really best as a research resource for a professional or graduate student. There are even photos of accessories and peripherals. They used to call them `programmed textbooks' when I was in school: logically-defined levels that build and refine skills gradually, clear chapter objectives, plenty of summary and review points along with ample, focused exercises that reinforce you've just read.
Throughout the book, Gindis stresses the practical with a point of view that might be called the `95/5 Rule' as in, `95% percent of your day-to-day use of AutoCAD will involve 5% of its features.' His point is that identifying and mastering that 5% will benefit you far more than the wide-and-shallow approach of other books that can leave you a jack-of-all-features and master of none.
This should not imply any lack of breadth or depth: At 650+ pages, this is no `Auto
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