Nov 11, 2021 | Book Reviews
Annette Simmons writes with a kind of refreshing irreverence. She isn’t interested in winning over hearts and minds. That ship has sailed, as far as the tone of her writing is concerned. What she’s really trying to lay the case for, complete with the release of the...
Nov 4, 2021 | Book Reviews
Reading Martin Brooks’ new project is potentially the equivalent to opening Pandora’s Box. After all, do you really expect a concise, clear, and even professionally illustrated collection of cards – called Body Language Decoder, no less – to leave you...
Nov 4, 2021 | Book Reviews
Murray Sabrin, Ph.D. is a man of his word. A man of his word in the sense that he knows of what he speaks, and doesn’t get things twisted with flowery rhetoric or the kind of chest-thumping, ego-facing presentational style of many other books within the leadership...
Nov 4, 2021 | Book of the Month, Book Reviews
It’s easy to become mired in darkness because of the current state of affairs within the world. Particularly when it comes to education policy. People on both sides of the political aisle will be the first to tell you schools in the United States of America are in a...
Oct 28, 2021 | Book Reviews
Ray Arata’s new book is titled Showing Up: How Men Can Become Effective Allies in the Workplace. Needless to say, the title needs no further explanation. It serves a function similar to a paper’s thesis statement, encapsulating in clear and concise prose what Arata...
Oct 23, 2021 | Book Reviews
Sabbithry Persad, MBA, along with Camilly P. Pires de Mello, Ph.D. and Viveca Giongo, Ph.D. serving in editorial positions, has achieved the impossible. An intermediate children’s book that pulls no punches, but never at the expense of comfort. It’s titled What Is...