"Luke is having such a bad day! Angry and frustrated, Luke finds a stone that, coupled with some wisdom imparted from his Grandfather, helps him realize how his thoughts can change his circumstances. The Secret Stone is a heartwarming story that teaches us the value of having an attitude of gratitude."
"For ages 3-9 Rollicking rhyming story of a little boy who tries to escape from a monster that is running rampant in his house. Into each room, the monster wreaks havoc until finally the boy has had enough and demands that his mom remove the monster from the house ... only to learn that he IS the monster!"
Alterity and Narrative Stories and the Negotiation of Western Identities (Suny Series, Negotiating Identity: Discourses, Politics, Processes, and ... Politics, Processes and Paxes (Paperback)) by Kathleen Glenister Roberts Paperback, 238 Pages, Published 2008 by State University Of New York Press ISBN-13: 978-0-7914-7218-7, ISBN: 0-7914-7218-3
Communication Ethics(2nd Edition) Between Cosmopolitanism and Provinciality (Critical Intercultural Communication Studies) by Kathleen Glenister Roberts, Ronald C. Arnett, Communication-Ethics Hardcover, 297 Pages, Published 2008 by Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers ISBN-13: 978-1-4331-0325-4, ISBN: 1-4331-0325-7
Communication Ethics(Updated) Between Cosmopolitanism and Provinciality (Critical Intercultural Communication Studies) by Kathleen Glenister Roberts, Ronald C. Arnett Paperback, 297 Pages, Published 2008 by Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers ISBN-13: 978-1-4331-0326-1, ISBN: 1-4331-0326-5
Suny Series, Negotiating Identity Discourses, Politics, Processes, and Praxes: Alterity and Narrative: Stories and the Negotiation of Western Identities by Kathleen Glenister Roberts 238 Pages, Published 2007 by Suny Press ISBN-13: 978-0-7914-7951-3, ISBN: 0-7914-7951-X
"To me, the great tragedy of Babel will always lie in the narrative motif of the loss
of the “holy tongue.” A sociolinguist by trade, ... The Talmud states, after all, that
Babel is the root of all our forgetting (Beck, 1995, p. 15). The tragedy of Babel is ..."