This powerful book shows how poor countries can ignite growth without waitingfor global action or the creation of ideal local conditions.
The remarkable true story of how one man overcame poverty to attain the pinnacle of business success, Beating the Odds is inspiring reading not just for business readers, but for everyone who believes that a person's ambition should always ...
Gayle Mitchell is Cúllsidered IIIle of NūTill America's lesiding experts (M Casimo gaming asid His III:lde a Cáros Out of educating other gamblers. Here she explains the tool isld WUIsl Hols ill the Căşislù, the secrets of sliccessful ...
Brad Carter is down on his luck.
As a child, Wilma Rudolph could barely walk.
Michael Oher shares his personal account of his story, in this inspirational New York Times bestseller.
Beating the Odds: Overcoming Life's Trials
She has a tendency to save up six months worth of material for a frenzied one-day journaling extravaganza surrounded by animals behind bars. She usually chooses a day during the week when the zoo will be quiet, so she can hear herself ...
One of thirteen children growing up in Arkansas during the Great Depression, McKinney became the first African American to head the Washington office of a Fortune 500 company. Masterfully drawn autobiography.
Another effort to scale up schools that are communities of commitment occurred in the early 1990s when Deborah Meier and Marsha Shelton Brevot secured private funding and school system support to develop several schools committed to the ...
Based on the author's 30 years of experience, this humorous book outlines the serious challenges facing women in in Australian universities. The book is a call to arms to women to take matters into their own hands.