Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Fortunately, our roundup of the best TV shows for nine to 12 year-olds includes a whole host of thoroughly vetted, age-appropriate content that will appeal to a wide range of interests. Read on ...
Brad Cohen (born December 18, 1973) is an American motivational speaker, teacher, school administrator, and author who has severe Tourette syndrome (TS). [1] [2] Cohen described his experiences growing up with the condition in his 2005 book, Front of the Class: How Tourette Syndrome Made Me the Teacher I Never Had, co-authored with Lisa Wysocky.
Normal People reportedly gave BBC Three its best ever week on iPlayer (26 April to 3 May), receiving over 16.2 million programme requests across the 12 episodes, about 5 million of which were from 16- to 34-year-olds, and bringing BBC Three requests up to 21.8 million, doubling the previous record of 10.8 million from the release of the first ...
The Big Show (Le Grand Cirque) 1951 Hanna Reitsch: Flying is My Life (Fliegen, Mein Leben) 1951 Adolf Galland: The First and the Last: 1953 Ernst Heinkel: Stormy Life (Stürmisches Leben) 1953 Heinz Knoke: I Flew for the Führer: 1953 Hugh Henry Home Popham: Sea Flight: A Fleet Air Arm Pilot's Story: 1954 Nevil Shute: Slide Rule: Autobiography ...
Autobiographies adapted for other media (2 C, 1 P) Works based on autobiographies (3 C, 1 P) Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography–winning works (44 P)
As part of a science program on Norwegian public television , a series on puberty intended for 8–12-year-olds includes explicit information and images of reproduction, anatomy, and the changes that are normal with the approach of puberty. Rather than diagrams or photos, the videos were shot in a locker room with live nude people of all ages.
Becoming Unbecoming, by English author Una, depicts the effects of misogyny and sexism on twelve-year old Una growing up in northern England in 1977 while the Yorkshire Ripper is on the loose, creating a panic among townspeople. Honor Girl is a graphic memoir written and illustrated by Maggie Thrash. It is the story of Thrash's first crush at ...
Bryson also describes and comments on American life in the 1950s. The title of the book comes from an imaginary alter-ego Bryson invented for himself in his childhood, who has the ability to vaporise people. The book was released on September 1, 2006, in the United Kingdom, where it was published by Doubleday. [2]