Books

4465 products

  • Surviving Schizophrenia

    Surviving Schizophrenia

    A Family Manual Updated throughout and filled with all the latest research, the bestselling Surviving Schizophrenia is back, now in its sixth edition. Since its first publication in 1983, Surviving Schizophrenia has become the standard reference book on the disease and has helped thousands of patients, their families, and mental health professionals. In clear language, this much-praised and important book describes the nature, causes, symptoms, treatment, and course of schizophrenia and also explores living with it from both the patient's and the family's point of view. This new, completely updated sixth edition includes the latest research findings on what causes the disease, as well as information about the newest drugs for treatment, and answers the questions most often asked by families, consumers, and providers.

  • Surviving The Death Of A Sibling

    Surviving The Death Of A Sibling

    Living Through Grief When an Adult Brother or Sister Dies Based on the author's own experiences, as well as those of many others, Surviving the Death of a Sibling helps adults who have lost a brother or sister to realize that they are not alone in their struggle. Just as important, it teaches them to understand the unique stages of their grieving process, offering practical and prescriptive advice for dealing with each stage.

  • Maybe You Should Talk To Someone Workbook

    Maybe You Should Talk To Someone Workbook

    A Toolkit for Editing Your Story and Changing Your Life In this empowering, one-of-a-kind workbook, Lori offers a step-by-step process for becoming the author of your own life by giving it a thorough edit. Using eye-opening concepts, thought-provoking exercises, compelling writing prompts, and real examples from the patients in the original book, Lori has created an easy-to-follow guide through the journey of becoming our own editors, examining aspects of our narratives that hold us back, and discovering the ways in which changing our stories can change our lives. An experience, a meditation, and a practical toolkit combined into one, this is the companion readers have been asking for: a revolutionary method for understanding which stories to keep and which to revise so that we can create our own personal masterpieces. By the end of this "unknowing," you will be surprised, inspired, and most of all, liberated. Maybe You Should Talk To Someone book is also available from ODIN BOOKS

  • Braided Cord

    Liz Kulp Braided Cord

    Liz was diagnosed with fetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD) as a young teen. Knowing her challenges and understanding her strengths helped her graduate from high school and move on to independent adulthood. She soon learned that life with a family who understood and helped her didn't prepare her for a world full of predators and abstracted thinking. A remarkable book about the hidden world of adult transition for young people with FASD.

  • One Eagle Soaring Northwest Coast Native Counting

    One Eagle Soaring Northwest Coast Native Counting

    This book explores counting and numbers with the help of West Coast animals—from a single eagle aloft, to a pair of swimming whales, as well as leaping frogs, honey-hungry bears and a group of ten dozing marmots. Combining Roy Henry Vickers' vivid illustrations, a glossy tactile finish and a simple yet catchy text, this sturdy board book introduces babies and toddlers to the spectacular scenery and wildlife of British Columbia. (First West Coast Books # 2 series)

  • Bulimia: A Guide to Recovery

    Lindsey Hall & Leigh Cohn Bulimia: A Guide to Recovery

    This intimate self-help guidebook offers a complete understanding of bulimia and a plan for recovery. It includes a two-week program to stop bingeing, ideas for things to do instead of bingeing, a guide for support groups, specific advice for loved ones, and "Eat Without Fear," Lindsey Hall's story of her self-cure, which has inspired thousands of other bulimics. This 25th anniversary edition updates all information from previous editions, with additional material on assessment, new diagnostic categories, men and bulimia, evidence-based treatment, family-assisted recovery, the influence of media (including the Internet), the essentials of "long-term recovery," and much more.

  • Taking Arthritis To School

    Taking Arthritis To School

    This book is part of The Special Kids in School Series and is a must-have for every counselor, teacher, school nurse, parent, or caregiver. This beautifully illustrated and fun-to-read storybook tells the story of Eric, a kid living with arthritis. When read aloud, other children can start to identify why a peer with arthritis may be treated differently and begin to empathize with the peer. In addition, children with arthritis or children who have conditions that set them apart as being different begin to feel accepted and safe. Book includes a Kid Quiz to reinforce new information and Ten Tips for Teachers to provide additional facts and ideas for teacher use.

  • Talk and Work It Out

    Cheri J. Meiners Talk and Work It Out

    What’s the best way to solve problems between people? By talking them over and working them out. It’s never too soon for children to learn the process of peaceful conflict resolution. This book distills it into clear, simple language and supporting illustrations. Children learn to calm themselves, state the problem, listen, think of solutions, try one, evaluate results, and even agree to disagree when a solution isn’t possible. Includes skill-building games and role plays for adults to use with children.

