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Stop Screaming at the Microwave : How to Connect Your Disconnected Life by Mary Loverde
This short but friendly abridged
audiobook provides simple ideas to put you more in touch with your spouse,
family, colleagues, and yourself, based on the philosophy that the more
connected you are to others, the better you'll feel. Although you may have
heard some of these ideas before, author Mary LoVerde reads them with an
infectious enthusiasm that makes Stop Screaming a welcome change of pace for
harried working people. (Running time: 1.5 hours, one cassette)
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Creating You & Co : Learn to Think Like the Ceo of Your Own Career by William Bridges
Career counselors tell workers they have to be in
business for themselves--top transitions consultant William Bridges tells
them how. "The key to constructing successful careers, " said Bridges, "is to
think not as an employee in a job but as head of a small independent company
supplying an employer.".
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Repacking Your Bags : Lighten Your Load for the Rest of Your Life by Richard J. Leider
In today's times of growing confusion, Leider
equips us for the journey to happiness and balance with a sense of clarity
and confidence like few can. If you have ever wondered what you wanted to be
after you grew up, this is the read for you.
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Work and Family by Sue Shellenbarger
Work & Family is an
extensive and fascinating collection of Wall Street Journal columnist Sue
Shellenbarger's essays on balancing work and family life. Shellenbarger's
beat is the two-career family with contemporary parents wired to fax, phone,
and beeper in case the kids have an emergency. In these 90 brief essays,
Shellenbarger covers tremendous ground.
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Business Dad : How Good Businessmen Can Make Great Fathers (And Vice Versa) by Tom Hirschfeld
Hirschfeld has worked in corporate finance,
served as assistant to the mayor of New York, and is now a partner at a
venture capital firm. He is also the father of two children. He decided to
write this book after he was unable to find any material or advice that he
felt would help him meet the challenges facing a father today. It dawned on
him that many of the skills necessary to succeed in business could also be
applied at home. He compares parenting to a joint-venture partnership,
explains information transfer and intellectual capital, and offers advice on
quality control, team building, and negotiating.
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