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  • Out of stock
    Dr. Padraic Gibson “THE ANXIETY EPIDEMIC It is estimated globally, that about 273 million people or 4.5% of the world’s population has had an anxiety disorder. We have seen a sharp rise in fear based conditions, there is now an anxiety epidemic! Fear, anxiety, phobias, obsessions and compulsions are growing rapidly. But the tide is turning and patients who are now empowered”
  • Lorraine Spillane A regular Mum doing what every other Mum in the World does and embracing life’s challenges along the way
  • Dr. Padraic Gibson
    This book offers the reader a ‘how to’ of Brief Strategic Coaching which is a new, innovative and truly original coaching method.  This book will allow you to apply strategic coaching to working with individuals and organisation.
    www.coachingclinic.ie
  • Tom Felle Tom Felle is an academic and author. He has produced this style book to give guidance on how to approach news writing, spelling, punctuation and commonly used terms, in order that your writing has uniformity.
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    Call out: A History of Mountain Rescue in Ireland

    Original price was: €20.00.Current price is: €10.00.
    Pat Holland For over forty years volunteer mountain rescue teams have been on standby twenty-four hours a day, every day of the year ready to help those in trouble on the hills and mountains of the island of Ireland. This book describes how the teams and the search dog association have developed from very modest beginnings to become experienced and capable frontline 999/112 services.
  • Michael J.Walsh The Divine Connection is really a book of questions. It's about the individual and the society we live in. It's about religious people who espouse the words of the Divine and, yet, they do the opposite. Questions arise about morality and about the existence of God.
  • Wasps Vs. Humans An Evel Knievel fan sits on his room watching TV. His two passions are Evel Knievel and American TV shows from the seventies. Not satisfied with his own life he decides to invent a new one, a new persona. He calls himself Bobby America. He invents a whole family: wife, children, a job, without ever leaving his room. He makes himself American, but his America is based on the TV shows he watched as a kid. The REAL America visits him in the shape of Charles Manson, Dr Martin Luther King, a death row inmate, a civil rights activist, General Custer, the Boston marathon bomber and an ISIS hostage. He lives his life through the celebrities and the TV shows that beam back at him. He watches, but he doesn’t take part. Who is the real person and what is he hiding?
  • James Good Muirne, an Irish nurse working in the desert, falls in love with a local warrior. She marries him, and brings him home to an Irish island. After some happy years, they drift apart, and eventually she seeks a decree of nullity in their marriage. A strange sequence of events brings them together eventually, and the story has a happy ending.
  • James Good Of the articles which follow, some few remain in my files because I did not succeed in getting them published. The majority were never submitted for publication, while some few are in a kind of no-man’s-land – sent to a publisher and never even acknowledged. An occasional one may have been printed without my knowing it. All in all, writing articles and seeing them in print is a joyous, fulfilling experience. A writer hopes that his joy at seeing himself in print is somehow shared by his readers. With this double purpose in mind, I have put together this collection of pieces written over the years but – as far as I am aware – never appearing in print.
  • Pádraig McCarthy Life, Death, Hope and the Eight Amendment
  • Out of stock
    Philip Johnston When Cork was under attack by the Germans.
  • Malcolm Bray Orphaned in Boston, Massachusetts at the age of ten, Danny MacNamara survives a series of hopeless and hazardous adoptions, as well as a long term in a brutal juvenile detention centre. Driven by an obsessive search for his mother’s killer-rapist, the man he blames for all his subsequent misfortunes. Danny becomes battered and scarred by his life-experiences. Growing into a physical giant of a man, he finds himself unable to fit in anywhere for long and through no real fault of his own is hounded by both the authorities and the mob, with murder and mayhem accompanying his every move.
  • Brona Mills Twenty-year old Michael is visited by time-traveller Audrey, who has information that can improve his life. In this time-travel dilemma, relationship influences are the centre of Audrey’s conflict: what things in life should be left to fate? And if altered, could she destroy everything? Michael must make drastic changes in his career path, move country, take financial risks and push himself out of his comfort zones. As he struggles to make the changes, he falls in unrequited love with his guardian angel – the perfect woman who returns from the future once a year to offer him friendship and guidance.
  • Helen Kelly, Eamonn McHale and Jimmy Stephenson Heuston’s Fort is a book that highlights the importance of the battle of the Mendicity Institution Garrison to the 1916 Easter Rebellion in Ireland. The Small contingent of 29 men made a significant contribution in prolonging the rebellion by preventing large numbers of troops from attacking the central command at the General Post Office and other larger garrisons such as the Four Courts and Dublin Castle. Authors: Helen Kelly, Eamonn McHale and Jimmy Stephenson Illustrator: Jimmy Wren
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