  • The Smart but Scattered Guide to Success: How to Use Your Brain's Executive Skills to Keep Up, Stay Calm, and Get Organized at Work and at Home

    The Smart but Scattered Guide to Success: How to Use Your Brain's Executive Skills to Keep Up, Stay Calm, and Get Organized at Work and at Home

    Cutting-edge research shows that today's 24/7 wired world and the growing demands of work and family life may simply max out the part of the brain that manages complex tasks. That's especially true for those lacking strong executive skills—the core brain-based abilities needed to maintain focus, meet deadlines, and stay cool under pressure. In this essential guide, leading experts Peg Dawson and Richard Guare help you map your own executive skills profile and take effective steps to boost your organizational skills, time management, emotional control, and nine other essential capacities.

  • TalkAbility: People Skills for Verbal Children on the Autism Spectrum - A Guide for Parents

    Fern Sussman TalkAbility: People Skills for Verbal Children on the Autism Spectrum - A Guide for Parents

    Even after they have learned to talk, children ages 3-7 with ASD, mild autism or social difficulties face special communication challenges. To have real 'talk-ability,' children have to understand the meaning behind the words by tuning in to the thoughts and feelings of other people. Parents and professionals have long sought a down-to-earth guide on how to help these children develop the people skills that make it possible to engage in real conversations and connect well with others. TalkAbility answers this need with a wealth of practical strategies that parents can build into their child's everyday life. These strategies help children gain both the social and special language abilities necessary for successful conversations and friendships.

  • The Longer the Wait, the Bigger the Hug

    The Longer the Wait, the Bigger the Hug

    Hedgehog is waiting for his friend Tortoise to wake up. But where is he and when will he wake? Hedgehog's friends are all very lovely, but they just aren't as much fun at the beach, or at hide and seek, or at holding hands, or at hugs. Tortoise begins to stir - the one boulder that Hedgehog didn't think he could lift to turn . . . Tortoise has been dreaming of Hedgehog. And the hug that follows is their best yet!

  • Tapping Cure : A Revolutionary System For Rapid Relief from Phobias, Anxiety, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and More

    Tapping Cure : A Revolutionary System For Rapid Relief from Phobias, Anxiety, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and More

    The Tapping Cure is an astoundingly easy and somewhat mystifying process that offers great results in the treatment of a variety of psychological problems. It takes only a few minutes, requires no medication and no talk therapy, and can completely erase a full range of negative emotions—from phobia, to trauma, to performance anxiety—in just a single session. In The Tapping Cure Dr. Temes, a seasoned psychotherapist, teaches readers how to tap themselves to eradicate their own symptoms. It is the first book of its kind to give precise instructions on where the tapping should occur—e.g., on the collarbone, under the eye, on the pinky—without resorting to mystical explanations, unscientific paradigms, and complicated pseudo-psychoanalytic rationalizations. The Tapping Cure is sure to help a great many people—psychological sufferers, the worried-well, and therapists with increasing numbers of patients requesting the treatment, which is fast becoming known in mainstream circles just like other once fringe therapies before it.

  • Calling My Spirit Back

    Elaine Alec Calling My Spirit Back

    Indigenous Peoples have always carried the knowledge necessary to heal. When our people heal, our families heal, our communities heal and our land will heal. You cannot have one without the other. These stories are teachings, prophecy and protocols shared throughout the years by elders, language speakers, medicine people and helpers. They have been the foundation to individual healing and learning self-love. They teach us how to make good decisions for ourselves and for all other aspects in our lives. When our people were young, they were sent on the land to gather as much experience and knowledge as they could, and when they returned, they would contribute what they learned. I am Syilx and Secwepemc and although many of my teachings come from this place, they also intertwine with indigenous knowledge shared through ceremony from many other nations.

  • Meshom and The Little One

    Meshom and The Little One

    After 10-year-old Shawna moves to the West Coast with her mother, she misses everything from back home, including her school friends and the wide prairie skies of Manitoba. But most of all she misses her Meshom (grandfather). Delightfully, he arrives for her birthday and brings with her a surprising Little One with many important lessons to teach her.

  • Teacher's Guide To Behavioral Interventions

    Teacher's Guide To Behavioral Interventions

    This is the most comprehensive behavioral intervention reference of its kind for principals, special education and regular teachers, guidance counselors, and teaching assistance teams. It includes proven intervention strategies for the most common behavior problems found in schools for the student who is identified for special education services. It includes IEP goals, objectives, and interventions for 83 items on the School Version scale and 27 common school behavior problems. Check out all the Hawthorne products by putting the word Hawthorne in the search bar. NOTE: This item is exempt from any special pricing or discount.

