Training Camp: What the Best Do Better Than Everyone Else
Training Camp is an inspirational story filled with invaluable lessons and insights on bringing out the best in yourself and your team. The story follows Martin, an un-drafted rookie trying to make it in the NFL. He’s spent his entire life proving to the critics that a small guy with a big heart can succeed [More About This Book]
Making the Case: How to Be Your Own Best Advocate
After an eleven-year-old Kimberly Guilfoyle lost her mother to leukemia, her dad wanted her to become as resilient and self-empowered as she could be. He wisely taught her to build a solid case for the things she wanted. Creating a strong logical argument was the best way to ensure she could always meet her needs. [More About This Book]
Critical Thinking: 50 Best Strategies to Think Smart and Clear, Get Logical Thinking, and Improve Your Decision Making Skills
50 Best Strategies to Have Critical Thinking Skills Aside from life’s basic necessities, such as food and water, critical thinking is considered by many as a key ingredient to a healthy and successful life. The ability to critically think allows people to think for themselves, to question hypotheses, to develop alternative hypotheses, and to test [More About This Book]
It’s Not How Good You Are, It’s How Good You Want to Be: The world’s best selling book
It’s Not How Good You Are, It’s How Good You Want to Be is a handbook of how to succeed in the world – a pocket ‘bible’ for the talented and timid to make the unthinkable thinkable and the impossible possible. The world’s top advertising guru, Paul Arden, offers up his wisdom on issues as [More About This Book]
The Better Brain Book: The Best Tool for Improving Memory and Sharpness and Preventing Aging of the Brain
From the author of the #1 New York Times bestseller Grain Brain… Loss of memory is not a natural part of aging—and this book explains why. Celebrated neurologist David Perlmutter reveals how everyday memory-loss—misplacing car keys, forgetting a name, losing concentration in meetings—is actually a warning sign of a distressed brain. Here he and Carol Colman offer [More About This Book]