  • Sometimes I Grumblesquinch

    Sometimes I Grumblesquinch

    Katie Honors is a really nice kid. But there’s one little secret that sometimes makes her feel not-so-nice deep inside: her little brother, Chuck. Katie loves her brother and works hard to be the perfect big sister but it can be hard. Chuck can sometimes be just so icky and messy. Sometimes it makes Katie secretly wish she had a trampoline or a treehouse or a giraffe instead of a brother. When all these emotions bubble up to the surface, Katie can no longer grumblesquinch them down. She explodes, but she also learns an important lesson: that there’s room for ALL of her feelings, even the scary ones. Vail masterfully explores the pressure children often feel to be perfect all the time and helps them realize that it's okay to share frustrating, and at times, not-so-nice thoughts and seek comfort from adults to help them manage those feelings.

  • Barbara Throws a Wobbler

    Nadia Shireen Barbara Throws a Wobbler

    Barbara is in a very bad mood. She won't admit it, but she is. She has a problem with a sock, and at lunchtime there's a strange pea... And even though she's at the park with her friends, it all just gets a bit much. Suddenly Barbara's WOBBLER is out of control! But what if Barbara and her Wobbler can work together, so she can be cheerful again? Winner of the UKLA Award and shortlisted for the Oscar's Book Prize and the FCBG Children's Book Award, Barbara Throws A Wobbler is a brilliantly funny and sensitive way to understand and deal with tantrums.

  • Stress Reduction Workbook For Teens

    Stress Reduction Workbook For Teens

    Mindfulness Skills Between school, friends, and planning for the future, it’s easy to feel stressed out. Written by a psychotherapist specializing in mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR), these simple workbook activities will teach you to reduce your worries using a technique called mindfulness. Mindfulness is a way to be aware of your thoughts and feelings in the present moment. You can use mindfulness when you start to feel as though things are spinning out of control, so you can stop worrying about what might happen and focus instead on what’s happening now. This revised edition shows how mindfulness skills can help you relax, prioritize, and keep calm during stressful times.

  • I'm Furious

    I'm Furious

    Too often kids' feelings get ignored. This series helps children and adults accept and acknowledge their emotions. It also helps them distinguish between feelings and actions. Even more important, the stories give kids several ways to cope with feelings by utilizing the books' "choose-your-own-ending" format. They also allow parents and teachers to discuss other situations in a nonjudgmental way. How can kids diffuse their anger? Your kids get to decide what Matt should do when his little brother ruins his favorite baseball card. "I'm so angry inside I can't think!" he tells his mother.

  • Learn the Colours Northwest Coast Native Art

    Learn the Colours Northwest Coast Native Art

    Brightly colored board book. 10 pages, recycled paper, soy ink with protective coating. Art by various Northwest Coast Native artists.

  • Learn to Count Northwest Coast Native Art

    Learn to Count Northwest Coast Native Art

    Learn to count with illustration by various Northwest Coast Native artists. Made of heavy cardboard using soy-based inks and non-toxic coatings.

  • Northwest Coast Native Animals Matching Game

    Northwest Coast Native Animals Matching Game

    Using images of West Coast wildlife to teach logic and comprehension, this card game is a uniquely Canadian educational tool for children. Fun, bright, and made with non-toxic paints and soy-based dyes, the Northwest Coast Native Animals Matching Game is comprised of 48 tiles. It comes in a cardboard box measuring 7 3/4" x 5" x 2". Compact and portable, this game makes for a great gift. Creatures depicted include the octopus, beaver, halibut, bear, and hummingbird! Match together 24 animal pairs by 13 Northwest Coast Native artists. Ages 5 and up.

  • I'm Scared

    I'm Scared

    Crary's series helps children and adults accept and acknowledge their emotions. It also helps them distinguish between feelings and actions. Even more important, the stories give kids several ways to cope with feelings. They also allow parents and teachers to discuss other situations in a nonjudgmental way. In this story, Tracy is anxious to meet her new neighbor kids, but she's frightened that their big dog might bite, just like another neighborhood dog did. What should she do?

  • I'm Mad

    I'm Mad

    Too often kids' feelings get ignored. This series helps children and adults accept and acknowledge their emotions. It also helps them distinguish between feelings and actions. Even more important, the stories give kids several ways to cope with feelings by utilizing the books' "choose-your-own-ending" format. They also allow parents and teachers to discuss other situations in a nonjudgmental way. This story addresses what to do when you are mad.


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